[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: William J. Clinton (1996, Book I)]
[April 5, 1996]
[Pages 549-553]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



Remarks at the University of Central Oklahoma in Edmond, Oklahoma
April 5, 1996

    Thank you very much. Governor Nigh, Mrs. Nigh, Congressman Istook, 
Mr. Mayor, Mr. Speaker, the other distinguished guests on the platform, 
and to the students and the other members of the University of Central 
Oklahoma community and family, Governor David Walters and Mrs. Walters, 
and to all the people who are here with me today because of the mission 
we are on.
    Let me say it's good to be back here. I heard the students laughing 
when Governor Nigh announced that I was here 8 years ago, and I was 
thinking, most of the students were in grade school the last time I was 
here. [Laughter] Later this year I'll be eligible for my AARP card--
[laughter]--but I'm still glad to be here.
    As all of you know, and as the Governor said, I came here today to 
Oklahoma to pay my respects nearly a year after the tragedy of the 
bombing, to attend a memorial service for the families of those who were 
victims, for the survivors and their families, and others who were 
Federal employees who worked there, and to help your State officials to 
dedicate the beginning of the child care center which will be rebuilt, 
which is a remarkable accomplishment, and to meet with this scholarship 
committee, which informed me of the results which were just announced to 
you by Governor Nigh.

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    And it is coming at an especially sad but ironically appropriate 
time, just a couple of days after we suffered the loss of our Secretary 
of Commerce and a number of fine Federal employees--some of them very 
young, barely older than some of the students here--a number of fine 
U.S. military personnel, and some of our country's most outstanding 
business leaders in that plane crash in Bosnia.
    I would like to make just two points briefly. I know it's cold and 
you've been waiting a long time, but I ask you to reflect on two things. 
That plane went down in Bosnia full of people who have worked very hard 
to help the American people fulfill their potential. Ron Brown was 
immensely proud of the fact that more than any other Commerce Secretary 
and Commerce Department in our history, they had been instrumental in 
opening new avenues for people to buy American products and American 
services and create jobs for Americans, so that when young people get 
out of college they can get jobs, good jobs, jobs that pay better than 
average, jobs with a good future.
    But these people went to Bosnia with only the most modest 
expectation of any personal gain for themselves. They went there to try 
to use the power of the American economy to help bring opportunity to 
the Bosnians so that peace wouldn't fall apart and instead would take 
hold.
    But the main thing I want to say is that my friend Ron Brown, who 
grew up in Harlem, never forgot where he came from and spent his 
lifetime trying to help other people realize their dreams. When our 
hearts were breaking over what happened in Oklahoma City--it was this 
madness that somebody for some perverted political purpose could take 
everyone else's life away from them who weren't even standing in the 
way, they just happened to show up in the wrong time in the wrong place. 
And so I would like to say two things to you today.
    First of all, all of us need to ask ourselves a year later, what are 
our responsibilities not only to help the children who were tragically 
robbed of their parents in Oklahoma City to fulfill their dreams but to 
provide that opportunity for all people? I've worked very hard to expand 
the quality and availability of college loans and the college 
scholarships for children of modest incomes. I'm still hoping we'll pass 
a balanced budget amendment in our legislation in this Congress that 
will include a tax cut that gives families a deduction for the cost of 
college tuition, because I think it's the best possible tax break we 
could give America, to do that.
    But this is not a political issue. Every American has an interest in 
seeing every other American be able to live out their dreams. And we 
have certain positive responsibilities, just like Ron Brown believed 
that we did, to try to do that, and access to higher education is, 
perhaps, the most important one.
    The second thing I want to ask you about, especially the young 
people, is to think about where do we go from here. And as horrible and 
personal as the bombing of the Federal building was to you, I want you 
to try to step back a minute and put it in a larger context. It was, 
first and foremost, an act of terror. What is terror? Terror is when 
someone, allegedly for some philosophical or political reason, believes 
they have the right to take innocent lives, not people who are fighting 
them in war, not people who are wearing uniforms, not people who are 
staring at them across a battle line but just to take an action that 
will take the lives of people who just happen to be in the wrong place 
at the wrong time.
    And we are seeing that all over the world, and you see it in two 
ways. First, you see homegrown terror, people in your own country that 
are so profoundly alienated they think they have a right to do this. 
You've been reading about the Unabomber in recent days. That's an 
example of that. You remember when the religious fanatics in Japan broke 
open poison gas in the Japanese subway and killed a lot of people and a 
few days later could have killed hundreds more, but miraculously, the 
second attempt was thwarted. That's an example of that.
    And then you have imported terrorism, where people come in from 
other countries and they try to wreck your life to pursue their 
political ambitions. An example of that is the World Trade Center 
bombing. And it's really tough when they're coming from right next door, 
which is what is tearing the heart out of the people in the Middle East 
now. And you remember how recently we saw the people there--innocent--
not only innocent Israelis, innocent Palestinians, innocent Moroccans, 
little children just blown away because some crackpot believes that it 
is a legitimate way to pursue your political philosophy to kill innocent 
civilians.
    Now what I want to tell you today is--and I want you to think about 
this, especially the

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young people--the world you're living in and the world we're moving 
toward is going to offer you more opportunities to succeed, if you have 
a good education, than any generation of Americans has ever known. But 
the same forces that offer you those opportunities to succeed offer 
people opportunities to commit terrorist acts. And therefore, we must be 
more vigilant, more active, more determined than ever before.
    Why is that? Well, just think about it. What's the world like now? 
Computer technology can now interface people all over the world. I'm 
trying to get every classroom and every library and every school in 
America connected to the Internet by the end of the decade. I know right 
now there are public schools in America where young junior high school 
students can get on the Internet and do research out of libraries in 
Asia and Australia, all over the world. Well, that also means that 
terrorist networks can get information about how to build bombs and how 
to wreak mischief if you just know how to find the right home page.
    We've got to have open borders in order to move products and 
services around the world, in order for people to travel around the 
world. We have to be able to get around in a hurry. The more open the 
borders are, the more open the information is, the more vulnerable we 
are to things like money laundering and terrorists moving out of 
countries.
    Now, that should not frighten you. The good news is we are reducing 
the traditional threats to your security and your future. Communism has 
failed. The cold war is over. We have agreed to treaties that will 
reduce by two-thirds the number of nuclear weapons that existed when the 
cold war was at its height. And for the first time in the history of 
nuclear weapons, for the last 2 years there's not a single nuclear 
weapon pointed at any American citizen. That is the good news.
    That's the good news. But in an open world of easy information, 
quick technology, and rapid movements, we are all more vulnerable than 
we used to be to terrorism and its interconnected allies, organized 
crime, drug running, and the spread of weapons of destruction. And so I 
spend a lot of my time as your President trying to think about what we 
can do to minimize those dangers.
    We've done a lot to try to fight terrorism. We've done a lot to try 
to fight drug trafficking. We've done a lot to try to fight the money 
laundering that goes along with all this, to try to help other countries 
stand up to organized crime, because nobody is immune from this. You see 
it in all of the places I cited. You see it when those terrible bombs go 
off in London. I saw it in Latin America where we have honest law 
enforcement officials in Colombia trying to help us crack the Colombian 
drug cartels. And the good news is we arrested seven top leaders in the 
last couple of years. The bad news is, 500 Colombians laid their lives 
down trying to break their country of the grip of drug cartels.
    So what we have to do is to ask ourselves, our generation--the 
generation that preceded us won World War II and then won the cold war. 
What we have to do now is to fight back these organized forces of 
destruction so all the opportunities that await you young people will be 
there and so you can pursue them without fear; so that if you're willing 
to work hard and obey the law and make the most of your own lives, you 
will be able to live out your dreams. That is what this is all about.
    The lessons we have to take out of what happened to us at the World 
Trade Center, what happened to us in Oklahoma City, what we were able to 
avoid when we stopped terrorist attacks in the last 2 years on our own 
soil and against our airplanes as they were flying over the oceans, 
those are the things we have to learn.
    Now, what I want to say to you is that, first, you've got to realize 
all these things work together. On the 19th of this month, when you all 
are observing the one-year anniversary, the reason I won't be here is I 
have to go to Russia to a nuclear summit. And part of it is about 
continuing to reduce nuclear weapons. But part of it is making sure that 
every place in the world that has the residue of the nuclear age, this 
nuclear material, make sure it is secure and safe and cannot be stolen, 
because we don't want our homegrown terrorists or our foreign terrorists 
to get their hands on nuclear material that, with just the size of a 
wafer, you could make a bomb 10 times more powerful than the one that 
destroyed your Federal building in Oklahoma City. So I have to go there. 
The United States has to be a part of that. And that's an important 
thing, but we also have to recognize that there are things that we have 
to do here at home.
    Last year I asked people in the other parts of the world to stand 
with the United States

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because we took a tough stand against the countries that support 
terrorism, against Iran and Iraq and Sudan and Libya. And I get 
frustrated when they don't help. But when those bombs blew up in Israel, 
it sobered a lot of countries up, and in 3 days the President of Egypt 
and I were able to persuade 29 countries to send high-level leaders, 
including heads of state, to Egypt to meet to stand up against 
terrorism. We had Arab countries condemning terrorism in Israel for the 
first time.
    So we've got--we're getting in a position now where the people are 
willing to say we can't let terrorism pay. We can't let terrorism pay. 
We've got to make sure that terrorists pay for what they're doing. We 
have to make sure that's true here and around the world.
    When I was in Israel--and I suppose they have about as much 
experience with terrorism as anybody--I talked to leaders of both 
political parties. And they hardly agree on anything over there; they 
fight just like we do. [Laughter] But you know what? They were both 
agreed on one thing. They said, ``You have got to continue to take the 
lead in the fight against terrorism, and you need to pass that 
legislation that you're trying to pass to crack down on the forces of 
terrorism in the United States and enable us to stand against them when 
they invade our country.''
    It's been almost a year since I was pledged that terrorism bill, and 
it's still not in the shape it needs to be. But let me just tell you 
three things that I think ought to be in it, and there's a big debate 
about it.
    We know what kind of bomb blew up the Federal building. We propose 
that we be able to have markers that go into explosives when people buy 
them. Contractors don't have a thing in the world to fear. People need 
to buy explosives; you can't do a lot of work without them. But if 
explosives are used to kill innocent civilians, we ought to be able to 
find out where they came from and who bought them. That's what I 
believe, and I hope you do, too.
    We ought to have explicit authority that permits the Attorney 
General of the United States to stop terrorist groups like Hamas from 
raising money in America. And if we catch people doing it, we ought to 
be able to throw them out of the country immediately--immediately, not 
after some long, drawn-out process.
    We ought to have the best technology available to our law 
enforcement officials to keep up with these terrorists that move around 
in a hurry, and they're very sophisticated and very hard to catch. And 
we can do that without violating the civil liberties of the American 
people, without undermining the constitutional rights of criminal 
defendants. But I'm telling you, folks, these people are smart. They 
understand computers. They understand information. They understand how 
to hide. They understand how to doctor bank records. They understand how 
to launder money.
    And when it all comes down to it, just think of what would happen if 
Oklahoma City had happened five or six or seven times within a month or 
two. Think what it would have done to the American people. Think what 
would have happened if 3,000 people had been killed at Oklahoma City and 
every American had felt like those people were within 50 miles of them. 
That's what happened in Israel just a few weeks ago. It can paralyze a 
country. It can take its heart out. It can take its confidence away. It 
can make young people believe they have no future.
    Now, I am very optimistic about America's future, and I am proud of 
the work that our law enforcement officials have done in catching these 
people. And I am proud of the fact that we have caught and deported more 
terrorists in the last 3 years than at any time in our history put 
together. I am proud of that.
    I am not saying these things to frighten any Americans. I am just 
telling you I have been around the world representing you; I've talked 
to people all over the world. I do not believe--if we can do our job and 
if we had just a little bit of luck--I do not believe that you will have 
to worry about a nuclear weapon wiping out a whole American community or 
killing lots of Americans in the way that our parents worried about us 
when I was growing up. But I do not believe you can fulfill your dreams 
and be totally free until we have taken the strongest possible stand 
against terrorism, organized crime, drug running, and weapon sales. And 
they are all related.
    So I ask you, I ask you because you will have more weight than most 
people--this State has suffered, this State has felt it, this State 
understands the human dimension of people killing innocent people for 
perverted, allegedly political reasons--to say in simple, clear terms, 
this is not a political issue; this is not a partisan issue; this is not 
an ideological issue. This is

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a matter of America getting ready for the future and guaranteeing our 
young people the opportunities that they deserve to live out their God-
given dreams and destiny.
    Thank you, and God bless you all.

Note: The President spoke at 4:40 p.m. in the courtyard at the School of 
Education. In his remarks, he referred to George Nigh, president, 
University of Central Oklahoma, and his wife, Donna; Mayor Bob Rudkin of 
Edmond; Glen Johnson, speaker, Oklahoma State House of Representatives; 
and David Walters, former Oklahoma Governor, and his wife, Rhonda.