[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: William J. Clinton (1999, Book I)]
[March 31, 1999]
[Pages 475-485]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



Interview With Dan Rather of CBS News
March 31, 1999

    Mr. Rather. Mr. President, thank you for doing this.
    The President. Glad to do it, Dan.
    Mr. Rather. I appreciate you doing it.

NATO Airstrikes Against Serbian Targets

    Mr. Rather. As Commander in Chief, you've sent some of our best to 
fly every day, every night, through the valley of the shadow of death in 
a place far away. Why? For what?
    The President. For several reasons. First and most important, 
because there are defenseless people there who are being uprooted from 
their homes by the hundreds of thousands and who are being killed by the 
thousands; because it is not an isolated incident but, in fact, a repeat 
of a pattern we have seen from Mr. Milosevic in Bosnia and Croatia. So there is a compelling 
humanitarian reason.

[[Page 476]]

    Secondly, we haven't been asked to do this alone. All of our NATO 
Allies are doing it with us. They all feel very strongly about it, and 
we are moving together. Thirdly, we do not want to see the whole region 
destabilized by the kind of ethnic aggression that Mr. 
Milosevic has practiced repeatedly over 
the last 10 years, but he's been limited. This is, in some ways, the 
most destabilizing area he could be doing it in. And fourthly, we 
believe we can make a difference.
    And so for all those reasons, I believe we should be doing this.
    Mr. Rather. Why now, and why this place? The Russians, in a somewhat 
similar situation in Chechnya, had maybe 100,000 casualties. We've had 
Rwanda, Sudan--you didn't go into those places. As a matter of fact, the 
Serbians argue the Croatians did the same thing with the Serbians in 
part of Croatia. So why this place? Why right now?
    The President. Well, first of all, if you go back to Yugoslavia, we 
never supported any kind of ethnic cleansing by anybody. And the 
circumstances under which we went into Bosnia and ended the Bosnian war 
were designed to guarantee safety and security for all the ethnic 
groups, not just the Muslims but also the Croats and the Serbs. And the 
peace agreement that the Kosovar Albanians agreed to would have brought 
in an international peacekeeping force under NATO that would have 
guaranteed security to the Serbs as well as to the Albanians.
    So the United States and NATO believe that there should be no ethnic 
cleansing and no people killed or uprooted because of their ethnic 
background.
    Secondly, we're doing it now because now it's obvious that Mr. 
Milosevic has no interest in an honorable 
peace that guarantees security and autonomy for the Kosovar Albanians, 
and instead he is practicing aggression. We might have had to do it last 
fall, but we were able to head it off. Remember, he created a quarter of 
a million refugees last year. And NATO threatened to take action, and we 
worked out an agreement, which was observed for a while, which headed 
this off.
    When we agreed to take action was when he rejected the peace 
agreement and he had already amassed 
40,000 soldiers on the border and in Kosovo, with about 300 tanks. So 
that's why we're doing it now.
    And you asked about other places. In the Rwanda case, let's remember 
what happened. In Rwanda, without many modern military weapons, 
somewhere between 500,000 and 800,000--we may never know--people were 
killed in the space of only 100 days. I think the rest of the world was 
caught flat-footed and did not have the mechanisms to deal with it. We 
did do some good and, I think, limited some killing there. But I wish 
we'd been able to do more there. And I would hope that that sort of 
thing will not ever happen again in Africa. And that's one of the 
reasons we worked hard to build up a cooperative relationship with 
African militaries through the Africa Crisis Response Initiative.
    So I believe there are lots of reasons. But if you look at Kosovo, 
we have a history there in Europe. We know what happens if you have 
ethnic slaughter there. We know how it can spread. And the main thing 
is, there is this horrible humanitarian crisis. And because of NATO, 
because of our allied agreement and because we have the capacity, we 
believe we can do something about it there. And I think we have to try.
    Mr. Rather. You still believe you can do something about it there? 
The last few days have indicated--well, seem from at least several 
points of view, Milosevic is winning, and we're losing.
    The President. Well, we knew that that would happen in the first few 
days. He had planned this a long time. 
Keep in mind, before the first NATO plane got in the air, he already had 
the 40,000 troops there. Think how we would feel if this were going on 
and we were doing nothing. There's no question that in--we've run this 
air campaign for less than a week. We've been hampered by bad weather. 
We had to be cautious on the early nights to try to at least protect our 
planes as much as we possibly can against the air defenses, which are 
quite good.
    So it takes a while to get up and going. And against that, he had 
40,000 troops and 300 tanks. It shouldn't surprise anybody that he's 
able to do a lot of what he intended to, even though we've had some 
success in hitting his military targets 
in the last couple of days.
    But I would urge the American people and, indeed, the people of all 
the NATO nations to have a little resolve here, to stay with your 
leaders, to give us a chance to really see this thing through. We cannot 
view this as something

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that will be instantaneously successful. This is something that will 
require some time.
    Keep in mind, when we took NATO air action in Bosnia, when we tried 
to alleviate the siege of Sarajevo, which was a very important precursor 
to the ultimate peace that was signed there, the air campaign went on 
for 20 days--with pauses--I think there were 12 days, at least, of 
bombing. So that's quite a bit more than has been done now--2,300 
sorties there.
    So the American people and the people of the NATO nations should not 
be surprised that what has happened on the ground has happened. It was 
always obvious it was going to happen if there were no opposition to 
Milosevic. And this thing hasn't had 
enough time to work. So I would ask for the American people to be 
patient and to be resolved and be firm and to give our plan a chance to 
take hold here.

Call for Easter Suspension of Airstrikes

    Mr. Rather. Let me follow up some, Mr. President. First of all, the 
Pope has asked for an Easter suspension of the bombing. Are you prepared 
to do that?
    The President. I don't see how we can do that, with what is going on 
on the ground there now. Mr. Milosevic is 
running those people to the Albanian border, to the other borders by the 
thousands a day; he's killing people. No one would like more than I to 
properly observe Easter, which for Christians is the most important 
holiday of all--even more important than Christmas, really, because of 
what it symbolizes to the living. But we can't observe Easter and honor 
the resurrection of Christ by allowing him another free day to kill more 
innocent civilians.
    Mr. Rather. And to those people who say, Mr. President, that this is 
the most important week in the whole Judeo-Christian calendar in many 
ways because you have Passover, Maundy Thursday, Good Friday, and 
Easter--that it is ``obscene'' to be carrying on this kind of war during 
this period--you say what?
    The President. That we are acting in defense of the defenseless. We 
are not carrying on an aggressive war. We are acting at a time when he 
is going through the country killing people--according to the reports, 
including moderate politicians--tried to destroy records of what their 
land holdings are, tried to eradicate any historical record of their 
claim to their own land, and has given no indication whatever that he's 
prepared to stop his aggression.
    I mean, the cease-fire he offered to 
Prime Minister Primakov was ludicrous. He 
didn't offer to withdraw his troops to where they were before this 
invasion began. He didn't do that. He basically said, ``Well, now, I'll 
just keep my gang and sit around here, and if everybody wants to stop 
shooting, that's fine with me.''
    Since he's taken all the media out of 
Kosovo, we would have no way of knowing even whether he was honoring 
that or not. He could keep right on doing what he's been doing, and 
there would be no coverage of it.
    So this week is a very important week to me personally and to 
American Christians, to American Jews. Next week will be Easter week for 
Orthodox observers, Christians not only in--the Serbs, in that part of 
the world, and among the many, many Orthodox we have in the United 
States. I hate the idea of having to continue this campaign during this 
period. But I hate more the idea that we would walk away from this 
campaign while he continues to clean out 
house after house after house and village after village after village 
and kill a lot of innocent people. I think that that would not serve to 
honor the occasion.

President's Feelings About Kosovo Situation

    Mr. Rather. Mr. President, as you always try to do, we're talking in 
measured tones. As President of the United States, you have to be 
careful of what you say. But I'm told by those who are close to you that 
you have a lot of pent-up feelings about what's happening in the 
Balkans, what we're doing there. Can you share some of that with us?
    The President. Well, I guess I do have a lot of pent-up feelings, 
and I think the President is supposed to keep a lot of those feelings 
pent up. But let me say, I think throughout human history one of the 
things that has most bedeviled human beings is their inability to get 
along with people that are different than they are, and their 
vulnerability to be led by demagogs who play on their fears of people 
who are different than they are.
    You and I grew up in a part of the country where that was a staple 
of political life during our childhood. That's why this race issue has 
always been so important to me in America. And here we are at the end of 
the cold war; we're on the verge of the 21st century; our stock market 
went over 10,000 this week; we see the Internet and all this technology 
with

[[Page 478]]

all this promise for all these people, not just the United States but 
all over the world; and what is the dominant problem of our time? From 
the Middle East to Northern Ireland to Bosnia to central Africa, people 
still wanting to kill each other because of their racial and religious, 
their ethnic, their cultural differences.
    This is crazy. And it is embodied in the policies of Mr. Milosevic. He became the leader of the Serbs by 
playing on their sense of grievance, which may have had some 
justification--their sense of ethnic grievance--and made them believe 
that the only way they could fulfill their appropriate human destiny was 
to create a Serbs-only state, even if it meant they had to go in and go 
to war with the Bosnian Muslims and they had to go to war with the 
Croatian Catholics, they had to go to war with Kosovar Albanian Muslims 
and clean them all out.
    And to be doing it in a place where World War I began, which has 
been the source of so much heartache, where so much instability can 
occur in other neighboring countries, in the last year of the 20th 
century, I think is a tragedy.
    And I had hoped--he's a clever man, 
you know, Mr. Milosevic, not to be underestimated. He's tough; he's 
smart; he's clever. I told all of our people that. The worst thing you 
can ever do in life is underestimate your adversary. But underneath all 
that, for reasons that I cannot fathom, there is a heart that has turned 
too much to stone, that believes that it's really okay that they killed 
all those people in Bosnia and they made a quarter of a million refugees 
there--or millions, probably 2 million by the time it was over, 
dislocated from their home, and a quarter million people died; and it's 
really okay what they're doing in Kosovo, that somehow non-Serbs, on 
land that they want, are less than human.
    And I guess I've seen too much of that all my life. And I have all 
these dreams for what the modern world can mean. When I'm long gone from 
here, I hope that there will be a level of prosperity and opportunity 
never before known in human history, not just for Americans but for 
others. And it's all being threatened all over the world by these 
ancient hatreds.
    We're working, trying to bring an end to the Northern Ireland peace 
process now. We're trying to keep the Middle East peace process going. 
All of this stuff, it's all rooted in whether people believe that their 
primary identity is as a member of the human race, that they share with 
others who are different from them; or if they believe their primary 
identity is as a result of their superiority over people who may share 
the same village, the same neighborhood, and the same high-rise 
apartment but they don't belong to the same ethnic group or racial group 
or religious group, so if they have to be killed, it's just fine.
    I mean, I think that is the basis of Milosevic's power. And that is the threat to our children's 
world. That's what I believe.

NATO Airstrikes Against Serbian Targets

    Mr. Rather. Mr. President, there are reports that as we speak, and 
through this evening, that there will be air attacks in Belgrade itself, 
that you've gotten NATO to authorize it. Is that correct? Is that 
accurate?
    The President. It is accurate that we are attacking targets that we 
believe will achieve our stated objective, which is either to raise the 
price of aggression to an unacceptably high level, so that we can get 
back to talking peace and security, or to substantially undermine the 
capacity of the Serbian Government to wage war.
    Mr. Rather. Does that include attacks now in Belgrade? In the 
vernacular of the military, have you authorized them to go downtown?
    The President. I have authorized them to attack targets that I 
believe are appropriate to achieve our objectives. We have worked very 
hard to minimize the risks of collateral damage. I think a lot of the 
Serbian people are--like I said, the Serbs, like other people, are good 
people. They're hearing one side of the story. They've got a state-run 
media. They don't have anybody that can talk about Mr. 
Milosevic the way you get to talk about 
me from time to time. And that's too bad. And some of those targets are 
in difficult places. But I do not believe that we can rule out any set 
of targets that are reasonably related to our stated objective.
    Mr. Rather. If I report tonight that we are attacking targets inside 
Belgrade, will that be inaccurate?
    The President. I don't think that you can report tonight that I have 
confirmed any specific set of targets, because I think that's a mistake 
until we have actually carried out our mission, and I would not do that. 
You can report that I have said that I have not ruled out any targets

[[Page 479]]

that I believe are reasonably related to our objective of raising the 
price of his aggression in trying to undermine the capacity to wage war.
    Mr. Rather. You know I'm not going to go down a list of targets. 
When you say that you don't rule out any targets that could help you 
accomplish the mission, would that--declining to rule out targets--
include the Defense Ministry, the Interior Ministry?
    The President. I don't think I should discuss the specific targets, 
because I don't want to compromise our efforts to achieve them. And I 
don't want to run the risk that unscrupulous people would actually try 
to stage civilian casualties there that would otherwise not occur. But 
you can say that I didn't rule out any targets anywhere within Serbia or 
Kosovo that would be reasonably related to our objectives. You can say 
that.
    Mr. Rather. Mr. President, I want to read to you what some fairly 
high-ranking military people have said privately. You would understand, 
they didn't want their names attached to it. ``Dan, we're not employing 
the full power of our Air Force.'' Another one: ``We ran over 200 
bombing missions the first day when we moved against Saddam Hussein.'' 
There hasn't been a single day in which you've run as many as 50 bombing 
missions, with the possible exception of today. Why aren't we going all-
out? You've described a situation that you feel passionately about, you 
think is wrong. Everybody knows if you had a street fight with a bully, 
you want to hit him the hardest right at first.
    The President. You have reported--and you mentioned this to me in 
the beginning that we have stepped up our attacks and that I have pushed 
for that. I think it's quite important to emphasize--again, let me say, 
again--we have done this through and with NATO. It is an organization 
that operates by consensus. One of the things that has struck me is that 
in the last 48 hours, because of the actions taken by Mr. 
Milosevic, the will, the steel, the 
determination, and the outright anger of our allies has been 
intensifying exponentially, so that we have now, I think, stronger 
support than we have ever had for taking the most aggressive action we 
can.
    So I will say to you, I've tried to do everything I can, consistent 
with maintaining allied unity and with achieving our objectives. I 
understand the frustration of some of our people in the Pentagon. But I 
think that the Secretary of Defense and the 
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs would tell you 
that I have worked very hard with them to give them the maximum possible 
leeway, showing sensitivity only to targets that would have marginal 
benefit but cause a lot of collateral damage. I don't want a lot of 
innocent Serbian civilians to die because they have a man running their country that's doing something 
atrocious. But some of them are at risk because of that and must be, 
because we have targets that we need to go after.
    Now, we're getting--we've got good allied unity. I think it's worth 
something to preserve that. And I think that that's what I would ask our 
military people to understand, too. I know that our top commanders do, 
because they understand what we're trying to do with NATO. And goodness 
knows, General Clark, the American general 
who's the commander of our NATO forces, we have someone who understands 
Mr. Milosevic very well, who was there 
during the Bosnian talks, and who is all-out committed to the most 
aggressive possible response.
    So we're doing--we're getting steadily more and more support for 
being more and more aggressive, and I think that will only grow.
    Mr. Rather. Mr. President, I want to pose this next question with 
all respect, but also directly. Everybody acknowledges you have a 
brilliant mind; you're an excellent speaker, but sometimes people--
people who support you and like you say, well, he parses words too 
closely--``what is, is'' argument, all of that. I want to discuss ground 
troops. In the context of speaking as directly as you possible can, when 
you say you have no intention to commit ground troops to accomplishing 
the mission in Kosovo, does that mean we are not going to have ground 
troops in there--no way, no how, no time?
    The President. It means just what it says. I'll come back to the 
point, but you say people say I parse words too close. That's what they 
said about President Roosevelt, too. He made a pretty good President. 
And when people say you parse words too closely, it usually means they 
want to ask you a question and get you to give an answer which is 
inconsistent with the objective you're trying to pursue for the American 
people, and so you don't do what they want you to do. So normally they 
criticize you not for what you're doing but for what they wish you would 
do.
    Mr. Rather. Fair enough.

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    The President. I have used those words carefully. I am very careful 
in the words I use not to mislead one way or the other. And the reason 
is, I think I have embraced a strategy here that I believe has a 
reasonable, good chance, a reasonably good chance of succeeding, maybe 
even a better chance than that, as long as we have more and more steel 
and will and determination and unity from all of our NATO Allies. And I 
want to pursue that strategy. And I believe that all these discussions 
about, well, other strategies and should we do this, that, or the other 
thing do not help the ultimate success of the strategy we are pursuing. 
That is why I have used the words I have used; why I have said the words 
I have said.
    Now, on the merits of it, the thing that bothers me about 
introducing ground troops into a hostile situation--into Kosovo and into 
the Balkans--is the prospect of never being able to get them out. If you 
have a peace agreement, even if it's difficult and even if you have to 
stay a little longer than you thought you would, like in Bosnia, at 
least there is an exit strategy, and it's a manageable situation. If you 
go in in a hostile environment in which you do not believe in ethnic 
cleansing and you do not wish to see any innocent civilians killed, you 
could be put in a position of, for example, creating a Kosovar enclave 
that would keep you there forever. And I don't believe that is an 
appropriate thing to be discussing at this time.
    I do think we've got quite a good chance of succeeding with our 
strategy if we could keep everybody focused on it. And I simply think 
that it's wrong for us to be obsessing about other things and not 
working--people are frustrated because we live in an age where everybody 
wants things to operate like a 30-second ad. This air campaign is not a 
30-second ad. It's only been going on a few days, and it's been 
undermined to some extent by bad weather. But we are blessed with 
enormously skilled pilots, a good plan, good technology, and good 
resolve by our allies. And I'd like to see us keep working on this and 
not to have our attention diverted by other things.

Hillary Clinton's Possible Senate 
Candidacy

    Mr. Rather. Mr. President, there's so many questions and so little 
time. You know I'm going to be in trouble if I don't ask you some 
questions on some other subjects, but I'd like to do that and then come 
back to Kosovo because I know you agree that this war situation--air war 
at the moment for us--there's nothing more important than that. But let 
me shift gears for just a moment.
    Could you describe for me what you believe to be the 
responsibilities of a husband of a United States Senator?
    The President.  [Laughter] I don't know, but I'm willing to fulfill 
them. I would do whatever. I would fill in at dinners, make speeches 
when she had to vote. I'd be the main casework officer of the New York 
office. I'd do whatever I was asked to do.
    Let me say seriously, I have no earthly idea what my wife will do. I 
can tell you that before some New York officials came to her, it had 
never crossed her mind. And I still think it's a highly unusual thing. 
And I can imagine that many voters in New York would wonder whether--
even though she and I intended to move to New York after we left the 
White House, although I would also spend a lot of time at home in 
Arkansas--they would wonder, well, does this make sense for someone to 
be a United States Senator. And that would be a burden she would have to 
carry in the campaign and to explain that--why she was doing it, that 
she was asked to do it, and demonstrate her commitment to the State and 
its issues.
    I think if she could win an election like that, she would be 
magnificent. But whatever the duties are--for 22 years now or more, 
we've done what I wanted to do in terms of my political career. So the 
deal I made was, she gets the next 22 years. And if I'm still around 
after that, we can argue about the third phase. And so I would be happy 
to be the spouse of a Senator.
    Mr. Rather. And you expect to do that together as man and wife?
    The President. Oh, absolutely. I would--like I said, I don't know 
what the duties are, but I'm sure I could fulfill them.

First Family

    Mr. Rather. Mr. President, you know Americans like to know that the 
First Family is okay, that they're doing all right. Given the year-plus, 
what you and our First Family have been through, tell us what you can 
about how the three of you are doing.
    The President. Well, I think, given what we've been through, we're 
doing reasonably well. We're not a large family. We do love each other 
very much, and we work hard to support one

[[Page 481]]

another. And I think that this trip to north Africa has been a good 
thing not only for our country--because I think Hillary has done a great job on it--I think it must have been 
good for Hillary and Chelsea, too, to have 
that time together, to do some exciting things, to be in a different 
environment. And I think they've really enjoyed it. I think we're doing 
quite well considering what we've been through. And God willing, we'll 
keep after it.

Lessons of the Past Year

    Mr. Rather. How about yourself, Mr. President? We're here in a room 
with pictures of Lincoln, Washington, Continental Congress. And you're 
thinking about sending our sons and daughters into war; I know that. But 
I also know you tend to stay up late at night; you always have done 
that. When you look back over this year-plus, what's the moral of it? 
Does it have a moral?
    The President. Oh, yes, I think there is more than one lesson here. 
I think, first of all, the moral is--there's a personal moral, which is 
that every person must bear the consequences of his or her conduct, and 
when you make a mistake, you pay for it, no matter who you are. And it's 
true whether or not it's made public, or whether or not what's made 
public is exactly accurate reflection of what in fact happened--that's 
not the important thing. The important thing is that there are 
consequences in people's personal lives, no matter who they are.
    The second lesson is that the Constitution works. The Founding 
Fathers were smart people. They understood that partisan passions which 
very often get carried away in the temptation to seize on events of the 
moment would be too great, and that's why they wrote the Constitution 
the way they did. And they were awfully smart.
    The third thing that I think we learned this year is that the 
American people almost always get it right if you give them enough time 
to think through things and really work on it.
    And the fourth thing I think we learned is that people expect their 
elected officials to work for them and not be forced to be focused on 
themselves or their adversaries in Washington, and that they will reward 
those who they believe get up every day and show up for work and work 
for them and their future and their children, and they will take account 
of those they believe do not.
    Those are, I think, the lessons of the last year.

Option of Resignation

    Mr. Rather. You said the American people, if given enough time--did 
you ever consider resigning?
    The President. Never.
    Mr. Rather. Never for a second?
    The President. Never. Not a second. Never. Never.
    Mr. Rather. Never entered your mind?
    The President. Never entered my mind.
    Mr. Rather. Did the First Lady ever come to you and say, ``Listen, I 
think we ought to at least consider it?''
    The President. No. She felt at 
least as strongly as I did that it shouldn't be done.
    Mr. Rather. That tells me she might have felt even stronger.
    The President. At least as strongly as I did. But it never crossed 
my mind. I wouldn't do that to the Constitution. I wouldn't do that to 
the Presidency. I wouldn't do that to the history in this country. I 
would never have legitimized what I believe is horribly wrong with what 
has occurred here over the last 4 or 5 years. So it never crossed my 
mind. And I always had faith. I just--I prayed about it. I tried to work 
on maintaining my inner spiritual strength, and I tried to come to grips 
with the work I had to do personally with my family and myself and the 
work I owed the American people. And I just decided that of all the 
options available, that wasn't one. And it never entered my mind.

Public's Response to President's Conduct

    Mr. Rather. Mr. President, I get a lot of letters--not as many as 
you do, but I get a lot of letters from parents who say, some of them 
say, ``Listen, I like President Clinton, I like what he's doing for the 
country.'' Some of them even say they'd ``vote for him again, but I 
don't know what to tell the children on the worst aspects of what 
happened last year.'' Let's try to give these parents some help. What 
can they tell the children? What do they tell----
    The President. Well, it's interesting, you know. I get a lot of 
letters from parents and from children--interesting letters from 
children--and sometimes pretty young children--11-, 12-, 13-year-old 
kids writing me, some of them, on this very point, and offended that 
they're being used in that way, because what they say is, ``What

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I learned from this is what my parents always told me: that nobody is so 
big or so important that they're not subject to the same rules of human 
conduct; and that when they do things they shouldn't, they have to bear 
the consequences. But if they bear the consequences, say they're sorry 
and go on, they should be able to go on with their lives, because they 
also know that every person makes mistakes. No one is so big or so 
important that they are perfect.''
    And so that's what I would say to our children. That's what I think 
the lessons of all those Bible stories are, of the great figures of the 
Bible who did things they shouldn't have done. The reason those stories 
are in the Bible is to say, everyone sins, but everyone is held 
accountable, and everyone has a chance to go on--and that all three of 
those points need to be made. And if you say that to our children, I 
think that's what needs to be said.
    Kids are pretty smart, and they--this is a good lesson, not a bad 
lesson for them. I'm sorry that I had to be the example, and it's 
painful. But the lessons, the right lessons properly learned, will be 
good for them and good for our country.

Impeachment

    Mr. Rather. Mr. President, I hear this clock ticking, and it isn't 
the ``60 Minutes'' clock. And I do want to get back to the war 
situation, but in this category--last question, if you'll indulge me--
you agree that whatever you do, however this situation in Kosovo turns 
out, whatever else you do, in the first paragraph of your obituary is 
going to be a reference to what you consider among the worst things that 
has ever happened to you: the only President in the 20th century to be 
impeached; one of only two Presidents to be impeached. Give me some 
sense of how you feel about that, within yourself.
    The President. Well, first of all, I'm not at all sure that's right, 
that it will be the first paragraph of the obituary. And secondly, if it 
is, if the history writers are honest, they'll tell it for just exactly 
what it was. And I am honored that something that was indefensible was 
pursued and that I had the opportunity to defend the Constitution. That 
doesn't have anything to do with the fact that I did something I 
shouldn't have done, of which I am ashamed of, and which I apologize 
for. But it had nothing to do with the impeachment process. And I think 
that's what the American people, two-thirds of them, knew all along. And 
I determined that I would defend the Constitution and the work of my 
administration. And those that did not agree with what I had done and 
were furious that it had worked and that the country was doing well, and 
attempted to use what should have been a constitutional and legal 
process for political ends, did not prevail. And that's the way I saw 
it.
    I have no lingering animosity. I don't wake up every day mad at 
those people----
    Mr. Rather. You've got to be bitter about some of it.
    The President. I'm not. I have--I'm not. I learned--look, I'm not. 
And I'm not saying that for any reason other than that I have--part of 
the learning process that I went through in the last 6 years, but 
certainly in the last--and in the last several years when I was dealing 
with this, when I saw--all these other charges, they were always false; 
they never amounted to anything. And half the people that were 
propagating them knew they were false. I realized that, particularly in 
the last year, if I wanted people to give me forgiveness, I had to 
extend forgiveness. If I wanted to be free to be the best President and 
the best husband and father and the best person I could be, I had to 
free myself of bitterness.
    And I have worked very hard at it. And I have had very powerful 
examples. I look at a man like Nelson Mandela, who suffered enormously. 
Yes, he was part of a political movement that was threatening to the 
people who were in, but he didn't deserve to go to jail for 27 years. 
And in the 27 years he was there, he purged himself of his hatred and 
also of whatever might have been wrong with himself, and his hatred for 
other people. Now, if a person like that can rid himself of bitterness, 
what I went through was peanuts compared to that. It was nothing.
    And I think it's an--and any moment I spend full of anger and 
bitterness is a moment I am robbing from my wife or from my daughter or 
from my country or from my friends. So it's almost a selfish decision. 
But I do not regard this impeachment vote as some great badge of shame; 
I do not. Because it was--I do not believe it was warranted, and I don't 
think it was right.

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    And I believe, frankly, if you look back at President Andrew 
Johnson, who unfortunately, because of the circumstances under which he 
came to office, didn't have the opportunity to achieve very much while 
he was President, I think most people believe that he was unjustly 
impeached and that the fact that he stood up to it and refused to give 
in and came within much closer than I did--he came within only a vote of 
actually being removed--reflects well on him and the history of the 
country, not poorly.
    And so I just don't have bad feelings about that. But neither do I 
have feelings of anger and bitterness against those who did what they 
did, whether they believed it or whether it was political, or whatever. 
I just think that it's past us, and we need to put it behind us, and we 
need to go on. We owe that to the American people, to let it go. And all 
of us owe it to our families and our personal lives. All the great 
players here, they need to let it go and go on with the business of the 
country.

Serbia's Strategy in Kosovo

    Mr. Rather. Mr. President, you have been very generous with your 
time, and I appreciate it. I want to get back to the war. Let me sketch 
out for you a scenario which a number of diplomats and some military 
people have said this could happen: Milosevic will have defeated the 
Kosovo Liberation Army, self-described as such, and he will have rid 
Kosovo--driven out most of, if not all of, the Albanians. He's very near 
having accomplished that. So over the next few days, having accomplished 
that on the ground, while our air campaign tries to build this momentum 
you've talked about, he then says, ``Okay, I'm ready to talk.'' Doesn't 
that leave us defeated? Or does it?
    The President. It does if we accept that result--if we accept that 
result. Because I think we've got to say, ``But the Kosovars have all 
got to be able to come home, and they have to be secure, and they have 
to be given the autonomy of self-government''----
    Mr. Rather. Excuse me--you're talking about in some enclave, some 
protected enclave?
    The President. No, I'm talking about they're entitled to come back 
to Kosovo, to go back to their villages where they were, and to enjoy 
self-government and security. But keep in mind, Dan, let me say again, 
there is no scenario under which this last week could not have occurred, 
if he was willing to do it.
    Mr. Rather. You don't think the air campaign gave him the opening to 
do this?
    The President. No, no, that I'm sure of. I just met with a bunch of 
Kosovar Albanians here--excuse me, a bunch of Albanian-Americans here--
I'm sorry--in the White House. One man told me he had 24 cousins in 
Pristina. Every one of them said to me, ``Don't let people tell you that 
this NATO air campaign caused Milosevic 
to do that. Everybody knows that's a bunch of bull.''
    Mr. Rather. You're absolutely convinced----
    The President. Absolutely.
    Mr. Rather. ----that it didn't touch it off.
    The President. No. He had 40,000 
soldiers on the border and inside Kosovo.
    Mr. Rather. And hundreds of tanks?
    The President. Almost 300--before any of this happened. Last October 
he had already created a quarter of a 
million refugees before the NATO threat got him to stop. This is a part 
of his strategy. He started his ethnic cleansing politics with a big 
speech against the Kosovars in Kosovo 12 years ago, and then he got 
diverted into his wars in Bosnia and Croatia. So I believe this is a 
plan he had all along.
    Now, suppose--you could take any scenario. If we had said, ``Well, 
if you do this, ground troops are on the way''--suppose that had been 
said--it would take much longer to mobilize that than it did the air 
campaign. He had the armor; he had the 
men; he had the air cover; he had the weapons; he had all this stuff he 
could do.
    And the UCK, the Kosovar Liberation Army, all those people, all they 
could ever do was to fight what was, in effect, a guerrilla war, which 
they could still do. They may be run out of the country; they could come 
back. They may be run up into the hills; they can come down--with 
support they got from their kinfolks and relatives outside of the 
region.
    So I think it's very important to note that there--that under any 
set of circumstances, his military could 
have done what they have done these last 5 days.
    Mr. Rather. And you think they would have done----
    The President. Absolutely. I am totally convinced of that. So is 
everyone else that I know who's been dealing with this for any length of 
time. Would they have waited another week to

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do it? Maybe. But I'm convinced that that's exactly what they wanted to 
do. They didn't show up in those numbers with those tanks for their 
health. That's what they were going to do.
    So I think the real issue is--I think that that was a decision 
certainly made when he realized--he did 
not want the framework of the peace agreement, which was, let them have 
self-government within the autonomous framework that governed Yugoslavia 
for all those years, and let's have an international force in there to 
keep them safe. Even though the international force--I want to say 
again, because there may be a lot of Serbian-Americans listening to this 
interview--the international force, we made it clear that we would not 
go in there, and neither would our NATO Allies, unless they were also 
free to protect the Serbian minority in Kosovo, because so much blood 
has been shed and so many people that have been dislocated that they, 
too, are vulnerable to people taking it out on them because they're 
Serbs. So we said we would not go in there unless we also protected the 
Serbs.
    But, yes, I'm completely convinced. Prime Minister Blair believes that. Chancellor Schroeder believes that.
    Mr. Rather. And you believe it.
    The President. With every fiber of my being. I am convinced. Look at 
what this guy did in--let's go back to 
Bosnia: 2 million refugees, a quarter of a million people dead. There is 
no question that this is his strategy. And he was very angry that 
finally what had been a passive resistance from the Kosovars, a peaceful 
resistance for 10 years, began to manifest itself then in violent 
exchanges in return for--in reaction to what the Serbians had done.
    I think he wanted to clean them out. 
I think he wanted to ethically cleanse the country as much as he could. 
I think he wanted to drastically alter the population balance. I think 
he wanted to eradicate all the records of the Albanians and the property 
they own. I think he wanted to erase the history and start all over 
again. That's what I think.
    Mr. Rather. Is genocide too strong a word, Mr. President?
    The President. Well, as you know, I try to be hesitant in using it. 
There is no question that a few thousand people have been murdered 
because they were Kosovar Albanians. There's no question about that.
    Mr. Rather.  But you hesitate to use the word genocide.
    The President. But I think because--it's only a question of whether 
enough people have been killed yet. There's no question that what 
he was doing constitutes ethnic cleansing 
and that he was killing and uprooting people because of their ethnic 
heritage. There is no question about that. And I think that not only he, 
but others who are in decisionmaking positions, have to be held 
accountable for what they've done. And of course, this whole war crimes 
tribunal that's been set up to review what happened in the Balkans will 
have to review those facts. But the main thing I want to do is, whatever 
the label belongs on it, is to stop it if we can.

Legal Status of Kosovo

    Mr. Rather. Mr. President, I'm getting the wrap-up sign, and I must 
ask you--help me as a reporter. You seemed to hint within the last 24 
hours, at least hint--and the newspaper stories say, ``President hints 
at a change in position''--an independent Kosovo, as opposed to a semi-
autonomous Kosovo. Has there been a change in your thinking? Are you 
changing the policy? Is there likely to be one? Help me explain that to 
folks.
    The President. What I said, I'll say it again, because I think it's 
pretty clear. The United States has supported the historic legal status 
of Kosovo as an autonomous province of Serbia. We think it would be 
difficult for the Kosovars, politically, economically, to sustain 
independence because of their small size and because of the stage of 
their economic development.
    But what I said, and I'll say again, is that Mr. 
Milosevic is in danger of forfeiting the 
claim of the Serbs to have government over those people in their own 
land. That's the problem. It's his conduct. It's not that we've had a 
change of heart about what would be best, if you will, or that we would 
honor the rule of international law, which still has lodged Kosovo as an 
independent province of Serbia. It's whether--and we tried to tell Mr. 
Milosevic all along that this peace process was the best chance he had 
to keep the Kosovars as a part of Serbia, because there would be a 3-
year period during which they could demonstrate, the Serbs, good faith 
in letting them govern themselves. We could protect the Serbian minority 
as well as the Albanian majority in Kosovo. And they could see that 
economically it would be better, as well

[[Page 485]]

as politically. He's just about blown all that off. That's the----
    Mr. Rather. You think he now has that at deep risk?
    The President. It's very much at risk, not because of a change of 
heart by us but because of a change of behavior by him.
    Mr. Rather. Mr. President, thank you.
    The President. Thank you.

Note: The interview was taped at 4:21 p.m. in the Cabinet Room at the 
White House for later broadcast, and the transcript was embargoed for 
release until 9 p.m. In his remarks, the President referred to President 
Slobodan Milosevic of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (Serbia and 
Montenegro); Prime Minister Yevgeniy Primakov of Russia; Gen. Wesley K. 
Clark, USA, Supreme Allied Commander Europe; President Nelson Mandela of 
South Africa; Prime Minister Tony Blair of the United Kingdom; and 
Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder of Germany. A tape was not available for 
verification of the content of this interview.