[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: William J. Clinton (1999, Book I)]
[June 11, 1999]
[Pages 919-923]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



Remarks at Whiteman Air Force Base in Knob Noster, Missouri
June 11, 1999

    Thank you very, very much. General Lyles, 
thank you for your introduction and your service. I'd like to thank 
General Barnidge for making me feel 
right at home. You can tell he's pretty proud of you, and he makes a 
good speech, doesn't he? I didn't know whether he was a politician or a 
general the first time I met him. [Laughter] I've got the coin, General. 
[Laughter] I think I know the rules. You got yours? [Laughter]
    Actually, ladies and gentlemen, when I discovered these coins, I 
decided one way I could always remember the men and women of our 
military is to keep every coin I receive visible. And for as long as I 
have been President, I have done that. And if you saw the speech I gave 
last night on Kosovo, when the camera zooms in I have three racks of 
these coins behind me. I now have nearly 300 of these, from every unit, 
every enlisted person, every officer, every commander that has given me 
one of these, I still have the coins. And everyone who comes into the 
Oval Office sees them all, to remember you and what you do for our 
country. And this will be on that desk tonight when I get home, and I 
thank you for it very much.
    I want to thank my good friend Congressman Ike Skelton for representing you so well and representing all of 
America's military families and military interests so well. I'd like to 
thank my National Security Adviser, Sandy Berger, who did a lot of working in planning and executing our 
efforts in Kosovo and others who have come here with me today.
    There are a large number of Congressmen here, and I want to 
acknowledge all of them, because I think it's important that you know 
you have broad support. We have four Members from Missouri here: in 
addition to Congressman Skelton, Congresswoman Pat Danner, Congresswoman Karen McCarthy, 
and Congressman Kenny Hulshof from 
Missouri. They are all here. I'd like to ask them to stand and be 
recognized. [Applause]
    We have Congressman Norm Dicks from 
Washington and Congressman Steny Hoyer from 
Maryland, as you heard, two big supporters of the B-2 program. We have 
Congressman Leonard Boswell from Iowa and 
Congressman Dennis Moore from Kansas, two of 
your neighbors here. And we have two Congressmen who came all the way 
from New York State, Congressman Eliot Engel 
and Congressman Peter King. I'd like to ask 
the rest of the members of the congressional delegation to stand. I 
thank them for being here. [Applause]
    We all came down from Washington today on behalf of your fellow 
Americans to salute the men and women of Whiteman Air Force Base, to 
thank you for a job well done, to honor you for the way you honor 
America.
    Over the past few months, our Nation has faced an extraordinary 
challenge. A decade of brutal policies in the former Yugoslavia, and in

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particular, in Kosovo, exploded into a humanitarian catastrophe when 
Serbian troops evicted over one million people from homes they had lived 
in with their families for generations. It was the culmination of a long 
campaign by the Serbian President, Mr. Milosevic, to exploit ethnic and religious differences to 
strengthen his power over the people of the former Yugoslavia.
    Now, in nearly every country, at some point or another, there are 
demagogs who have tried to exploit people's ethnic, racial, and 
religious differences. The difference here is that he wasn't just calling people names. This exploitation 
involved mass murder, mass rape, mass burning, mass destruction of 
religious and cultural institutions and personal property records, an 
attempt to erase the very presence of a people from their land, and to 
get rid of them dead or alive. We have come to call it ethnic cleansing. 
The International War Crimes Tribunal prosecutor indicted Mr. 
Milosevic and the leaders who worked with 
him for war crimes and crimes against humanity. It is that which the B-
2's from Whiteman flew to reverse.
    I asked you, our Armed Forces, and our NATO Allies to act when all 
of our diplomatic efforts failed after Mr. Milosevic had already put 40,000 troops and 300 tanks in and 
around Kosovo. I asked you to act early because the world community took 
4 long years to mobilize itself to stop the aggression in Bosnia, and by 
the time it happened, there were a quarter of a million people dead and 
2\1/2\ million refugees.
    And the great dream that we all had after World War II and after the 
cold war, that finally Europe would be free and undivided and at peace, 
and Americans would never have to go there in large numbers to fight and 
die again, was threatened by the oldest demon of human society, our fear 
and hatred of people who are different from us. That is what he 
exploited, in a systematic way, to threaten the future stability and 
peace of Europe and the security of the United States and to do 
unspeakable humanitarian horrors to innocent civilians.
    So when diplomacy failed, we and our NATO Allies acted. We attacked 
the Serb forces with air power for 79 days with three goals: first, to 
return the refugees with security and self-government; second, to get 
the Serb forces out of Kosovo; and finally, to have an international 
security force, with NATO at its core, to deploy to protect all the 
people of that troubled land, the ethnic Albanians and the ethnic Serbs.
    Today, the three objectives have been achieved. The Serbian forces 
are withdrawing, an international force with NATO at its core is 
preparing to enter, and very soon the refugees will go home. Mr. 
Milosevic accepted these conditions for 
one reason: You made him do it. Thanks to you and the others who flew 
and supported our air mission and those of our NATO Allies, he ran out 
of room, and he ran out of time. And thanks to you, the century is 
ending not with helpless indignation over such unspeakable cruelty but 
with its opposite, a ringing affirmation by free people of human 
dignity.
    It was not an easy campaign. Kosovo is a long way from Whiteman, 
even in a B-2. We had to coordinate all the details with 18 NATO Allies. 
The Serbs had sophisticated air defenses. They placed innocent civilians 
around military targets. The weather was often downright atrocious, 
especially when we began the operation.
    Yet, day after day, with remarkable precision, our forces pounded 
every element of Mr. Milosevic's military 
machine, from tanks to fuel supply, to anti-aircraft weapons, to the 
military and political support. Most Americans will never know how hard 
this was or how hard our forces worked, the pilots, the crews, the 
people who make it happen on the ground. But I want you to know that we 
are very proud of you.
    I'd like to single out a few groups for special thanks today. The 
pilots, the crews, the weaponeers, the maintenance personnel who are 
part of the B-2 team stationed here at Whiteman should take special 
pride in proving what a truly remarkable aircraft can do, flying 30-hour 
sorties, dropping ordnance, returning to base, night after night. And as 
our Commander said, as far as we know, they still don't know you were 
there. Listen to this: The B-2's from Whiteman flew less than one 
percent of the total missions, but dropped 11 percent of the bombs.
    We honor the pilots and the crews, but we should never forget that 
for every 2-man mission, about 60 people from the mission planning cell 
worked 2 or 3 days to make sure nothing went wrong. That's what I call 
teamwork. You put real meaning into the 509th's motto, ``Follow Us.'' A 
lot of good people are about to follow you back home to Kosovo, and I 
thank you for it.
    I would also like to thank the reservists of the 442d for all you 
do. I know how badly some of you wanted to take your Warthogs over

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to Serbia. I assure you, you're doing a fine job protecting us, just by 
being ready to drop everything at a moment's notice. And I want to thank 
the people who make Whiteman such a fine place to live and work, 
including the Missouri National Guard.
    And lastly, I want to pay special tribute to the families who give 
strength and support to our air men and women who do such a difficult 
job. The wives, the husbands, the children of our military personnel are 
a part of our military team, and they serve our country in a very 
special way.
    The statistics of Operation Allied Force tell the story better than 
I can. There were 30,000 sorties. Two planes were lost, but every single 
crew member returned safely, an extraordinary testament to your courage 
and skill. Of course, we cannot forget the two Army airmen we lost while 
training in Albania, and I hope you will remember them and their 
families in your prayers, Chief Warrant Officer David Gibbs and Chief Warrant Officer Kevin Reichert.
    Let me say one other thing that I hope will try to illustrate what 
this is really about. I'm proud to be in Whiteman today for many 
reasons. For over half a century, the brave airmen of this base have 
been crucial to our efforts to build peace and support freedom. We may 
be far from Europe here in the heartland, and I suppose it's unlikely 
that Knob Noster will ever be invaded by a foreign power. [Laughter] But 
you have always been close to the frontlines, and the people in that 
small community have supported you in being close to the frontlines.
    The 442d Fighter Wing supported the D-Day landings 55 years ago last 
Sunday. The 509th Bomber Wing distinguished itself in the Pacific 
theater. Whiteman was a bastion of strength throughout the cold war. Ten 
years ago, for example, who would have thought that a former leader of 
the Soviet Union, Mikhail Gorbachev, 
would come here to have you sing ``Happy Birthday'' to him--[laughter]--
or that he would have the gall to accuse General Barnidge of singing off-key. [Laughter]
    In this decade, in the wake of the cold war, our men and women in 
uniform have played a crucial role, and so have you. And with the B-2, 
you have been even closer to the frontlines. From Iraq to Haiti to 
Bosnia to Kosovo, our men and women in uniform have shown dictators they 
can't shatter their people and threaten their neighbors with impunity.
    But this is the point I want you to think about. You helped to put 
the lie to Mr. Milosevic's campaign of 
ethnic cleansing and killing in two ways, not one. First, and most 
obviously, you did it with the power of the bombing campaign. But 
second, you did it with the power of your example. What do I mean by 
that? His whole justification for power has been to tell the Serbian 
people that they cannot and should not have to live with the Bosnian 
Muslims, with the Kosovar Albanian Muslims, with the Croatian Catholics, 
that the only pure and great people worthy to be part of Greater Serbia 
are those who share their ethnic background and their faith, that their 
country can only be great when everybody's just like everybody else. 
Well, look around here. You put the lie to that by the power of your 
example. And make no mistake about it, it is even more powerful than the 
power of our bombs.
    I invite the people of this world today who say that people cannot 
get along across racial and ethnic and religious lines to have a good 
look at the United States military, to have a good look at the members 
of the United States Air Force in this hangar today. We have proved that 
when people are bound together by shared values, their differences make 
them stronger and make our community stronger; that everyone has a 
contribution to make and everyone is a child of God, worthy to be 
developed to the fullest of his or her own capacity; and that our 
differences make our lives more interesting, even more fun, as long as 
we recognize that fundamentally what is most important is our common 
humanity.
    Make no mistake about it: every day you get up and go to work, every 
day you work through a difference you're having with somebody who comes 
from a different part of the country or a different background than you 
do, every day you learn to live by performing your mission better 
working together, you put the lie to the idea that has driven Mr. 
Milosevic's power and that of every other 
dictator in this century who tried to get people to hate others because 
they had a different color skin, because they had a different ethnic 
background, because they worshiped God in a different way.
    And make no mistake about it: In a world that is smaller and smaller 
and smaller, where we are growing closer through the Internet, through 
links of trade, through shared culture, where people will become more 
vulnerable to

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one another through open borders, it is a very important thing for the 
safety and security of the United States for us to be able to hold up 
for the whole world the example of our men and women in uniform and say: 
This is the future we should all seek in the 21st century.
    Yes, I am very proud of the B-2's. I am proud of the cooperation 
across the services. I know the Air Force is grateful for the radar 
jamming provided by Navy and Marine aircraft, the Navy TLAMS fired from 
ships in the Mediterranean that made the flights safer, the Army and 
Marine units taking care of the refugees. I'm grateful for all of that 
cooperation, but fundamentally I am most grateful for the power of your 
example.
    In our military, we have Asian-Americans, African-Americans, Latino-
Americans, European-Americans of every stripe, including Albanian-
Americans and Serbian-Americans. I don't want anybody to get the idea 
that we have a grudge or bad feelings about the people of Serbia. They 
were our allies in World War II. They fill many neighborhoods in some of 
our largest cities. We cheer for them on professional sports teams. Many 
of us know them as our friends. This is not about a people; this is 
about a rotten idea that needs to be wiped from the pages of history. 
That, you have helped to do.
    And I say to you, we have to keep working on it. If we want to be a 
force for good around the world, we've got to keep working to be good at 
home. We've got to keep working to live up to the ideas of our Founders, 
that we are all created equal, that we have a constant obligation 
throughout our lives to broaden the circle of opportunity and deepen the 
meaning of freedom and draw closer together as a national community.
    These past months were a defining moment for the forces of freedom 
in our Alliance. This was the longest and most difficult military 
campaign NATO ever engaged in, in its entire 50 years. Mr. 
Milosevic, who believed that strength 
comes from everything being the same, thought that his campaign for 
Greater Serbia would break the unity of the incredible diversity of the 
NATO Alliance. He thought open societies with free dissent--where, as 
you know, everybody in America was free to tell me I was wrong about 
this from the get-go--he thought that made us weak.
    But he turned out to be wrong. He 
turned out to be wrong, yes, because the B-2 is a great aircraft, and 
the people flying the fighters out of Germany and Italy did a brilliant 
job, and the ships firing the TLAMS were great, and because the leaders 
were strong and tough and they hung together. That's fine, and that had 
a lot to do with it.
    But what made all that possible? How did we get to that moment in 
the first place? Because we had made a decision as a free people to 
respect the inherent dignity of every person, to give everybody a 
chance, to learn from people who are different, to be on the same team. 
Let me tell you, that is something money can't buy and propaganda can't 
erase, and it is an example that I hope the world will see all the more 
clearly in the aftermath of your success in Kosovo.
    Think what would have happened if we hadn't done this. Mr. Milosevic's victory would have been a license for 
despots around the world to deal with ethnic minorities simply by 
murdering or expelling them from their land. Whenever people have 
trouble with people who were different, they say: ``Well, just get rid 
of them. Kill as many as you want; nobody will do anything. And if you 
run them out of your country, the rich countries will take care of them, 
anyway. Just ethnically cleanse everyplace so you will never have to 
think about or look at or consider the interest of anybody that's the 
slightest bit different from you.''
    But instead, we end the 20th century and begin a new one with a 
respect for human rights and human dignity and international law. This 
is not America's first victory over tyranny, and unfortunately, it 
probably will not be our last. But it is a moment for all of you to 
thank God for the opportunity we have had to live in our country and 
serve our country at this moment in history, to reap the benefits of its 
opportunities, and to have a chance to move it a little closer to its 
ideals.
    As we celebrate the victory, I also ask you to remember this: There 
are challenges ahead. We still have to win the peace. Those folks have 
to go home, and they've got to have a roof over their head before it 
gets too cold to be outside. We've got landmines to take up and 
businesses to rebuild and a future to make.
    That work, too, can be dangerous for those who follow in your 
footsteps in the peacekeeping missions. But it is very much in our 
interest to help them rebuild and to draw together--to teach them what 
we already know, that if

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they have something to look forward to and something to work for and 
something to get up in the morning and smile about, it's a lot easier 
for people with superficial differences to find common interests. And so 
we have to be a part of that, as well.
    Whenever I come to Missouri, a State I've always loved, since I grew 
up to the south, in Arkansas, I think of President Truman, who was the 
President when I was born and whom my family idolized. Congressman 
Skelton knew Harry Truman, and I think that we 
would all admit that Harry Truman knew something about standing up for 
what he believed in. President Truman would be very, very proud of the 
Whiteman family today.
    In the final days of World War II, Harry Truman said: ``It is easier 
to remove tyrants and destroy concentration camps than it is to kill the 
ideas which gave them birth and strength. Victory on the battlefield was 
essential, but it was not enough. For a good peace, a lasting peace, 
decent people of the Earth must remain determined to strike down the 
evil spirit which has hung over the world for the last decade.''
    Well, the decent people of the world are determined to rebuild 
Kosovo and the Balkans. Think about the spirit.
    If you don't remember anything else I said today, remember this. 
Your victory was achieved for two reasons: one, the power and skill and 
courage of our pilots and our crews and the awesome capacity of our 
planes and our bombs; but two, the power of the example that you set in 
our military, a stern rebuke, on a daily basis, to ethnic cleansing and 
a reaffirmation of the moral worth and the sheer joy of working together 
as equal human beings for a good cause.
    Thank you, and God bless you.

Note: The President spoke at 11:50 a.m. in Building 1117. In his 
remarks, he referred to Gen. Lester Lyles, USAF, Vice Chief of Staff, 
U.S. Air Force; Brig. Gen. Leroy Barnidge, Jr., USAF, Wing Commander, 
509th Bomb Wing; and President Slobodan Milosevic of the Federal 
Republic of Yugoslavia (Serbia and Montenegro).