[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: WILLIAM J. CLINTON (1999, Book II)]
[November 2, 1999]
[Pages 1952-1954]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



Remarks to the American Embassy Community in Oslo
November 2, 1999

    Thank you very much. Well, Mr. Ambassador, Doreen, Mr. DCM, Congressman Sabo, thank you 
for coming with us. And thank you so much, Secretary Albright, for all you've done to make this a safer, better 
world.
    Now, Hermelin did not tell you the 
truth. [Laughter] He says, ``Come to Norway. I guarantee you a standing 
ovation.'' That's why you don't have any chairs today. [Laughter] He did 
not even tell you the truth about how he got this job. This deal about, 
``Oh, I got to go to Norway, and I thought I hit the lottery,'' that's 
not what happened. [Laughter]
    He called me, and he said--you said, ``Name one person in America 
who has done more for you than I have''--[laughter]--``just one.'' I 
said, ``Hillary.'' [Laughter] He 
said, ``You can't make her an Ambassador.'' So I said, ``Well, what do 
you want?'' He said, ``I want to go to Norway.'' I said, ``David, you 
can't even find Norway on a map.'' [Laughter] He said, ``No, you have to 
appoint me to Norway.'' He said, ``You know the Oslo accords and the 
role they have in the Middle East peace process?'' I said, ``Yeah, sure, 
of course, I do.'' He said, ``I, David Hermelin, am the last remaining 
Norwegian Jew on the face of the Earth.'' [Laughter]
    So even though it isn't true--[laughter]--hasn't he been good for 
the American Embassy? You know, one of the great joys of my life, 
because I've spent so much of it in public life, I'll be--when I leave 
on January 21st, 2001, I'll be moving out of public housing for the 
first time in 20 years. [Laughter] One of the great joys of my life is, 
I've gotten to meet so many thousands of people from all over the world, 
all over our country, from all different walks of life with all 
different slants on things and all kinds of different talents. And this 
man and his wife, his children, and his family are truly among the most 
wonderful human beings I've ever met anywhere in the world. And I am so 
blessed that they have been with me.
    I also want to say again to those of you who are Norwegian 
nationals, how profoundly grateful I am to His Majesty, the King, and to the Prime Minister and the Government and people of Norway for inviting me 
to come and for opening once again their hearts to the peace process in 
the Middle East and having this truly remarkable event today in honor of 
our friend Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin.
    And for those of you who were there or who saw it on television, I'm 
sure you'll agree it was a very moving event. And I can tell you, I met 
just before I came here with Prime Minister Barak 
and Chairman Arafat, and I think that the 
event and the feeling of the people and the luncheon that followed 
really did help to put them in a good frame of mind as we kind of head 
for the last sprint toward getting a framework agreement on all these 
final status issues by next February. It will be very difficult to do.
    The chances that we can do it now are dramatically increased in no 
small measure because we have had one more great gift from this small 
but remarkable and wonderful country. So I thank them very much for 
that.

[[Page 1953]]

    I would like to thank all the people who are here, our career 
Foreign Service officers, beginning with you, Mr. Gundersen, and all the others who are here, people who have worked 
for the other departments of the Federal Government, the military people 
who are here. I'd like to thank the young musicians for providing our 
music today. Thank you very much. It was very good.
    But I want to especially thank those of you who have given your life 
in service to our country. And I want to reiterate and reaffirm what 
Secretary Albright said. You know, in my lifetime, literally in my 
lifetime, which, unfortunately, is getting older by the minute, our 
country has never before been in quite this position where we had the 
strongest economy in our history, where our social fabric was coming 
together, not being driven apart, where we have a very high level of 
confidence that we can do things.
    For those of you who are Americans, I can tell you, back home in 
America, if our economic expansion continues--it's already the longest 
peacetime expansion in history; if it continues until next February, it 
will be the longest one we ever had, including those that embraced the 
wars. We have the lowest unemployment rate in 29 years, the lowest 
welfare rolls in 30 years, the lowest crime rates in 30 years, the 
lowest poverty rates in 20 years. Our country is moving in the right 
direction.
    Since the fall of the Berlin Wall and the end of the cold war, this 
is literally the first time in my lifetime that we have had both a very 
strong economy and a society coming together and the absence of an 
overarching threat from outside or from inside our country.
    I would argue to all of you that that imposes upon us enormous 
responsibilities, greater than we have had in the past, even in the cold 
war, to try to build the Nation of our dreams for our children in the 
new millennium but also to try to bring the world to the point where the 
forces of peace and freedom are triumphing everywhere and the sense that 
humanity will continue to increase its sway against all the forces of 
darkness will be far more deeply embedded. And if we walk away from 
that, we will never be able to explain it to our children.
    So, yes, I want to pass a good diplomatic budget; yes, I think the 
United States should lead the world toward forgiving the debt, much of 
the debt of the poorest countries in this world for the millennium, just 
as the Pope and others have asked us to do. 
I think the United States should help to bring empowerment opportunities 
of education and health care and the economy to poor village people, 
particularly poor village women, and guarantee that their little girls, 
as well as their little boys, can go to school, on every continent. And 
I think that we ought to continue to lead the world's fight against the 
proliferation of dangerous weapons and against terrorists.
    I know we didn't ratify the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty, but I 
think we will do that before it's all done. And I do not believe the 
United States will withdraw from the world. But to all of you who have 
stayed on the forefront of this important public service all these 
years, I just want to thank you from the bottom of my heart. And I want 
to urge you to do whatever you can to urge your friends, your relatives, 
and others back home to think about this moment in terms of what it 
means for our country.
    Every advanced country has to deal with the aging of its population; 
most of them, like us, have to deal with the increasing diversity of its 
children. But no other country can do what we should be doing now to 
advance peace and freedom and to stand against terrorism and the 
proliferation of dangerous weapons. We cannot walk away from this. And 
you're a good example--you and what happened here these last 2 days--of 
why we don't need to and why we can be successful.
    Let me say, in closing, it has been a very great honor for me to 
serve. I gave you all those numbers not because I think that I brought 
them about singlehandedly but because this is what I want America to be 
like at the close of the 20th century. But it only matters if now we do 
the right thing with our good fortune and our prosperity. And anything 
you can do to make sure that we do and to tell people back home about a 
country like Norway, the burdens they bear, the responsibilities they 
shoulder, the dreams that we share, will help.
    So again, let me thank you all and urge you all on. And thanks for 
David Hermelin's guaranteed standing 
ovation.
    Thank you very much.

Note: The President spoke at 7:30 p.m. in the foyer at the U.S. Embassy. 
In his remarks, he referred to U.S. Ambassador David B. Hermelin

[[Page 1954]]

and his wife, Doreen; Jon Gundersen, U.S. Deputy Chief of Mission; King 
Harald V and Prime Minister Kjell Magne Bondevik of Norway; Prime 
Minister Ehud Barak of Israel; Chairman Yasser Arafat of the Palestinian 
Authority; and Pope John Paul II. A portion of these remarks could not 
be verified because the tape was incomplete.