[Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents Volume 35, Number 47 (Monday, November 29, 1999)]
[Pages 2443-2445]
[Online from the Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]

<R04>
Remarks to American Troops at Camp Bondsteel, Kosovo

November 23, 1999

    The President. Thank you. Hello.
    Audience members. Hello!
    The President. From the reception you gave my daughter, I thought he 
was going to say I was Chelsea's father, too. [Laughter] Thank you.
    I want to thank all of you for making us feel so welcome. I want to 
introduce the people who came with me: our Secretary of State, Madeleine 
Albright; our NATO Commander, General Wes Clark; my Chief of Staff, John 
Podesta; National Security Adviser Sandy Berger; and four Members of the 
United States Congress, Representative Jack Kingston from Georgia, 
Representative Peter Deutsch from Florida, Representative Carolyn 
Maloney from New York City, and Representative Eliot Engel from New York 
City; and Chelsea.
    Let me say that we are honored to be with you. We thank you for your 
service. We're looking forward to eating a big, early Thanksgiving 
dinner with the men and women of Task Force Falcon.
    I want to salute some of the troops for what they have done at Camp 
Bondsteel and Camp Monteith. And also I want to thank those from other 
nations in our multinational Brigade East. I want to visit you now, at 
this season of Thanksgiving, not only because you're doing a hard job a 
long way from home but because here we've got a lot to be thankful for.
    Thanks to you, we have reversed ethnic cleansing. We have a 
successful military mission which was brilliantly executed, with no 
combat casualties. And now, we have a chance, not a guarantee but a 
chance, to work with these folks to build a lasting peace in the 
Balkans. Now that Operation Allied Force is over, there is a new 
struggle underway, and Camp Bondsteel is on the frontlines. Operation 
Joint Guardian will protect and deepen the peace we are working so hard 
to make permanent.
    You certainly haven't wasted any time. The story of Bondsteel reads 
like something out of the settling of the Old West. Not long ago, this 
was a hayfield. Soon after NATO came into Kosovo, it became a beehive of 
activity. Between the Army Engineers and the Navy Seabees----

[At this point, audience members interrupted the President with cheers 
and laughter.]

    The President. Yeah. Well, anyway, somewhere--[laughter]--somewhere 
between the Army Engineers and the Navy Seabees, you move over a half a 
million cubic yards of earth. You brought enough gravel to lay a two-
lane road all across the State of Missouri. In less than 5 months, you 
built 160 sea huts, a chapel, a gym, a hospital, mess halls, a PX, a 
barber shop, and an aviation area.
    I want to salute a few of the responsible units--don't be shy: the 
Headhunters of the Engineer Brigade 1st Infantry Division; the Blue 
Devils of the 3504 Parachute--I just want to note for the press that the 
Blue Devils of the 3504 Parachute Infantry Regiment are also known as 
``devils in baggy pants''; the Steel Tigers of the 177 Armor Battalion; 
the Bone Crushers of the 2d Platoon Bravo Company; the Blue Spaders of 
the 126 Infantry Regiment; the Hellcats of the 299th Forward Support 
Battalion; the Eagles of Task

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Force 21 Aviation Regiment; the Spartans of the 793d Military Police 
Battalion; the Dagger Brigade of the 1st Infantry Division; the Navy 
Seabees of Battalion 3.

[Unit members cheered as they were mentioned.]

    The President. You did pretty well.
    Let me say to all of you, I know that a lot of your assignments are 
still dangerous. I appreciate the hard work you have done to protect all 
the people of Kosovo, including the Serbs. I appreciate your pursuit of 
local thugs, like the mad mortar-man. I appreciate your constant 
mediation between people who have a long way to go toward 
reconciliation.
    I'm told that children routinely say, ``We love you, United 
States.'' Well, they love the United States because they love you, 
because we gave them their freedom back; we gave them a chance to go 
home; we're giving the children a chance to have a different life than 
their parents have lived.
    But let me just say this--I say this every time I speak to a group 
of American service men and women overseas--the biggest problem in the 
world today, with all the modern technology, all your fancy computers, 
everybody getting on the Internet, all the new discoveries in science, 
the biggest problem in the world today is the oldest problem of human 
society. People tend to be afraid of people who don't look like them and 
don't worship God the way they do and come from a different place. And 
when you're afraid of somebody, it's just a short step to disliking 
them. If you dislike them, it's a short step to hating them. If you hate 
them, it's a short step to dehumanizing them. And once you do that, you 
don't feel bad about killing them. Now that's what this whole deal is 
about.
    And you see this problem in our inability to solve the peace in the 
Middle East, although we're getting there. But it's been a long time 
coming. We may be about to have a final breakthrough in the Irish civil 
war--been 30 years coming. Almost 800,000 people were killed in 100 days 
in Rwanda by people of 2 different tribes, one hacking the others to 
death with machetes; they hardly had any guns at all.
    And if you strip it all away, the number one problem in this old 
world today is the problem of Bosnia, the problem of Kosovo: It's racial 
and ethnic and religious hatred and dehumanization.
    All you've got to do is look around the room today, and you see that 
our military is a stunning rebuke to that. This is the American idea in 
flesh and blood, all of you. You come from all different backgrounds, 
all different races, all different religious faiths, all different walks 
of life. And you're here working together as a team. You can appreciate 
your differences. You can even make fun of them. You can even make jokes 
about them because you know that your common humanity and your shared 
values are even more important than your differences.
    Now, the most important thing you can do, besides keeping these 
people alive and having security, is to teach that to the children and 
to their parents by the power of your example and your own testimony. 
Because I am telling you, what they're going through here today is an 
example, but by no means the only example, of the worst problem the 
world faces on the eve of the new millennium. And it violates everything 
we in America stand for. And the power of our weapons could win the 
military battle in Kosovo, but the peace can only be won by the human 
heart.
    And every day they see you, every day these little old kids see you 
working together--even if they don't speak our language, even if they 
never met any African-Americans or Hispanics before, even if they don't 
know any Asians before--they can see; they have eyes; they'll get it. 
You just show up, and you be yourself, and you do what you're supposed 
to do, and you treat them right. The power of your example will show 
them that they do not have to be trapped in the pattern which led to the 
slaughter of a quarter of a million people in Bosnia, 2\1/2\ million 
refugees there, almost a million refugees here, though we acted quicker, 
and because we acted quicker, they all came home.
    But now that they came home, they've got to learn how to win the 
peace. And I say that to the other nations who are here represented. I 
want people to see Americans working with you. I want these children to 
know that the world is a better place when

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people are proud of their own race and ethnicity and religion, but 
respectful of others; when they are secure enough in who they are that 
they don't have to put anybody else down, hurt anybody else, torch 
anybody else's church or mosque just to feel that they matter. This is 
the most important issue in the whole world today.
    And just by getting up every day, going to work, keeping the kind of 
morale that you manifested today with your cheers and your pride, you 
are a rebuke to the biggest problem in the world, and the power of your 
example can do more than anything else to help us to win the peace.
    Thank you, God bless you, and Happy Thanksgiving.

[At this point, a gift was presented to the President.]

    The President. You all know I have an important job, because I'm 
your Commander in Chief, right? [Cheers] Well, tomorrow, because I'm 
also the President and I have broad executive authority--I get home at 
10 o'clock tonight, we're all dog-tired, but I've got to get up and go 
to work tomorrow because I have to do something that every President has 
been doing since the 1920's: I have to pardon the Thanksgiving turkey. 
And they bring me a big turkey, and we let one go so we can eat all the 
others. [Laughter] And they put this turkey in a petting zoo for 
children to see in the Washington area. Anyway, it's always a great 
deal. I'm just saying, when I go into the office tomorrow to pardon the 
turkey, I'm going to take the falcon and put it on my desk so all of 
America can see, when my desk is on television, what you're doing.
    Thank you.

Note: The President spoke at 1:13 p.m. in the base theater/festival 
tent. In his remarks, he referred to Brig. Gen. Craig Peterson, USA, 
Commander, Task Force Falcon, who introduced the President; and Gen. 
Wesley K. Clark, USA, Supreme Allied Commander Europe.