For Immediate Release
Office of the Press Secretary
August 14, 2001
Remarks by the President to the Press Pool While in Lunch Line at YMCA Picnic
Rocky Mountain National Park, Colorado
1:05 P.M. MDT
Q Mr. President,
I've got a Mideast question for you. The Israeli tanks moved
into a Palestinian city, the furthest incursion yet. Any new
reaction to that?
THE PRESIDENT: I have no new
reaction. My only point is -- and I'm going to continue to
make the point and so is my administration, that the cycle of violence
has got to end in order for the peace process, or any peace process, to
begin.
And, therefore, Mr. Arafat must clamp down
on the suicide bombers and on the violence. And the Israelis
must show restraint. We've got to break the
cycle. In order for there to be any discussions about world
peace, it requires a willingness of both sides to come to the
table. And my administration continues to talk to both sides
and we will continue to work to try to bring a sense of -- a desire, a
sense of purpose on the partners there in the Middle East to sit down
and one, reject the violence and start meaningful discussions about how
to reach an accord. It's essential that the violence stops.
Q Sounds like a
strongly held feeling.
THE PRESIDENT: Well, I feel
very strongly about it because I'm worried about the cycle of violence
continuing to escalate. And it's not good for our -- it's
not good for that part of the world, nor is it good for the rest of the
world, that the Middle East be a place of violence.
We've been making good progress in
Macedonia, it looks like, so that part of the world is beginning to
calm down a little bit.
The Middle East is a cauldron of violence
and we've got to -- and we will continue to be very much involved in
insisting that both parties break the cycle.
Q Thank you, sir.
END 1:08 P.M. MDT
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