Remarks by President Clinton and Prime Minister Bertie Ahern to Government Leaders, Members of the Oireachtas (12/12/00)
                                THE WHITE HOUSE

                         Office of the Press Secretary
                               (Dublin, Ireland)
      ______________________________________________________________
                For Immediate Release    December 12, 2000


                          REMARKS BY PRESIDENT CLINTON
                        AND PRIME MINISTER BERTIE AHERN
                             TO GOVERNMENT LEADERS,
                           MEMBERS OF THE OIREACHTAS

                              Guinness Storehouse
                                      Dublin, Ireland


2:00 P.M. (L)


     PRIME MINISTER AHERN:  Mr. President, First Lady and Senator-elect,
Chelsea, friends.  We're gathered here today to pay our tribute to
President Clinton and to say a warm thank you to him for eight years of
strong leadership which has helped bring the benefits of peace and
prosperity to people in Ireland, and to people all over the world.
(Applause.)

     We're gathered for this tribute to President Clinton in St. James'
Gate in the heart of the Liberties of the greatest city in the world.
(Applause.)  The Liberties are one of Dublin's great communities, and it's
here that a great Irish businessman, Arthur Guinness, started the brew
Guinness over 250 years ago, which in time became a global brand with
strong links to Ireland.

     And the Guinness story, ladies and gentlemen, reminds us that
innovation and trade are very much part and parcel of the heritage of
Dublin and this community.  And we're working hard to make sure that
innovation remains a hallmark of this country into the future.  For
example, here in the Liberties, plans are underway to develop a digital hub
as part of our strategy for this country to be a leader in the new
Internet-enabled economy.  At the heart of this district will be Media-lab
Europe, a unique partnership between my government and the world-famous
Massachusetts Institute of Technology.  It will bring two global names
together -- Guinness and Media-lab, symbols of the strong partnership
across the Atlantic, which is the grounds for our confidence about the
future.

     We will build a future here, using the creativity of researchers and
students, entrepreneurs and artists from Ireland to the whole world.  And
we renew the fabric of this historic community and cherish its heritage.
And as evidence of the same spirit of partnership in the new technologies,
I'm pleased to announce the result of the work of the National Research and
Education Network provider, the HEAnet.  Broad-band links are set to
increase over 20 times between Irish and U.S. research institutions.  It
will mean closer research cooperation in Internet, too, and next-generation
initiatives between our higher institutes of learning, going forward.

     Mr. President, in the eight years of your presidency, Ireland has
changed, and changed very fast.  We've a new economy and a modern society.
The economy is now in its seventh year of sustained growth, has grown by
over 9 percent per annum in the last three years.  A key part of that
success has been the social partnership model which has underpinned strong
economic and social development.

     But we have also been fortunate to benefit from a positive
international economic environment, including a very positive and a dynamic
relationship with a strong U.S. economy during the Clinton years.  In your
term of office the U.S. has led the new technologies and U.S. business has
globalized.  Ireland has proved exceptionally attractive as location for
them in Europe.  Ireland has captured up to 10 percent of all U.S. foreign
direct investment into the EU in recent years, and up to 40 percent of
greenfield investment in electronics.

     Many of the companies represented here today have invested hugely in
Ireland in the past eight years.  Among these are Dell and Gateway,
Microsoft, Hewlett Packard, IBM and Intel, and many more.  And the pattern
of investment has continued.  This year Intel announced that it is building
a third microprocessor plant in Dublin, at a cost of $1.8 billion U.S.
American Home Products, Wyeth Medica are making the largest investment of
bio-pharmaceuticals ever in the world, also here in Dublin.  And yesterday,
Cardinal Health announced a massive new European center in Longford,
involving investment of over $100 million U.S. and resulting at over 1,300
new jobs.

     We greatly value, President, these companies and their contribution to
our country.  Truly it can be said that the United States has repaid the
role of the Irish in building America in an earlier age.  (Applause.)

     Mr. President, our economic success owes much to the great wave of
prosperity and progress which America has enjoyed under your stewardship.
But you've also worked to ensure the prosperity is shared by all.  You've
led the debate about the need to make sure that the global economy brings
economic, social, as well as political benefits to communities around the
world.

     Mr. President, you also brought the skills and energy you so
generously gave to us to other troubled parts of the world.  This richer
work in Ireland, your term as President has been marked by a clear desire
to understand the complexities of each conflict, to help where you could,
and above all, to make the world a better place.  You fundamentally
understood that the world is now one place.

     We cannot look at the face of hunger and ignore it, because the poor
and the hungry will come to us.  We cannot see the scenes of ecological or
natural devastation and say it has nothing to do with us, because it
inevitably will affect us.  We cannot say that disease elsewhere is not our
problem, because it will eventually come to everyone unless it is stopped
early in its tracks.

     As an island with an open economy, President, as a society with people
of Irish ancestry in every corner of the world, as a people who have had
our own share of human catastrophe, we in Ireland know instinctively that
the world is a single village, as vulnerable or as strong as the human
bonds within it.

     And you've understood, too, Mr. President, you've helped shape and
define America's responsibility in the world of today.  You've engaged with
the cause of Africa.  You've given global leadership in the fight against
diseases, particularly HIV-AIDS, which are undermining development in
Africa.  And the peace agreement signed today in Algiers between Ethiopia
and Eritrea would not have come about without the mediation efforts of your
Special Envoy, Tony Lake.  (Applause.)

     Mr. President, I don't really need to say it because I heard all of
the parliamentarians, all the members of both houses of the Oireachtas, as
they had the honor of meeting you and the First Lady, but you approached
the situation in Northern Ireland with an open but a determined mind --
open to all views; determined to make peace and make peace work.  You
brought the authority of your office to the peace process.  But more
important, you brought the credibility of your skills and expertise.

     And for those of us involved in the negotiations, before your
involvement, we often found that mistrust and suspicion could be early and
fatal enemies of progress.  We had so many talks about talks, and meetings
about meetings, that further, I think people, in particularly historians
into the future, will be dizzy following them, much less understanding
them.

     But your involvement, aided by so many of your colleagues and under
the man that you sent us, Senator Mitchell and his excellent chairmanship,
parties divided by suspicion could find the necessary assurance to take
meaningful steps forward.  They came to believe and trust that what was
banked with you was good and safe and secure.  And because of Washington's
engagement, we could pile up the agreed pieces until we had the makings of
a deal.

     And America's record as honest broker and plain speaker helped us all
to force an historic compromise in the Good Friday agreement.  That
settlement should rightly be regarded as part of your legacy, President, as
peacemaker, and we'll never forget it in this country.  (Applause.)

     The Good Friday agreement is the common ground on which both
traditions can stand, for that is uniquely historic and uniquely valuable.
More than that, it's the common ground for all Irish men and women,
wherever they are, however near or distant their ancestry.

     Mr. President, relations between our two countries have blossomed
under your presidency.  Ireland has changed profoundly.  But I have
confidence that Ireland and the United States will continue to develop the
common bonds of friendship, family, of commerce and shared values of
ancestry and heritage.  And today, it is my honor to say a profound thank
you for all that you have done to make hope and history rhyme as never
before in silent.

     President, I want to say personally, thank you for all of the time,
all of the calls, all of the meetings.  It never ceased to amaze me and all
of my colleagues, and I think here I speak for everybody in this country,
that you could try to involve yourself in the world's economic and business
and cultural heritage and the issues of the day.  But every time that we
needed you, that you had time to make a call.  You never seemed to be busy;
you always seemed at that time to talk a true.  (Laughter.)

     But I know, President, when I read the paper the following day that
the President was here, he was there, he was in India, he was in Pakistan,
he was in Korea, he was wherever.  He was moving through the world, dealing
with the issues, meeting the world leaders, and still he had time to give
to a country that has, North and South, about 5 million people.  And that,
we'll never forget.

     And then I say to the First Lady, she has been here so many times;
even, I think, President, more times than you.  (Laughter.)  And I want to
say to her that we appreciate all of that.  She's had a huge, huge effect
on Irish people, men and women, young people, giving them encouragement of
what to do at North and South.  And if I can say, First Lady, that we
really wish you well, and a friend we know that we'll have in the next
Senate.  Give them hell.  (Applause.)

     Mr. President, you and your family will always be welcome here.  I'm
delighted that Chelsea is here today, because back in September Chelsea
promised me that she'd get the President and First Lady here.  (Laughter
and applause.)  So if we can, on behalf of everybody here, President, and
to the extended community all over Ireland, that I assure you would love to
be here, we wish you Godspeed and happiness, as you all go forward now to a
new phase of your important work.  Go raibh mile maith agaibh (thank you).
(Applause.)

     THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you very, very much.  First, let me say to the
Taoiseach, I am delighted to be back in Ireland, glad to be with him and
Celia, glad that Hillary and Chelsea and I could all come together at once.
We've all been here sometimes together, sometimes at different times.  I
thank you for your friendship and the work we have done.  I thank your
predecessors who are here and all the members of the Dail.  I thank the
ministers of the government and members of our Congress who are here, and
the citizens of Ireland.

     I have often wondered how I got involved in all this.  (Laughter.)  I
have pondered all these deep explanations.  For example, less than a month
ago we celebrated the 200th anniversary of the White House.  And you may
know that America's most famous home was designed by an Irish architect
named James Hoban, who defeated and anonymous design presented by Thomas
Jefferson.  (Laughter.)  Maybe there's something in Hoban's spirit in the
house that infected me.

     In the Oval Office of the President on the mantle, there is a
beautiful ivy plant which has been there for almost 40 years now.  It was
given to President Kennedy by the then-Irish Ambassador to the United
States as an enduring sign of the affection between our two people.  Maybe
I got the political equivalent of poison ivy.  (Laughter and applause.)

     When I started come here, you know, I got a lot of help in rooting out
my Irish ancestry.  And the oldest known homestead of my mother's family,
the Cassidys, that we've been able to find is a sort of mid 18th century
farmhouse that's in Rosleigh and Fermanagh.  But it's right on the --
literally right on the border.  And in my family, all the Catholics and
Protestants intermarried, so maybe I was somehow genetically prepared for
the work I had to do.  (Laughter.)  Maybe it's because there are 45 million
Irish Americans, and I was trying to make a few votes at home.  (Laughter
and applause.)  The truth is, it just seemed to me the right thing to do.

     America has suffered with Ireland through the Troubles, and even
before.  And we seemed paralyzed and prevented from playing a constructive
role when I became President.  I decided to change America's policy in the
hope that, in the end, not only the Irish, but the British, too, would be
better off.  I think it is unquestionable, after eight years of effort,
thanks to the people and the leaders of Northern Ireland, of the Republic
and of Great Britain, that the people of Ireland and the people of Britain
are better off for the progress that has been made toward peace.
(Applause.)

     So when the Taoiseach and our friends in Northern Ireland, the leaders
of the parties, and the British Prime Minister asked me to come back to
Ireland one more time, Hillary and Chelsea said, yes -- (laughter) -- and I
said a grateful, yes.

     I also want to say to all of you, with reference to the comments
Bertie made about the Irish economy, I think every one of you that has
played any role in the remarkable explosion of economic opportunity in
Ireland, and the outreach and impact you're having beyond the borders of
your nation, is also a part of the peace process, because you have shown
the benefits of an open, competitive, peaceful society.

     And nobody wants to go back to the Troubles.  There are a few hills we
still have to climb and we'll figure out how to do that, and I hope that
our trip here is of some help toward that end.  But as long as the people
here, as free citizens of this great democracy, and as long as their allies
and friends in the North increasingly follow the same path of creating
opportunities that bring people together instead of arguments that drive
people apart, then the political systems will follow the people.

     So it is very important that all of you recognize that whatever you
do, whether you're in politics or not, if you are contributing to the
present vitality of this great nation, you are helping to make the peace
hold.  And for that, I am very grateful.

     Let me just say in closing, when I started my involvement with the
Irish peace process, to put it charitably, half the political experts in my
country thought I had lost my mind.  (Laughter.)  In some of the all-night
sessions I had making phone calls back and forth over here through the
whole night, after about the third time I did that, to put it charitably, I
thought I had lost my mind.  (Laughter.)  But I can tell you that every
effort has been an honor.  I believe America has in some tiny way repaid
this nation and its people for the massive gifts of your people you have
given to us over so many years, going back to our beginnings.  I hope that
is true.

     For me, one of the things I will most cherish about the eight years
the American people were good enough to let me serve as President is that I
had a chance to put America on the side of peace and dignity and equality
and opportunity for all the people in both communities in Northern Ireland,
and for a reconciliation between the North and the Republic.

     I don't know how I happen to have such good fortune, and even though
it gave me a few more gray hairs, I'm still grateful that I did.

     Good luck, stay with it, and God bless you.


END                                          2:26 P.M. (L)


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