PRESS BRIEFING BY SECRETARY OF STATE MIKE POMPEO, U.S. AMBASSADOR TO THE UNITED NATIONS NIKKI HALEY, AND NATIONAL SECURITY ADVISOR JOHN BOLTON
ON THE PRESIDENT'S AGENDA AT THE U.N. GENERAL ASSEMBLY
For Immediate
Release
September 24, 2018
New York Hilton
Midtown
New York, New York
Video is available here.
SECRETARY POMPEO: Good
morning, everyone. It's an honor to be here in New York for the 73rd
United Nations General Assembly, my first as Secretary of State. Kind of
the Super Bowl of diplomacy. Americans can be proud of how our entire
team is executing on the field today. I'm thrilled to be here with my
friends Nikki and John, as well.
Americans expect the United States
to assert bold leadership on the world stage that reflects our values.
And under President Trump, we are certainly leading from the front.
This was clear from just the first
meeting this morning, in which we issued a call for Global Action for the World
Drug Problem, the scourge of drug trafficking, narcotics production, and
substance abuse is intensifying on a global scale. Within the United
States, President Trump is leading a massive and effective counterattack
against it. It's now time for every country to follow our lead.
Later today, the President will
hold bilateral meetings with President Moon of South Korea, President Al-Sisi
of Egypt, and President Macron of France. Whether it's security issues,
economic issues, human rights, or anything else, the President is asking for
countries to exert their sovereignty to solve challenges and listening to what
America can do to help.
This emphasis on sovereignty was,
of course, the theme of President Trump's speech to the General Assembly last
year. That theme will endure in his speech tomorrow, along with a recap
about how his call for every nation to do its part has paid dividends for the
United States and the world over this past year.
For example, President Trump's
leadership, combined with efforts of countries to enforce the pressure
campaign, has deescalated tensions with North Korea and brought us closer to
our final goal: the final, fully verified denuclearization of the DRPK, as
agreed to by Chairman Kim Jong Un.
Last week's summit between President
Moon and Chairman Kim yielded another positive step forward, but the President
remains resolute: Now is the not the time to ease pressure.
And as you've heard too, President
Trump will address the threat of nonproliferation at the Security Council, on
Wednesday, and the need for responsible nations to stop the spread of weapons
and technologies.
Among the topics that meeting will
cover are North Korea, Syria, and Iran. You can bet the President will
have well-deserved strong words for the Iranian regime, which is among the
worst of violators of U.N. Security Council resolutions, if not the absolute
worst in the world. He'll call on every country to join our pressure
campaign in order to thwart Iran's global torrent of destructive activity.
Whether it's Venezuela, South
Sudan, Syria, Burma, China, the estimated 2.5 million victim -- excuse me, 25
million victims of modern slavery around the world can also count on America's
support. Today is shaping up as a great first day. Lots more work
to come this week.
President Trump and our entire
diplomatic corps look forward to the days with our foreign counterparts as we
work on achieving shared victories for all.
Ambassador Haley.
AMBASSADOR HALEY: Good
morning. Happy UNGA. We got a great start today with the
President's event on counter-narcotics.
Really, to understand this event is
to understand the fact that it wasn’t just a bunch of people getting into a
room. Every country that attended had to sign a Global Call to Action,
which basically said that they were going to implement something within their
own countries that dealt with how they were going to deal with the supply and
demand of drugs, the international cooperation they were going to do with other
countries to stop illicit drugs, and then also treatment that can be done
within their own countries.
And so the idea that the President
was able to get 130 countries to sign on means that we are now having a global
drug conversation that needed to be had for a long time.
As we go through UNGA, you are
seeing over 140 heads of delegations that are here at the United Nations.
We certainly are looking forward to the President's speech tomorrow. As
you can tell, last year we started UNGA and it was trying to figure what the
U.S. presence was going to be. This year, we're here with a bang.
Not only is the President doing his speech, he's going to be doing a Security
Council meeting. Secretary Pompeo is also doing a Security Council
meeting. The Vice President is doing an event on Venezuela. And so
it's all hands on deck by the United States.
He will be meeting with the
Secretary-General. It's been an interesting time knowing that, since the
Secretary-General's meeting last year, we have pulled out of the Paris
Accord. We have pulled out of the Global Compact. We have pulled
out of the Iran deal. And all of that is to say that the United States is
determined to obviously be involved in multilateral organizations where we see
it, but not in the way that they're mandated on what the United States does or
that infringes on the American people.
So with that, he will be hosting
the reception, obviously tonight, with the heads of delegations. And then
tomorrow night, he and the Vice President and the Secretary have agreed to host
our Security Council members, as well as their foreign ministers.
And you know, with everything we've
been able to get accomplished, whether it's the arms embargo with South Sudan,
whether it's the idea that we were able to get three sanctions packages passed
in North Korea, that we've got massive reform efforts that were done this past
year and peacekeeping mandates completely rolled over. We would not be
able to do that without the Security Council, and so that meeting is going to be
very important.
But we look forward to a great
week. Everyone is excited. The United States is always very happy
to host this. New Yorkers may not be, but we're going to make it a great
UNGA. Thank you very much.
AMBASSADOR BOLTON: Well,
thanks. I'm just delighted to be here. Everybody have a copy?
I've got mine. It's a little worn, but I still got it.
I just wanted to take a second and
talk about one of the themes in the President's remarks tomorrow. And I
have been around long enough to know that I'm not going to step on any of his
lines, but he is going to talk and elaborate on his views on sovereignty.
And I just wanted to explain that
this is -- why this is so important for Americans, because many people consider
sovereignty a kind of abstract concept. It derives, obviously, from the
word "sovereign," meaning the monarch. But it's one of the
reasons I think America is exceptional, and that is we understand sovereignty
not to be vested in the head of state; we understand it as the Framers said in
the Constitution itself: "We the People." We the people are
sovereign in America. So that infringements on our sovereignty are not
infringements on abstractions or infringements on the government, they're an
infringement on the people themselves.
We express our sovereignty through
the Constitution, through our political process. It's why that's so
important. And it's why we believe -- and of course, I'm speaking in
secular terms here -- that the Constitution is the highest authority that we
recognize.
So in a number of different ways,
the President is going to address this issue. And again, it's the
continuing theme of his -- as Secretary Pompeo said, it was a theme in his last
address to the General Assembly, it will be this year, and in a variety of
other contexts that you'll see.
Thank you.
MS. WALTERS: With that, we'll
open it up to questions. Steve Holland.
Q Mr. Secretary,
will you raise with the Russians what you’re calling an “escalation” of sending
these S-300 missiles to Syria?
SECRETARY POMPEO: So there are many topics that we’ll talk about with the
Russians. I am very confident that their latest decision to move the
S-300 will be amongst them.
Ambassador
Bolton has had the most recent conversation when he met with his counterpart
now three weeks ago perhaps, four weeks ago.
As I
said yesterday, we’re trying to find every place we can where there is common
ground, where we can work with the Russians. We’re finding lots of places
where they’re working against American interest, and we will hold them
accountable for so doing.
Q
And will you meet with Lavrov while you’re here?
SECRETARY POMPEO: Yes. I’m sure Sergey and I will have our time
together.
MS. WALTERS: Matt Lee from the AP.
Q I really don’t have anything to ask. I'm in the
middle of writing something here. (Laughter.) But I will, I guess.
Ambassador
Bolton, when you talk about sovereignty and your threat to prosecute the
International Criminal Court, do you expect the President will repeat that
threat? And exactly what is the legal basis for saying that you will
prosecute ICC prosecutors or judges?
AMBASSADOR
BOLTON: Well, as I said a moment ago, I’m not going to say anything
specific about what he's going to comment on. And the authorities that I
referred to in my speech to the Federalist Society are largely drawn from the
American Service-Members’ Protection Act of 2002.
MS.
WALTERS: John Roberts, Fox News.
Q
Two questions. The first one is not exactly in your purview. But as
you spent the morning with the President, do you have any idea what’s currently
going on with the Deputy Attorney General?
SECRETARY
POMPEO: We don’t have any comment. You’ll have to talk to the White
House about that.
Q
Okay, then let me ask my second question. North Korea. You’re
having a lot of talks with North Korea. You’re not seeing what you need
to in terms of denuclearization. How long do you leave the door open
before you decide this isn’t working?
SECRETARY POMPEO: Yeah, John, look, you have to remember this is a
process that will move forward. To set a date certain would be
foolish. But make no mistake about it -- the conversations that we’re
having are important. They’re putting the opportunity to complete the
denuclearization in place. And we will continue at every level to have
those conversations. Some of them you will all be aware of; some of them
you won’t know are taking place.
There’s
lots going on so that we can get to the place where -- in this place, this
week. Right? These are the U.N. Security Council resolutions that
demanded that North Korea give up its nuclear weapons program and, even more
broadly, its nuclear capabilities. Those aren’t United States demands;
they are the United Nations demands. And we’re working to assist in
implementing them and to help Chairman Kim get to the right place to honor the
promise that he made to President Trump in Singapore.
Q
Are you optimistic that he will come through on this?
Q
SECRETARY POMPEO: Yes.
MS.
WALTERS: Errol Barnett, CBS.
Q
Secretary Pompeo, just to follow up on that point, President Trump said
earlier today the second meeting will take place quite soon. So my
specific question to you is: What does North Korea need to do before securing
that meeting? Or has it already achieved that privilege?
SECRETARY
POMPEO: I’m not going to get into the details about it, but the President
said this morning they’ll meet quite soon. I’m confident that that will
happen. I expect I’ll be traveling to Pyongyang before too long, as well,
to make the final preparations for that second meeting between the two
leaders.
Q
Will that be before the end of the year? What is “soon”?
SECRETARY
POMPEO: Yes. Lord willing, I'll be traveling before the end of the
year.
MS.
WALTERS: Francesca Chambers.
Q Thank you, Lindsay. I'll start with you, Secretary
Pompeo. North Korea says that it’s looking for reciprocal actions
from the United States in order to enter into a nuclear deal. What at
this point would the United States be willing to give up to North Korea since
you guys have said that sanctions are not on the table? And then, I have
a second question on a second topic, but you might want to answer that first.
SECRETARY
POMPEO: So I have said repeatedly and I shall remain steadfast: We’re not
going to talk about the state of the negotiation -- it would be inappropriate
for us to do that -- or our North Korean counterparts to talk about particular
deal points, things we’re working on.
But
the fundamental principles remain the same. We expect the full, complete,
verified denuclearization of North Korea. And until such time as that occurs,
the economic sanctions -- the sanctions that have been put in place by the
United Nations Security Council -- will remain in place. That’s the core
proposition that the President agreed to in Singapore, and it’s the one we’re
going to continue to honor through the whole process.
Q
Okay, and then the second topic. Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau
is among the U.S. allies who is not getting a private sit-down with the
President this week, it would seem. So what does that say about the relationship
between the United States and Canada right now? And what does it say
about the possibility of securing a trade deal with Canada?
AMBASSADOR
BOLTON: The President’s schedule is very compressed this year in New
York, and so there were a lot of requests and a lot of desires by the President
to have bilaterals that simply couldn’t be accommodated. He speaks with
Prime Minister Trudeau by phone all the time. And it’s always possible
here in New York that they would have time for a pull-aside, as we call
it. But there is full and open, complete communication between Prime
Minister Trudeau and President Trump. That I can assure you.
MS. WALTERS: Emerald Robinson, One America News.
Q Thank you,
Lindsay. This is for either Ambassador Haley or Secretary Pompeo.
In an update on Pastor Brunson, there's rumors that he could be released next
month. Any comment on that? Is that true? And are there
conversations going on this week in regards to him and Turkish sanctions?
SECRETARY POMPEO: Yes, he
could be released this month. He should have been released last month,
and he should be released today, in fact. We've talked to the Turks; they
know the expectation. Pastor Brunson and the other U.S. persons that are being
held by Turkey all need to be released by Turkey. And they need to be
done -- that needs to be done immediately.
And I'm sure there will be some
conversations this week in furtherance of that. But no make no mistake,
there will be nothing that we share with them here that we haven't shared with
them already about President Trump's demands that these innocent people --
these people who have truly done nothing wrong -- not be detained wrongfully in
Turkey.
MS. WALTERS: We can move to
the back of the room.
Q Thank
you. Thank you very much. Secretary Pompeo, my name is Majeed
Gly. I'm from Rudaw Media Network. I have a question for you,
Ambassador Bolton, or Secretary Pompeo, to answer questions about Iraq.
Ambassador Haley last week
elaborated very well at the Security Council of how Iran is practically taking
over Iraq and influencing what's going on there. Iran now is appointing
the Speaker of the Parliament. They're planning to appoint the Prime
Minister of Iraq. They're taking over the country. What is the U.S.
planning to do in order to counter Iranian influence? Do you have
specific plans with that regard? Thank you.
SECRETARY POMPEO: Thank you.
You're speaking about the Iraqi government formation process? Yes,
sorry, I wanted to make sure I had the question right.
This administration took over at
time when Qassem Soleimani and the Ayatollah were running rampant through five
capitals in the Middle East. And we have engaged in significant activity
that has begun to counter the Iranian threat. Today they remain the
world's largest state sponsor of terror. It is our fervent effort to make
sure that that not remain the case.
We've put a number of restrictions
in place. We will re-impose another set of sanctions come this
November. Our actions in and around the Middle East have made clear we
will not continue to accept Iran's bad behavior.
In Iraq, we have been working to
achieve a government that is an Iraqi national government. And we're
hoping that the leaders -- the people of Iraq have spoken. They had their
chance to vote. And now they're in the process of forming that
government. And we are working diligently to make sure that the Iraqi
people, the voice that they gave during their election, is who ends up in
leadership there.
Q A
follow-on. Kim Dozier from the Daily Beast. Rudy Giuliani over the
weekend called for regime change in Iran. Does that follow with the Trump
administration's desires of policy?
AMBASSADOR BOLTON: As I've
said repeatedly, regime change in Iran is not the administration's
policy. As Mike Pompeo just said, we've imposed very stringent sanctions
on Iran. More are coming.
And what we expect from Iran is
massive changes in their behavior. And until that happens, we will
continue to exert what the President has called "maximum
pressure." That's what we intend to do.
MS. WALTERS: Jim Acosta,
CNN.
Q Yes, Ambassador
Haley, you're the lone person here that has been with the administration since
the beginning. In the story about Rod Rosenstein on Friday, it was
mentioned that he had been involved in circulating discussions about invoking
the 25th Amendment to have the President removed from office. Were you
ever involved in any of those discussions? Were you aware of any of those
discussions? And I did have a North Korea follow-up for the Secretary.
AMBASSADOR HALEY: I mean, I
said yesterday, on the Sunday shows, that, literally, I have never once been in
the White House where that conversation has happened. I am not aware of
any Cabinet members that are even talking about that. It is completely
and totally absurd. No one is questioning the President at all. If
anything, we're trying to keep up the pace with him, in the fact that he's got
a lot he wants to accomplish very quickly, and we're going to continue to
support him in the way that he does that.
Q I appreciate
that. And, Secretary Pompeo, if I may ask you a follow-up on North
Korea. Before you went into the summit with Kim Jong Un in Singapore, you
did not have an agreement really in place for complete denuclearization.
Why should you have another summit with Kim Jong Un -- a second summit the
President talked about this morning -- if you don't have the details in
place? It just seems, even to the layman, that you sort of have the
process backwards; that you would want the details in place before having a
summit. And here you may do it for a second time.
SECRETARY POMPEO: Two
things. Fact check: I've been with the administration since the beginning
too. Not that that's relevant. (Laughter.) But I'll add, no
discussion with me about the 25th Amendment anywhere either.
Q Oh, thank
you. I appreciate that. Yes, sir.
SECRETARY POMPEO: So you can
now report that there are two senior leaders that have said that your statement
-- your question was ludicrous. (Laughter.)
Second point, with respect to North
Korea: Look, we went --
Q Well, if it's
so ludicrous -- if I may ask, if it's so ludicrous -- and I apologize for not
remembering that you were the CIA Director. Obviously, you were the CIA
Director. If it's so ludicrous, why did the Deputy Attorney General have
discussions about it behind the scenes?
SECRETARY POMPEO: I find the
question ludicrous. I've been involved -- I've been at the center of this
administration, along with lots of other folks, from virtually day one. I
think it was actually day three or four. I've never heard anyone talk
about it, whisper about it, joke about it in any way. I've been in a lot
of meetings with a lot of senior officials from this government.
Your question on North Korea:
Remember the history. We went at this the other way for decades, and
North Korea continued to build its nuclear program. Right? We tried
to do details. We tried to do step-for-step. We tried to do
trade-for-trade. Each of those failed.
We're coming at this from a
different direction. We're bringing the two senior leaders, the
individuals who can actually make the decisions that will move this process
forward, bring them together so we can continue to make progress towards what
the U.N. Security Council has demanded and what Chairman Kim has promised he
would do.
That's the effort. There
remains work to be done. There will be some time before we get to
complete denuclearization for sure. But we've been at this the other way
for an awfully long time and failed, and put America in the position it finds
itself today: At risk from North Korean nuclear weapons.
Q And wouldn't it
be ludicrous to have another meeting with Kim Jong Un if you don't have the
details in place?
SECRETARY POMPEO: Absolutely
not. If we can continue to make progress and have conversations, I think
there's enormous value in that.
MS. WALTERS: (Inaudible) in
the back.
Q Yeah, hi.
Secretary Pompeo, in your terms about denuclearization, you left out the word
"irreversible." Was that a mistake or deliberate?
SECRETARY POMPEO: Complete
mistake. Completely irreversible. Thank you. Thank you for
correcting me.
MS. WALTERS: Thank you all
for attending today. Thank you.
END
11:29 A.M.
EDT
###
President Donald J. Trump participates in the Global Call to Action on the World Drug Problem Monday, September 24, 2018, at the United Nations Headquarters in New York. (Official White House Photo by Joyce N. Boghosian)
THE WHITE HOUSE
September 24, 2018
United Nations
Headquarters, New York, New York
THE PRESIDENT: Thank you all
for being here this morning. It is a great honor to address you on an issue
that affects every nation across the globe: the world drug problem. And a
big problem it is.
The scourge of drug addiction continues to claim too many
lives in the United States and in nations around the world. Today, we commit to
fighting the drug epidemic together.
I want to express my deep gratitude to Ambassador Haley for
her outstanding leadership in counter-narcotics at the United Nations, along
with the dedicated work of our great Secretary of State, Mike Pompeo, who's
done an absolutely fantastic job, and Ambassador John Bolton. Thank you
very much.
We also thank the Secretary-General for joining us at our
special guest -- and as our special guest. He's become a great friend,
and he's doing a wonderful job at a very, very complex situation, but a
beautiful situation. And I've always said the United Nations has
tremendous potential, and that potential is being met. Slowly but surely,
it's being met.
We are likewise grateful to our 31 co-host countries.
Each of you is taking critical steps to combat the global drug problem.
As the 2018 World Drug Report highlights, cocaine and opium
production have hit record highs -- incredibly -- and global deaths caused by
drug use have increased by 60 percent from the year 2000 to 2015. So, in
15 years, it gone up 60 percent, which is absolutely terrible.
As we know, illicit drugs are linked to organized crime,
illegal financial flows, corruption, and terrorism. It's vital for public
health and national security that we fight drug addiction and stop all forms of
trafficking and smuggling that provide the financial lifeblood for vicious
transnational cartels.
In the United States, we're taking aggressive action, securing
our border, supporting law enforcement, devoting record funding to the opioid
crisis, and promoting treatment and recovery.
Many nations here today are also taking bold action.
Newly elected President Duque, Colombia, campaigned on an anti-drug platform,
and won a very, very impressive victory. Congratulations.
We look forward to partnering with his new administration to
eradicate coca production in his country. All of us must work together to
dismantle drug production and defeat drug addiction.
For this reason, last month, the United States announced a
“Global Call to Action on the World Drug Problem.” The call is simple:
reduce drug demand; cut off the supply of illicit drugs; expand treatment; and
strengthen international cooperation. If we take these steps together, we
can save the lives of countless people in all corners of the world. And
when I say countless, I'm talking about millions and millions of
people.
I'm thrilled that every country in the room today has agreed
to answer our call, and I want to thank each and every one of you for your
commitment to this important initiative.
The United States looks forward to working with you to
strengthen our communities, protect our families, and deliver a drug-free
future for all of our children.
Thank you very much. And thank you for being here.
We appreciate it. Thank you. (Applause.)
END
8:39 A.M. EDT
Ambassador
Haley Delivers Remarks at the President’s High-Level Event “Global Call to
Action on the World Drug Problem”
Ambassador Nikki Haley, U.S. Permanent Representative to the
United Nations, delivered remarks at a high-level event hosted by President
Donald J. Trump, the “Global Call to Action on the World Drug Problem.” The
high-level event, with 31 co-hosts, demonstrated international political will
to enhance efforts to effectively address and counter the serious threats posed
by the world drug problem. Ambassador Haley welcomed representatives from the
129 other Member States that joined the United States in signing a Global Call to Action, declaring
their commitment to develop action plans for addressing drug supply and demand,
treatment options, and international cooperation.
“What brings us together today is something that has touched every
American. Everyone knows someone who has suffered or died from abusing illegal
drugs. And drugs are not only an American problem. The drug problem is global.
It is a demand-side issue and a supply-side issue. Drugs are a corruption
issue. A law and order issue. A civil society issue. All of these issues are
part of the drug problem, and they don’t stop at geographical borders. It will
take every country at the United Nations to address the drug problem.”
“The Global Call to Action began as a way to build awareness among
world leaders about the drug problem. The next step is to reaffirm the
commitment of UN Member States to key UN conventions and institutions devoted
to this issue. And we need to pay more attention to emerging challenges,
specifically those posed by synthetic drugs.”
Ambassador Haley Announces Additional Humanitarian
Assistance to Those Affected by the Crisis in Burma’s Rakhine State
Today, during a ministerial-level
meeting on Burma, Ambassador Nikki Haley announced more than $185 million in
additional humanitarian assistance for those in Burma and Bangladesh who have
been affected by the Rakhine State crisis. The new funding, which includes
$156 million for Rohingya refugees and host communities in Bangladesh, will
support the implementation of critical emergency services, including
protection, emergency shelter, food, water, sanitation, health care, and
psychosocial support.
“The United States is proud to be
the leading donor of life-saving assistance to displaced persons, refugees, and
host communities in Burma and Bangladesh. Still more needs to be done, so we
need other countries to do their part as well. We continue to call on the
Burmese government to do more to hold those who have engaged in ethnic
cleansing accountable for their atrocities, end the violence, and allow full
humanitarian and free press access. And we greatly appreciate Bangladesh’s
unwavering generosity in hosting and caring for the refugees,” said Ambassador
Haley.
This additional funding brings
U.S. humanitarian assistance in response to the Rakhine State crisis to nearly
$389 million since the outbreak of violence in August 2017, when Burmese
security forces began committing widespread atrocities against Rohingya
villagers across northern Rakhine. Bangladesh now hosts nearly 1 million
refugees, most of whom are Rohingya
Deputy Secretary Sullivan co-hosts a meeting on stepping up action to end forced labor, modern slavery and human trafficking, at the United Nations, in New York City on September 24, 2018. [State Department photo/ Public Domain]
The below is attributable to Spokesperson Heather Nauert:
Deputy Secretary John J. Sullivan today co-hosted a public event on the margins of the 73rd session of the UN General Assembly entitled “Stepping up Action to End Forced Labour, Modern Slavery and Human Trafficking,” proudly joining the governments of Argentina, Australia, Bangladesh, Bahrain, Canada, Nigeria, and the United Kingdom to affirm the importance of government action to combat human trafficking.
During the event, Deputy Secretary Sullivan announced on behalf of the United States, Australia, Canada, New Zealand, and the United Kingdom Principles To Guide Government Action To Combat Human Trafficking in Global Supply Chains, a framework other countries can build on to prevent human trafficking in public and private sector supply chains. The Principles highlight the critical role of governments and acknowledge the necessity of strategic cooperation with civil society, survivors, and the business community.
Deputy Secretary Sullivan also announced additional U.S. funds to support the Department of State’s Program to End Modern Slavery (PEMS), bringing the Department’s total investment for this important program to $75 million. PEMS aims to support transformational programs and projects to achieve a measurable and substantial reduction of the prevalence of modern slavery in targeted populations in priority countries and regions.
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