NOVA Precision Content Retrieval |
Search took 0.26 seconds
| Fitzwater on the Japan-United
States Structural Impediments Initiative Negotiations |
| Reagan. Oh, I was just sitting there. And, yes, he's doing
exactly what is right for him. I just have a little more freedom.
|
| 4, 1990 |
|
|
|
tomorrow with General Scowcroft and Secretary of State Baker. They will
meet with President Bush on Wednesday. In addition, they will deliver
a letter from Prime Minister Kaifu to President Bush concerning trade
issues.
|
| Polish officials, technical and scientific exchanges,
trade increases, environmental improvements, international fishing clarifications,
and various economic prospects. President Bush felt the meeting was quite
productive and friendly.
|
| progress made
in this regard during the visit of Irish Prime Minister Haughey in February
as President of the EC Council. The U.S.-EC Ministerial yesterday and
President Bush's meeting today with President Delors should permit additional
progress.
|
| day for U.S.-Czechoslovak relations. President Bush and President Dubcek discussed the role of the Federal Assembly and its important role in the building of democracy. President Bush concluded the meeting by signing a large, brown leather guest book, giving the signing pen to President Dubcek. President Bush signed: ``With great happiness and warm best wishes, George |
| of Estonia |
|
|
| nobody in the Reagan campaign went to Paris to meet
any Iranian official?
|
|
|
| |
| this isn't a press conference.
Thank you very much for your interest. [Laughter]
|
| that it is the responsibility
of the United Nations to face up to the situation.
|
| anxious to know what the President thinks that we might do to be of
further help.
|
|
|
|
and they talk very fondly about you and Nancy.
|
| President Bush this time, only 8 months after the meeting in Seoul last February, demonstrates how close and important the Korea-U.S. relationship has become. At today's meeting, President Bush and I reaffirmed that the traditional friendship and cooperation between our two nations remain firm and are growing stronger. Both of us shared the view that a new breeze of reform |
| the new democratically elected Hungarian Parliament
on May 2. Hungary will have an Acting President until new election laws
are enacted this summer.
|
| say we'll just have
to wait and see, see what the parties want. But they've already served
in an extraordinarily useful role in hosting this conference.
|
| a hostage setting. President Bush was grateful for the conversation
and told Mr. Polhill how much he admired his courage and strength during
this terrible period in his life. Mrs. Bush also attended the meeting.
|
| am extremely pleased
to say that this meeting opened up broad vistas for furthering ties between
the two countries. We highly appreciate the full support voiced during
our meeting by President Bush on behalf of the U.S. administration for
democratic processes that are gaining momentum in Mongolia.
|
| Discussions With President Boris Yeltsin
of the Republic of Russia |
| Question-and-Answer Session in Atlanta, Georgia |
|
|
| of liberating Kuwait. So,
we shouldn't neglect him. He is a very important partner there.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| knows from the very first day
I've been President that good will will beget good will, and good will
means releasing kidnaped prisoners. And so, that's where it stands.
|
| made
possible -- and I would say that what happened today is a confirmation
of what I'm going to say -- this has been made possible only in the environment
produced by our meeting with President George Bush at Malta.
|
| |
| is only a stage, though a major one,
in the gigantic and forward-looking project of perestroika and Soviet-American
relations.
|
|
Maryland, With President Mikhail Gorbachev of the Soviet Union |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 27, 1989 |
| 28, 1989 |
|
|
| 27, 1989 |
| 27, 1989 |
| racing in Australia, which will give an indication that there
is certain shrewdness in sport in our country. It's a true story, I can
assure you.
|
| Statement by Press Secretary Fitzwater on the Japan-United
States Structural Impediments Initiative Negotiations |
| 11, 1990 |
| Monday, June 11, and with Vice President
Quayle on Tuesday, June 12.
|
| We have discussed ideas designed to assist
Djibouti in meeting its development needs which improve the living standards
for Djibouti's population.
|
| don't want to go into any more detail.
|
| been agreed on that. You know my position
on abortion.
|
| to shape a future of mutual prosperity. By
joining our efforts, our two governments can more clearly hear the wise,
generous voice of the men and women who give meaning to this meeting.
|
| it's time to relax these regulations? And also if President Mitterrand
would respond, too, if you and the United States are in more agreement
today on this than you were before the meeting?
|
|
|
| extended to us on this soil,
and to appreciate highly the contribution made by the President of this
country and his wife to make these excellent arrangements for these meetings.
|
| only one word in brackets, and I hope this will
be very soon solved so that in Paris next week we can have the issuance
of this declaration.
|
| truly that should this
agreement not be achieved, then it would bring about serious damages,
in particular to the less developed countries.
|
| trading relationship with Japan remains a key trade priority of the administration. I have carefully reviewed with the EPC the recent progress in negotiations with Japan. Since my meeting with Prime Minister Kaifu in March, Japan has moved to address our concerns in the Structural Impediments Initiative (SII) and in bilateral negotiations involving supercomputers, satellites, and wood |
| the Gorbachev phone call?
|
| set. The problems are big, but we salute
him for his tackling of those problems, and it's those things that I think
are the most important for this visit.
|
| of conflict, and we will
stand with you in peace. And I'm delighted, sir, that you came to the
White House.
|
| broad range of issues related
to East-West relations and European stability. They had frank and substantive
discussions in the relaxed atmosphere of the camp.
|
| did not constitute
an unequivocal commitment to an immediate and unconditional withdrawal.
Thus, the Iraqi approval of the Soviet proposal is without effect.
|
| him as a good friend.
|
|
forward to working with you toward peace and democracy in Mozambique and
in the entire region. I'm so glad you came to the White House.
|
| to close my
question by just wishing my wife a happy anniversary and thanking my daughter
for being here.
|
|
and mutual understanding of the position and interests of our two states
surpassed the limits of official ceremonies.
|
| by Press Secretary Fitzwater on the President's
Meeting with President Alfredo Cristiani of El Salvador |
| the Soviet Union, but I think what they need now from us is know-how and
technical knowledge, that kind of thing.
|
| admired at home and widely respected abroad, and one whose skill and resolve
provided the international community with a stunning success in a war
over Iraq.
|
| in our expression of solidarity with the peoples of Eastern Europe by furthering the ongoing democratization process and promoting adequate economic aid. I informed President Bush about the outcome of the recent meeting of the European Council in Strasbourg, where significant steps were made toward a European union and the building of a new Europe, and where a plan of action to assist the Eastern European |
| Excuse me, we are in Europe.
|
| Q. President Gorbachev, did you assure President Bush that the Soviet
Union will -- --
|