Interview With Latin American Journalists
Secretary Condoleezza Rice
Ft. Lauderdale, Florida
June 6, 2005
QUESTION: (In Spanish)
SECRETARY RICE: Yes, thank you very much. The mechanisms that we're talking about first of all, I don't believe we're
ever going to have a single mechanism, or perhaps a better word would be a set of tools that could be available to the
Organization of American States, principally through its Secretary General, to try and help to prevent crises in fragile
democracies. We know we've had a history recently of a number of problems in some of our democracies where the
institutions are not so strong and where there is a need for help and dialogue between society and the government, or
sometimes even between members of the government.
Now, the question I would have is: Why wouldn't the Organization of American States have some means to try and help
with the sorts of situations that we are facing, a situation like Ecuador, which was already out of control by the time
anybody was able to try and do something about it? And in talking with Mr. Insulza he told me, he said, "You know, the
Ecuadorians have been saying for months" this was when we talked back in Chile "for months that there was a problem
brewing, and we did nothing."
And so if we are going to be an organization that doesn't just talk, that we don't just meet every year and say, all
right, how many more crises have we had, then we're going to have to be an organization that tries to help. This isn't
to be punitive. This is not to even judge. But it is to try and intervene when there are large elements of a society or
parts of a society that are having difficulty because we have institutions that are new and therefore fragile.
QUESTION: I am Jean Pierre Leroy from Haiti.
SECRETARY RICE: Yes, down here.
QUESTION: It is a great honor for the opportunity that I am granted this morning. And you know that the election
process in Haiti is in a gridlocked due to the violence and terrorism action on a daily basis and we know that the UN
mandate in Haiti is also gridlocked at the UN Security Council due to the old diplomatic conflict between China and
Taiwan.
So my question is: Is the U.S. Administration really concerned about that matter, election matter, coming in November?
How do you plan to help? Because we are running out of time for the November election.
SECRETARY RICE: Thank you. We have a three-pronged strategy, three-part strategy for trying to help the people of Haiti
finally gain stability and then, from that stability, a democratic and prosperous future.
The first is, obviously, the security situation has been more difficult over the last few weeks. The armed gangs are
causing multiple problems. We are talking with the UN and with the MINUSTAH mission about how it can be more effective
in dealing with that. I think it's extremely important that that mission succeed because it was a real breakthrough for
this hemisphere to have Brazil in the lead and then to have other Western Hemisphere states actually engaged in
peacekeeping. So we are devoted to making that mechanism work and so we are talking with the UN about what more needs to
be done.
Secondly, we do need to perhaps accelerate our economic development efforts so that the people of Haiti know that there
is an economic future.
And third, as you mentioned, the political side, really we've got to have some strengthening of the political dialogue
among the various parties so that the elections can go forward. And again, the UN is a key to that but also Assistant
Secretary of State Noriega is going down to Haiti after this meeting to see if he can help and we are talking here with
the Haitian delegation but also with the Brazilian delegation and with other interested parties to see if we can get
ready for these elections. We have now several months not very long, but several months to really get ready so that
these elections are a success, and I think we now really need to focus in on making those elections a success in
security terms and in political terms.
QUESTION: Madame Secretary, my name is Andrew Johnson. I represent a newspaper and a television station in Trinidad and
Tobago, and I speak for my colleague, who is from Jamaica. We wanted to ask about the Bush Administration's current
feeling about countries who have, in general, and then particularly, in relation to those countries dealings with Cuba
and Haiti.
SECRETARY RICE: Yes. Well, we have very good relations with the CARICOM countries. The President has met with the
ministers of I mean the heads of state of CARICOM. I'm going to meet with the ministers of CARICOM while I am here. We,
of course, have been active through the Caribbean Basin Initiative in trying to help on the economic development side.
And generally, we've had good relations. We've not always agreed, but that's all right. That's going to happen. These
are democratic states that will have their own views. We have no problem with that.
As to Cuba, I would just hope that there would be a recognition that anyone who deals with Cuba, in any way that they
choose, need to keep in mind the Cuban people, and that is that this is the one country that cannot even sit at the
table at the OAS because it is not democratic. This is the 21st century. There aren't that many places in the world
anymore where people don't get to choose their leaders. And in Cuba, we have had this condition for too many years.
Now, a number of years ago sorry, two years ago, the President offered a new way to the Cuban Government. He said just
have transparent parliamentary elections, just start the process, and the United States is prepared to change the way
that it deals with Cuba. The Cuban Government responded with a roundup and arrest of their opposition leaders. What are
we doing in this hemisphere if people can't speak out about the Cuban people? We all know what the conditions are in
Cuba. And so I just hope people will speak out.
As to Haiti, there, I hope CARICOM will be more helpful and more active. I know we had some differences about the
Aristide period but I don't think there was any doubt that the Aristide government had lost its ability to govern
democratically, and so we now need to help the Haitian people get to democratic elections. And CARICOM has a
responsibility to care about the Haitian people and to help them get to these democratic elections and I will talk with
the CARICOM's leaders when I meet with them the CARICOM foreign ministers when I meet with them later today.
QUESTION: (In Spanish.)
SECRETARY RICE: Well, thank you. First of all, we have to do this in partnership, of course, with the elected
governments in these countries because the United States can help through trade. We believe that when you have free
trade, that that improves the chances for economic growth and then for the resources that are available for development.
We are trying, for instance, to get the Central American Free Trade and Dominican Republic agreement through the
Congress because we believe that will improve the chances for a better economic performance of Central America.
But we also then need to support and are trying to support efforts at education. I believe strongly, as an educator,
that there is no greater way to empower people than to educate them, to educate their children, so that one generation
is not condemned to does not watch its children condemned to the same poverty that it has experienced. When I teach at
Stanford, one of the great things about being there is that next to a kid who is a fourth generation Stanford legatee is
a kid who's a first generation college student or who might be an itinerant farm worker whose parents never even
finished high school, and there they are both in college. That's the kind of upward mobility that we need to see. And
I've been impressed, for instance, with President Lula in Brazil for his emphasis on education.
There is another sometimes unspoken element in Latin America. We have a lack of inclusion of people from different
ethnic backgrounds in Latin America. I understand this myself because I come from a country in which I grew up in a
segregated Birmingham, Alabama where it was not until 1964 that we had a Voting Rights Act so that everybody could vote.
The United States is not one to judge on these issues. We've been through our own struggles. But we are I am here to say
that unless democracy includes peoples who have been marginalized, then you don't have true democracy.
So we are trying to help in these ways, but the I want to say that while we talk about development and including
people, let's remember that it starts with the human dignity that comes from democracy. It starts with being able to
choose your leaders. It starts with being able to hold your leaders accountable. That's where it starts, and then the
benefits of democracy can be.
QUESTION: (In Spanish.)
SECRETARY RICE: Thank you. This is the question of what does it mean to govern democratically after having been elected
democratically, and to me and I think most people would agree it means that the opposition has an opportunity to
organize, the opposition has an opportunity to be on television, to be on the radio, to be in the newspapers with their
platform; it means they have the ability to associate freely; it means that no one intimidates the opposition, tries to
threaten the opposition in some way; it means that there are civil society groups that can freely associate and can
freely take their cases to the people; it means that there are independent trade unions, for instance, that can protect
the rights of workers. The government can say everything that it wants to about protecting the rights of workers, but
trade unions are also an important part of protecting the rights of workers.
And so I don't believe that there are different kinds of democracy. I've heard this argument. Now, it may be that I'm
suspicious of this because I was a Soviet specialist and the word "democracy" was used cynically. The German Democratic
Republic. Who ever thought that East Germany was democratic? It was not. And so when people talk about different kinds
of democracy, I say let's go back to the basics of democracy. That means people can say what they think, people can
educate their children freely boys and girls; it means that they can worship as they please; it means that they can be
free from the arbitrary knock of the secret police at night because the justice system is independent; and it means that
they can organize themselves politically to oppose the existing government.
So those are the basics of democracy and I don't think we need a new definition of democracy. We know it when we see
it.
QUESTION: (In Spanish.)
SECRETARY RICE: Well, I don't know how much resonance the anti-American rhetoric has. My view is that this is not an
issue about the United States; this is an issue about the region and about democracy in the region, and that's what we
need to focus on.
I would be the first to say that we have to think in a different phase and differently about what democracies now need
to do. That is why the Monterrey Consensus was so important about development needing new resources, but also countries
that will receive development governing wisely, governing transparently, fighting corruption, not allowing political
leaders to enrich themselves at the expense of their countries. These are important elements of democracy, just as
voting as an important element of democracy.
It's also true that we need, as I said and maybe the United States has not spoken out enough about it we need to worry
about marginalized people. We need to be concerned that all ethnic groups and people of all kinds of backgrounds are
represented and that their governments are held accountable for them.
Yes, I accept that perhaps we haven't talked enough about these things in the region, but I would also say that anyone
who wants to be critical of the United States in this way needs to look at what they're talking about. And again, when
you talk about Cuba, you're talking about a place where people have had no say in who governs them for more than for 45
years. That's a very long time to have no say in who governs you.
QUESTION: (In Spanish.)
SECRETARY RICE: Well, we are in discussion with the government of President Bolaños. We are also trying very hard, as I
said, to get CAFTA passed. We think that this will help to strengthen the economy of Nicaragua and the other Central
American states. But I would hope that this would be a discussion here at the OAS as to how, now knowing that there are
danger signs in Nicaragua, how are we as a hemisphere going to respond to those danger signs, how are we as democracies
in the hemisphere going to help the Nicaraguan presidency, its government, to deal with threats to it, to means that
while they may be marginally legal would have an anti-democratic effect because it needs to be constitutional. These
means, they need to the Nicaraguan people need to know that they have elected a government and that they're getting the
government that they elected.
That is my concern in Nicaragua and I think we need to have a discussion of that as a region. But we are in discussions
with the government there. We are trying to help on the economic side. We are trying to help politically. But I really
do think that this is a perfect example of why the OAS needs to do more than talk.
QUESTION: (In Spanish.)
SECRETARY RICE: Thank you. Well, the Government of El Salvador and the people of El Salvador have been so supportive of
what the Iraqi people are trying to achieve now in their march to democracy and we're just very, very grateful for that.
And if they choose to extend, and it's for El Salvador to decide if they choose to extend, I hope that they will because
the Iraqis now have to write a constitution and then they have elections to take place at the end of the year.
But, of course, the CAFTA we are doing because we believe it is good for the region, we believe it's good for El
Salvador, we believe it's good for the United States. And we couldn't work any harder than we're working to try to get
CAFTA passed.
Similarly, on the immigration policies, the President has said that we do need to revise our immigration policies in
the United States to take note of the fact that there is an economic side to this, that willing workers and willing
employers need to have a better relationship where they can find each other. We believe strongly that people have to
respect our laws and so any changes to our policies for instance, a temporary worker program of the kind the President
has talked about should not advantage people who broke our laws to get into the country. And so we don't believe in
amnesty, but we do believe strongly that we need a system that is more humane. People shouldn't have to live in the
shadows the way that many people do currently. And it would be good if they could go home. It would be good if people
could keep some of what they have earned in our pension system.
And so these are all things that we are working on in the United States and we're going to continue to work on them
whatever happens in terms of the troop deployment. But we are in conversation with the Salvadoran Government and I've
seen such strong support for the Iraqi people from the Salvadoran people that I'm confident that El Salvador will try to
continue to help in whatever way that it can.
QUESTION: Dionne Jackson Miller, Radio Jamaica. The State Department recently issued a report on human trafficking in
which it stated that Jamaica is not doing enough to combat that. The Jamaican Government has taken issue with that
position, saying that there's not enough proof of that. Is that kind of conclusion something the State Department will
stand by unequivocally or will it revisit its position in light of objections from Jamaica?
SECRETARY RICE: Well, we certainly, of course, take into consideration the government's a government's view of its own
situation, but we're pretty careful in our examination of the basis for any determination. There are criteria that are
transparent to everybody as to what constitutes a problem in trafficking.
But let me just say, this report is not meant to punish or to embarrass. It's meant to raise the light on what is a
really very awful problem, and this is a modern-day problem that shouldn't exist in a world where we care about human
rights and where we care about what it happening to women and children in the world. And so we're more than prepared to
work with the Jamaican Government on this issue. We spent last year $96 million to help with technical assistance for
issues associated with trafficking, whether it was technical assistance on legal reform or on support for victims, and
we're prepared to help in the future.
But it is a serious problem and, by the way, the United States is by no means blameless in this regard. Not only do we
provide an environment in which some people take advantage of trafficked people, we are a country that sees that
trafficking can place in the United States as well. And that's why first Attorney General John Ashcroft and now Attorney
General Gonzalez are working so hard to make sure that the United States cleans up its act when it comes to this matter
of trafficking. So we internationally all of us need to be concerned about this.
QUESTION: Can I make one more?
SECRETARY RICE: Yeah. Yes, yes.
QUESTION: (In Spanish.)
SECRETARY RICE: I'm sorry, I missed the first part.
QUESTION: (In Spanish.)
SECRETARY RICE: Okay, right. I'm sure we've made many. You know, these are big historical circumstances and change does
not come without a lot of difficulty. I've often said that one day people will write dissertations about what the Bush
Administration could have done differently. I will probably oversee some of these dissertations when I go back to teach
so I'm quite certain we've made many.
The problem with trying to judge too early what you've done right and what you've done wrong is that history unfolds in
big sweeps, not in small increments. If I take you back to 1945 or 1946 or 1947 after the defeat of Hitler's Germany and
fascist Japan, you would read story after story after story about how badly the reconstruction was going in Germany, you
would read story after story about how Japan could, of course, never have institutions that were democratic. Now, all
that matters is that Japan became democratic and prosperous, Germany became democratic and prosperous, so democratic and
prosperous that it became an anchor for the demise, the defeat, of communism throughout Europe.
So I ask everyone to just step back and let's let history decide about what has been done right and what has been done
wrong. Of course, we make adjustments along the way. I think that we have been as good as we should be in dealing with
the fact that the terrorism problem is not really a war on terrorism; that's a method, terrorism is a method. It is an
ideology of hatred that is so great, principally in the Middle East but not just in the Middle East, that people strap
suicide bombs onto themselves and blow up innocent people and fly airplanes into buildings. This isn't normal. This
isn't what parents want for their children. This isn't what is happening in most of the world.
And so I think we've come to an understanding that in the Middle East, in particular, the absence of freedom, the
absence of democratic governments, the 60 years when the United States and others didn't speak out about the absence of
democracy, has caused this malignancy to grow up, this abnormality to grow up underneath, and that we now need to deal
with the freedom deficit. And so that's why you hear the President talking about the importance of the spread of
democracy in the Middle East and I think that's been the major change in our thinking as the war on terrorism has
unfolded.
SECRETARY RICE: Last question?
QUESTION: (In Spanish.)
SECRETARY RICE: Yes. Well, let me say first that it is a broad agenda. We also have doubled development assistance in
this President's time. The United States development assistance was essentially flat and now, under this President, it
has doubled over the last four years. So we understand that it is not just free trade, it is also development
assistance. But what free trade does is to give opportunities to export product to places like the United States.
Now let me address the various elements of this. Subsidies. You're right, subsidies have grown up too much in the
developed world. But the President has said we are we favor the reduction of subsidies, we just can't do it unilaterally
and disadvantage American farmers vis-à-vis, for instance, European farmers. So in the WTO we are trying to reduce
subsidies in the WTO structure and we would be very much for doing that, for ultimately eliminating those subsidies, if
it were a worldwide program to do that.
When it comes to the support for anti-drug efforts, we have had a real strong focus on Colombia and the Andean region
and that is because the situation had gotten so bad in the Andean region that it was really threatening governments in a
very fundamental way. When you look at the fact that the Colombian Government actually didn't control much of its own
territory because of narco-trafficking, that's an enormously serious problem. Now, we are we believe we're making some
progress. The Uribe Government has reestablished control in most of Colombia. But that region still has a terrible
problem in coca production. We do some anti-drug work in other parts but we don't have limitless resources and we do
have to make choices of what we're going to do, and the situation in the Andean had just gotten so bad.
What we are trying to do is to help in other countries, including, I believe, in Paraguay, with regional efforts at law
enforcement, regional efforts at anti-corruption. You know, one of the things we're learning, for instance, is that the
same corrupt practices, the same corrupt institutions that allow terrorists to transit, allow drug traffickers to
transit and allow arms dealers to transit, because it's the same corrupt policeman or judge or border guard. He doesn't
care whether it is drugs or arms or terrorism. It's just corruption. And so the efforts that we're making in law
enforcement improvements, in legal reform and in anti-corruption, I think even help a problem like this.
But we understand that free trade there are responsibilities on both sides. I think you will find the United States is,
by far, the most open economy in the world, by far. But we could be more open if the WTO does its work.
Thank you very much.
QUESTION: Thank you.
SECRETARY RICE: Thank you. Good to be with you. 2005/T9-3
Released on June 7, 2005
ENDS