[Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents Volume 38, Number 44 (Monday, November 4, 2002)]
[Pages 1866-1867]
[Online from the Government Printing Office, www.gpo.gov]
<R04>
Remarks Following Discussions With President Vicente Fox of Mexico and
an Exchange With Reporters in
Los Cabos, Mexico
October 26, 2002
[President Fox made opening remarks in Spanish, and no translation was
provided.]
President Bush. Vicente, thank you for inviting us here. This is a
very beautiful part of the world, and we're so honored you're hosting
this convention.
We did have a very good discussion, but I'm not surprised. After
all, we're close friends. We discussed trade. We discussed commerce. We
did discuss migration. Ever since I have been the President and Vicente
has been the President, we have had a mutual desire to deal with the
migration issue in a way that recognizes reality and in a way that
treats the Mexican citizens who are in the United States with respect.
And we will continue to work on this issue.
And we did talk about world peace and Iraq. Mexico is a member of
the Security Council. We discussed how to keep the world peaceful, how
to hold people to account, how to make sure the United Nations is
effective. And I appreciate so very much the President and the Foreign
Minister's desire to consult closely with the United States as we move
forward to making the world more peaceful.
So we're--it's an honor to be here. It's going to be a very
important conference, being held in a beautiful spot and hosted by a
good friend, Mr. President.
We'll take a couple of questions.
Immigration
Q. President Bush, we know that--we understand President Fox was
going to talk to you about the impact that your subsidies would
eventually have on Mexican illegal migration to the U.S. Did you have an
answer for him?
President Bush. Ask the question again--agricultural subsidies?
Q. Migration----
President Bush. Oh, yes. Well, here's the answer. The answer is, the
long-term answer for the migration issue is to work a way that
encourages commerce on both sides of the border, so people can find jobs
here in Mexico, for starters. That's the long-term solution.
And the short-term solution, we've got to recognize that wage
differentials are going to cause people to want to come to the United
States. And when they come to the United States, we've got to work to
make sure they're treated with respect. And the issue is, how do we
recognize the reality of two societies with a wage differential the way
they are? Here on the border, the wage differential is narrowing--or on
the border, wage differential is narrowing, so the migration pressure
tends to come from interior of Mexico and the south of Mexico.
And one of the things that the President and I have discussed in the
past is, how best to develop industry together in the midst of Mexico,
in the south of Mexico, so that people are more likely to find work at
home.
Heidi [Heidi Pryzbyla, Bloomberg News]. Oh, sorry.
North Korea
Q. A senior administration official told us this morning that the
goal with North Korea is to isolate them. What is your strategy for
doing that without winding up in the same position that we were in, in
1994, with a failed agreement?
President Bush. Well, I'm glad you asked a senior administrative
official. Our goal is to work with our friends in the region to convince
Kim Chong-il to disarm. I made a positive step yesterday in Crawford
when the President of China made a public declaration that--he said,
``Like the United States, we share the desire to make sure the Korean
Peninsula is nuclear weapons free.''
Right after this meeting with President Fox, I'll be meeting with
the leaders of Japan and South Korea, where we'll continue this dialog.
So the strategy is to make sure that our close friends and our allies
and people with whom we've got relations work in concert to convince Mr.
Kim Chong-il that a nuclear-weapons-free peninsula is in his interests;
it's in South Korea's interests, and it is in the world's interests.
[At this point, a reporter asked a question in Spanish. President Bush
and President Fox
[[Page 1867]]
responded in Spanish, and no translation was provided.]
U.N. Resolution on Iraq
Q. For President Fox--it's the same question, basically. For
President Fox, are you prepared to support the U.S. position at the U.N.
and vote for a resolution authorizing force?
And for President Bush, are there any consequences for nations that
don't support our position at the U.N.?
President Bush. The only consequence, of course, is with Saddam
Hussein. And if the U.N. does not pass a resolution which holds him to
account and that has consequences, then as I have said in speech after
speech after speech, if the U.N. won't act, if Saddam Hussein won't
disarm, we will lead a coalition to disarm him.
Q. President Fox?
[President Fox responded to the question in Spanish, and no translation
was provided.]
Note: The President spoke at 11 a.m. at the Las Ventanas al Paraiso
Hotel. In his remarks, he referred to Foreign Minister Jorge Castaneda
of Mexico; General Secretary Kim Chong-il of North Korea; President
Jiang Zemin of China; President Kim Dae-jung of South Korea; Prime
Minister Junichiro Koizumi of Japan; and President Saddam Hussein of
Iraq. A tape was not available for verification of the content of these
remarks.