International Information Programs
International Security | Response to Terrorism

20 September 2001

White House: Taliban Must Turn Over
Bin Laden to Responsible Authorities

U.S. stands by its demands, Fleischer says

By Wendy S. Ross
Washington File White House Correspondent

Washington -- A recommendation from Afghanistan's Grand Islamic Council that the country's Taliban rulers ask suspected terrorist ringleader Osama bin Laden to leave Afghanistan "does not meet America's requirements," White House Press Secretary Ari Fleischer told reporters September 20 at his early morning meeting with them.

"It's time for action, not words. The president has demanded that key figures of the al Queda terrorist organization, including Osama bin Laden, be turned over to responsible authorities and for the Taliban to close terrorist camps in Afghanistan. The United States stands by those demands," Fleischer said.

He reminded reporters that "this is about much more than any one man being allowed to leave voluntarily, presumably from one safe harbor to another safe harbor, if what he's doing is voluntarily."

Fleischer also told reporters that President Bush had made a series of phone calls the morning of September 20 -- to President Ricardo Lagos of Chile, President Fernando de la Rua of Argentina, and Belgium Prime Minister Guy Verhofstadt, "accepting their condolences" about the September 11 terrorist attack on the United States and discussing with them the response to it.

The president, he said, was to meet later in the morning in the Oval Office at the White House with Saudi Arabia's Foreign Minister Saud al-Faysal.

Saudi Arabia "has strongly supported the United States in the wake of the attack, and that's the president's view," Fleischer said.

In the early afternoon, following a luncheon meeting with Vice President Dick Cheney, Bush was to hold a private meeting in the Roosevelt Room of the White House with "a wide-ranging group of religious leaders to talk about tolerance. The leaders, Fleischer said, came to Washington from across the nation and represent Catholics, Protestants, Orthodox Christians, Jews, Muslims, Sikhs, Hindus and Buddhists.

Fleischer said that among the participants is Greek Orthodox Archbishop Demetrios, whose home church, St. Nicholas, "was located within 250 feet of ground zero in New York and was completely demolished" in the September 11 terrorist attack on the World Trade Center.

The evening of September 20 Bush is to meet in the Oval Office with Britain's Prime Minister Tony Blair, followed by a private working dinner.

Then at 9:00 p.m.Washington time Bush will address a joint session of the U.S. Congress.

"His intention," in that speech, Fleischer said, "is to talk to the American people about these known terrorist organizations around the world who have a goal, and their goal is to do the greatest harm and disruption to democracies and to freedom-loving people around the world, and including within the land borders of the United States."

Britain's Prime Minister Blair will be sitting in the gallery with Mrs. Bush during the speech, Fleischer said, adding that security "will be exceptionally tight."

As an indicator "of how serious this is," Fleischer said, "sitting behind the president will be Speaker of the House Dennis Hastert and President pro tem of the Senate, Robert Byrd. The vice president will not be in the chamber tonight. Recognizing the importance of continuation-of-government issues, he will be at a different location. So, too, will one member of the Cabinet, as is the tradition."

"There's no more fitting place to discuss the fight for freedom than in the halls of freedom," Fleischer said.



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