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Documentation - Documents
Discours du Président Bill Clinton à l'Université de Hanoi
Thank you very much, and good afternoon. I can think of no more fitting place to begin my visit at this hopeful moment in our common history than here at Hanoi National University.
I was given a Vietnamese
phrase; I am going to try to say it. If I mess it up, feel free to laugh at
me. Xin chao cac ban. So much of the promise of this youthful nation is
embodied with you. I learned that you have exchanges here with students from
nearly 100 universities, from Canada to France to Korea -- and that you are
now hosting more than a dozen full-time students from your partner school in
the United States, the University of California. I salute your vigorous
efforts to engage the world. Of course, like students everywhere, I know you
have things to think about other than your studies. For example, in
September, you had to study for your classes and watch the Olympic
accomplishments of Tran Hieu Ngan in Sydney. And this week you have to study
and cheer Le Huynh Duc and Nguyen Hong Son in Bangkok at the football
matches. I am honored to be the first American president to see Hanoi, and
to visit this university. But I do so conscious that the histories of our
two nations are deeply intertwined in ways that are both a source of pain
for generations that came before, and a source of promise for generations
yet to come. Hello, everybody. Two centuries ago, during the early days of
the United States, we reached across the seas for partners in trade and one
of the first nations we encountered was Vietnam. In fact, one of our
founding fathers, Thomas Jefferson, tried to obtain rice seed from Vietnam
to grow on his farm in Virginia 200 years ago. By the time World War II
arrived, the United States had become a significant consumer of exports from
Vietnam. In 1945, at the moment of your country's birth, the words of Thomas
Jefferson were chosen to be echoed in your own Declaration of Independence:
"All men are created equal. The creator has given us certain inviolable
rights --the right to life, the right to be free, the right to achieve
happiness." Of course, all of this common history, 200 years of it, has
been obscured in the last few decades by the conflict we call the Vietnam
War and you call the American War. You may know that in Washington, D.C., on
our National Mall, there is a stark black granite wall engraved with the
name of every single American who died in Vietnam. At this solemn memorial,
some American veterans also refer to the "other side of the wall,"
the staggering sacrifice of the Vietnamese people on both sides of that
conflict --more than 3 million brave soldiers and civilians. This shared
suffering has given our countries a relationship unlike any other. Because
of the conflict, America is now home to 1 million Americans of Vietnamese
ancestry. Because of the conflict, 3 million American veterans served in
Vietnam, as did many journalists, embassy personnel, aid workers and others
who are forever connected to your country. Almost 20 years ago now, a group
of American servicemen took the first step to re-establish contacts between
the United States and Vietnam. They traveled back to Vietnam for the first
time since the war, and as they walked through the streets of Hanoi, they
were approached by Vietnamese citizens who had heard of their visit: Are you
the American soldiers, they asked? Not sure what to expect, our veterans
answered, yes, we are. And to their immense relief, their hosts simply said,
welcome to Vietnam. More veterans followed, including distinguished American
veterans and heroes who serve now in the United States Congress: Sen. John
McCain, Sen. Bob Kerrey, Sen. Chuck Robb, and Sen. John Kerry from
Massachusetts, who is here with me today, along with a number of
representatives from our Congress, some of whom are veterans of the Vietnam
conflict. When they came here, they were determined to honor those who
fought without refighting the battles; to remember our history, but not to
perpetuate it; to give young people like you in both our countries the
chance to live in your tomorrows, not in our yesterdays. As Ambassador Pete
Peterson has said so eloquently, "We cannot change the past. What we
can change is the future." Our new relationship gained strength as
American veterans launched nonprofit organizations to work on behalf of the
Vietnamese people, such as providing devices to people with war injuries to
help them lead more normal lives. Vietnam's willingness to help us return
the remains of our fallen servicemen to their families has been the biggest
boost to improve ties. And there are many Americans here who have worked in
that endeavor for many years now, including our secretary of veterans
affairs, Hershel Gober. The desire to be reunited with a lost family member
is something we all understand. It touches the hearts of Americans to know
that every Sunday in Vietnam one of your most-watched television shows
features families seeking viewers' help in finding loved ones they lost in
the war so long ago now. And we are grateful for the Vietnamese villagers
who have helped us to find our missing and, therefore, to give their
families the peace of mind that comes with knowing what actually happened to
their loved ones. No two nations have ever before done the things we are
doing together to find the missing from the Vietnam conflict. Teams of
Americans and Vietnamese work together, sometimes in tight and dangerous
places. The Vietnamese government has offered us access to files and
government information to assist our search. And, in turn, we have been able
to give Vietnam almost 400,000 pages of documents that could assist in your
search. On this trip, I have brought with me another 350,000 pages of
documents that I hope will help Vietnamese families find out what happened
to their missing loved ones. Today, I was honored to present these to your
president, Tran Duc Luong. And I told him before the year is over, America
will provide another million pages of documents. We will continue to offer
our help and to ask for your help as we both honor our commitment to do
whatever we can for as long as it takes to achieve the fullest possible
accounting of our loved ones. Your cooperation in that mission over these
last eight years has made it possible for America to support international
lending to Vietnam, to resume trade between our countries, to establish
formal diplomatic relations and, this year, to sign a pivotal trade
agreement. Finally, America is coming to see Vietnam as your people have
asked for years -- as a country, not a war. A country with the highest
literacy rate in Southeast Asia; a country whose young people just won three
gold medals at the International Math Olympiad in Seoul; a country of gifted,
hard-working entrepreneurs emerging from years of conflict and uncertainty
to shape a bright future. Today, the United States and Vietnam open a new
chapter in our relationship, at a time when people all across the world
trade more, travel more, know more about and talk more with each other than
ever before. Even as people take pride in their national independence, we
know we are becoming more and more interdependent. The movement of people,
money and ideas across borders, frankly, breeds suspicion among many good
people in every country. They are worried about globalization because of its
unsettling and unpredictable consequences. Yet, globalization is not
something we can hold off or turn off. It is the economic equivalent of a
force of nature -- like wind or water. We can harness wind to fill a sail.
We can use water to generate energy. We can work hard to protect people and
property from storms and floods. But there is no point in denying the
existence of wind or water, or trying to make them go away. The same is true
for globalization. We can work to maximize its benefits and minimize its
risks, but we cannot ignore it -- and it is not going away. In the last
decade, as the volume of world trade has doubled, investment flows from
wealthy nations to developing ones have increased by six times, from $25
billion in 1990 to more than $150 billion in 1998. Nations that have opened
their economies to the international trading system have grown at least
twice as fast as nations with closed economies. Your next job may well
depend on foreign trade and investment. Come to think of it, since I have to
leave office in about eight weeks, my next job may depend on foreign trade
and investment. Over the last 15 years, Vietnam launched its policy of Doi
Moi, joined APEC and ASEAN, normalized relations with the European Union and
the United States, and disbanded collective farming, freeing farmers to grow
what they want and earn the fruits of their own labor. The results were
impressive proof of the power of your markets and the abilities of your
people. You not only conquered malnutrition, you became the world's second -largest
exporter of rice and achieved stronger overall economic growth. Of course,
in recent years the rate of growth has slowed and foreign investment has
declined here, showing that any attempt to remain isolated from the risks of
a global economy also guarantees isolation from its rewards, as well.
General Secretary Le Kha Phieu said this summer, and I quote, "We have
yet to achieve the level of development commensurate with the possibilities
of our country. And there is only one way to further open up the economy."
So this summer, in what I believe will be seen as a pivotal step toward your
future prosperity, Vietnam joined the United States in signing a historic
bilateral trade agreement, building a foundation for Vietnam's entry
eventually into the World Trade Organization. Under the agreement, Vietnam
will grant to its citizens, and over time to citizens of other countries,
rights to import, export and distribute goods, giving the Vietnamese people
expanding rights to determine their own economic destiny. Vietnam has agreed
it will subject important decisions to the rule of law and the international
trading system, increase the flow of information to its people, and
accelerate the rise of a free economy and the private sector. Of course,
this will be good for Vietnam's foreign partners, like the United States.
But it will be even better for Vietnam's own entrepreneurs, who are working
hard to build businesses of their own. Under this agreement, Vietnam could
be earning, according to the World Bank, another $1.5 billion each and every
year from exports alone. Both our nations were born with a Declaration of
Independence. This trade agreement is a form of declaration of
interdependence, a clear, unequivocal statement that prosperity in the 21st
century depends upon a nation's economic engagement in the rest of the
world. This new openness is a great opportunity for you. But it does not
guarantee success. What else should be done? Vietnam is such a young
country, with 60 percent of your population under the age of 30, and 1.4
million new people entering your work force every year. Your leaders realize
that government and state-owned businesses cannot generate 1.4 million new
jobs every year. They know that the industries driving the global economy
today -- computers, telecommunications, biotechnology -- these are all based
on knowledge. That is why economies all over the world grow faster when
young people stay in school longer, when women have the same educational
opportunities that men have, when young people like you have every
opportunity to explore new ideas and then to turn those ideas into your own
business opportunities. You can be -- indeed, those of you in this hall
today must be --the engine of Vietnam's future prosperity. As President Tran
Duc Luong has said, the internal strength of the country is the intellect
and capacity of its people. The United States has great respect for your
intellect and capacity. One of our government's largest educational exchange
programs is with Vietnam. And we want to do more. Senator Kerry is right
there, and I mentioned him earlier -- is leading an effort in our United
States Congress, along with Sen. John McCain and other veterans of the
conflict here, to establish a new Vietnam Education Foundation. Once enacted,
the foundation would support 100 fellowships every year, either here or in
the United States, for people to study or teach science, math, technology
and medicine. We're ready to put more funding in our exchange programs now
so this effort can get under way immediately. I hope some of you in this
room will have a chance to take part. And I want to thank Senator Kerry for
this great idea. Thank you, sir, for what you have done. Let me say, as
important as knowledge is, the benefits of knowledge are necessarily limited
by undue restrictions on its use. We Americans believe the freedom to
explore, to travel, to think, to speak, to shape decisions that affect our
lives enrich the lives of individuals and nations in ways that go far beyond
economics. Now, America's record is not perfect in this area. After all, it
took us almost a century to banish slavery. It took us even longer to give
women the right to vote. And we are still seeking to live up to the more
perfect union of our founders' dreams and the words of our Declaration of
Independence and Constitution. But along the way over these 226 years -- 224
years -- we've learned some lessons. For example, we have seen that
economies work better where newspapers are free to expose corruption, and
independent courts can ensure that contracts are honored, that competition
is robust and fair, that public officials honor the rule of law. In our
experience, guaranteeing the right to religious worship and the right to
political dissent does not threaten the stability of a society. Instead, it
builds people's confidence in the fairness of our institutions, and enables
us to take it when a decision goes in a way we don't agree with. All this
makes our country stronger in good times and bad. In our experience, young
people are much more likely to have confidence in their future if they have
a say in shaping it, in choosing their governmental leaders and having a
government that is accountable to those it serves. Now, let me say
emphatically, we do not seek to impose these ideals, nor could we. Vietnam
is an ancient and enduring country. You have proved to the world that you
will make your own decisions. Only you can decide, for example, if you will
continue to share Vietnam's talents and ideas with the world; if you will
continue to open Vietnam so that you can enrich it with the insights of
others. Only you can decide if you will continue to open your markets, open
your society and strengthen the rule of law. Only you can decide how to
weave individual liberties and human rights into the rich and strong fabric
of Vietnamese national identity. Your future should be in your hands, the
hands of the Vietnamese people. But your future is important to the rest of
us, as well. For as Vietnam succeeds, it will benefit this region and your
trading partners and your friends throughout the world. We are eager to
increase our cooperation with you across the board. We want to continue our
work to clear land mines and unexploded ordnance. We want to strengthen our
common efforts to protect the environment by phasing out leaded gasoline in
Vietnam, maintaining a clean water supply, saving coral reefs and tropical
forests. We want to bolster our efforts on disaster relief and prevention,
including our efforts to help those suffering from the floods in the Mekong
Delta. Yesterday, we presented to your government satellite imagery from our
Global Disaster Information Network -- images that show in great detail the
latest flood levels on the Delta that can help Vietnam to rebuild. We want
to accelerate our cooperation in science, cooperation focused this month on
our meeting in Singapore to study together the health and ecological effects
of dioxin on the people of Vietnam and the Americans who were in Vietnam;
and cooperation that we are advancing further with the science and
technology agreement our two countries signed just today. We want to be your
ally in the fight against killer diseases like AIDS, tuberculosis and
malaria. I am glad to announce that we will nearly double our support of
Vietnam's efforts to contain the AIDS crisis through education, prevention,
care and treatment. We want to work with you to make Vietnam a safer place
by giving you help to reduce preventable injuries -- on the streets, at home
and in the workplace. We want to work with you to make the most of this
trade agreement, by providing technical assistance to assure its full and
smooth implementation, in finding ways to encourage greater United States
investment in your country. We are, in short, eager to build our partnership
with Vietnam. We believe it's good for both our nations. We believe the
Vietnamese people have the talent to succeed in this new global age as they
have in the past. We know it because we've seen the progress you have made
in this last decade. We have seen the talent and ingenuity of the Vietnamese
who have come to settle in America. Vietnamese-Americans have become elected
officials, judges, leaders in science and in our high-tech industry. Last
year, a Vietnamese-American achieved a mathematical breakthrough that will
make it easier to conduct high-quality video-conferencing. And all America
took notice when Hoang Nhu Tran graduated No. 1 in his class at the United
States Air Force Academy. Vietnamese-Americans have flourished not just
because of their unique abilities and their good values, but also because
they have had the opportunity to make the most of their abilities and their
values. As your opportunities grow to live, to learn, to express your
creativity, there will be no stopping the people of Vietnam. And you will
find, I am certain, that the American people will be by your side. For in
this interdependent world, we truly do have a stake in your success. Almost
200 years ago, at the beginning of the relations between the United States
and Vietnam, our two nations made many attempts to negotiate a treaty of
commerce, sort of like the trade agreement that we signed today. But 200
years ago, they all failed, and no treaty was concluded. Listen to what one
historian said about what happened 200 years ago, and think how many times
it could have been said in the two centuries since. He said, "These
efforts failed because two distant cultures were talking past each other,
and the importance of each to the other was insufficient to overcome these
barriers." Let the days when we talk past each other be gone for good.
Let us acknowledge our importance to one another. Let us continue to help
each other heal the wounds of war, not by forgetting the bravery shown and
the tragedy suffered by all sides, but by embracing the spirit of
reconciliation and the courage to build better tomorrows for our children.
May our children learn from us that good people, through respectful
dialogue, can discover and rediscover their common humanity, and that a
painful, painful past can be redeemed in a peaceful and prosperous future.
Thank you for welcoming me and my family and our American delegation to
Vietnam. Thank you for your faith in the future. Chuc cac ban suc khoe va
thanh cong. Thank you very much. |
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