Statement Welcoming Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin
(September 10, 1974)
Mr. Prime Minister and Mrs. Rabin :
It is a very real pleasure for me to have the opportunity of welcoming
both of you to the United States.
You are returning as the leader of a great country. You are returning
to meet many of your friends over the years that you knew so well during
your service here as Ambassador to the United States.
I trust that you and Mrs. Rabin will thoroughly enjoy this visit back
to the United States.
The United States, Mr. Prime Minister, has been proud of its association
with the State of Israel. We shall continue to stand with Israel. We
are committed to Israel's survival and security.
The United States for a quarter of a century has had an excellent relationship
with the State of Israel. We have cooperated in many, many fields--in
your security, in the well-being of the Middle East, and in leading
what we all hope is a lasting peace throughout the world.
Many of our people have a close personal relationship and association
with your citizens, your fellow citizens in Israel, and we hope and
trust that this relationship will grow and expand.
Over the last few months, there has been movement in the Middle East
for a lasting and durable peace. Israel has cooperated; Israel has been
helpful. And we hope and trust that in the months ahead, the foundation
which has been laid will be built upon.
We want, you want, and others throughout the world want a lasting and
durable peace in the Middle East.
The first steps have been taken; others will follow. And I am certain
and positive that, as we meet here during the next several days, we
can contribute to the building of a better and finer peace in the Middle
East.
I hope that you and Mrs. Rabin will have a delightful and warm welcome,
which you so richly deserve, in the United States.
NOTE: The President spoke at 3:10 p.m. on the South Lawn at the White
House where Prime Minister Rabin was given a formal welcome with full
military honors. Prime Minister Rabin responded as follows:
Mr. President, Mrs. Ford, I am grateful to you for your kind invitation
to come to Washington and for your warm words of welcome.
As you know, Mr. President, I am not a complete stranger in this country
nor, indeed, in this city. But this is the first time that I come here
in my capacity of Prime Minister of Israel.
You, Mr. President, have very recently undertaken new and awesome responsibilities,
and I feel certain, therefore, that you can appreciate the weighty load
that rests on my shoulders.
I represent a country which is faced--which is facing manifold problems,
great challenges, but also great and new opportunities for internal
progress and for peace with her neighbors.
In the performance of my new duties, I am encouraged, as all my predecessors
have been, by their binding friendship and by the ever-deepening tics
which bind the people of Israel with the people of this, the greatest
democracy, and with its leaders.
Ever since the renewal of Jewish independence in the land of our forefathers,
after long generations of suffering and martyrdom, Israel has enjoyed
generous aid and support on the part of the United States. Our gratitude
for this sustenance will be recorded forever in the annals of our people.
During all these times since 1948, Israel has seen periods of trials
and hardships. Yet she never swerved, even for a moment, from her supreme
national goal, which is the quest for peace with her Arab neighbors.
So far, to our nation's deep sorrow, this goal has eluded us. Despite
the recent test of arms, Israel is prepared to continue to seek progress
towards peace.
We have in recent months demonstrated that we have taken risks for
peace to see whether new efforts may possibly bring us nearer to its
achievement.
I know, in this quest for peace in our region, we have in you, Mr.
President, and in your colleagues in the Government of the United States,
a strong and determined partner.
Incited, you, Mr. President, pronounced the commitment of the United
States to the quest of world peace as the central theme in your inaugural
address only a few weeks ago.
The people of Israel stand united in the conviction that war is futile,
that it cannot solve problems, that only human suffering is brought
in its wake. As far as our part of the world is concerned, we are convinced
that there is no issue, however complicated it may now appear, that
it cannot be resolved by patient negotiations.
What is needed is an equal measure of desire and determination on all
sides to achieve peace.
Much depends at this stage on what other governments in the area are
prepared to do. At any rate, we in Israel are ready for the peacemaking
effort.
I must, however, with a full sense of responsibility, add this: As
you, Mr. President, assumed high office you conveyed to your people
and to the world the message that a strong America is a paramount guarantee
for peace in the world. This is true in the same measure as far as Israel
and her own region are concerned. Only a strong Israel which has the
capacity to deter aggression and to defend herself successfully by her
own strengths, has a chance of winning peace.
I cannot underline strongly enough our conviction that the constant
maintenance of Israel's strength is an absolute prerequisite for the
attainment of solutions to the problems of our troubled region.
On these and other matters of common interest and concern, I shall
be exchanging views with you, Mr. President, and your colleagues, within
the next few days. I look forward to doing so in the spirit of confidence
and of the cultivation of a good future which has linked our governments
and our people for so many years.
I am confident that I shall return to Jerusalem assured of the United
States' determination to support the well-being of Israel within a Middle
East that we hope that will finally be advancing on the road towards
a just and durable peace which assures security and progress for all
its people.
Thank you very much.
Sources: Public Papers of the President |