Secretary Powell Announces
U.S. Giving $296 Million for Afghan Aid
(Secretary speaks at Tokyo Afghanistan donors conference)
Secretary of State Colin Powell announced January 21 at the Tokyo
Conference for Reconstruction Assistance to Afghanistan that the
United States would contribute $296 million for Afghan assistance
in the current fiscal year. Powell said this is only the first
contribution to what will be a multi-year effort.
Following is a transcript of a statement by Powell at the conference:
Remarks At International Conference For Reconstruction Assistance
To Afghanistan
Secretary Colin L. Powell
Tokyo, Japan
January 21, 2002
SECRETARY POWELL: Prime Minister Koizumi, Chairman Karzai, excellencies,
colleagues, ladies and gentlemen. Let me begin by expressing the
gratitude of President Bush and the American people to Prime Minister
Koizumi and the government of Japan for so graciously hosting
this conference and to my dear friend, Madame Ogata, for chairing
it. Our Japanese hosts have dedicated many long and intense hours
to working with the United States, European Union and Saudi co-chairs.
We're pleased it all came together so well and I'm especially
pleased at the level of participation that we see in the room
here today.
This conference is not about rhetoric. It is about resources
and about helping the people in need and so I'll go right to the
bottom line. On behalf of the United States, I am pleased to announce
that the American people will give $296 million in this fiscal
year to the Afghan people for the reconstruction of their society
and their nation. President Bush, the Congress of the United States,
the American people fully recognize that this is the first contribution
to what must be and will be a multi-year effort. The Bush administration
will work closely with our Congress to sustain our contribution
in future years. Chairman Karzai, we were all moved by your presentation,
especially your unscripted preamble and I want to say to you,
and through you, to the people of Afghanistan that the American
people are with you for the long term.
On my way here, I had the extraordinary experience of visiting
Kabul. My stay was short, but my impressions are vivid. Like many
of you who also have had the dust of Kabul on your shoes, I was
struck by the immensity of the devastation wrought by over two
decades of war and five years of Taliban misrule. At the same
time, you can't help but be impressed by the eagerness of the
Afghan people to make up for lost time. They are absolutely determined
not to lose another generation to war, exile and misery.
In the two short months since the initial Afghan reconstruction
meeting in Washington, DC, the United States and coalition forces
have lifted the yoke of the Taliban regime from the backs of the
Afghan people. We have destroyed the Al-Qaida terrorist base in
Afghanistan and a stabilizing international security force has
begun to arrive. Al-Qaida and Taliban leaders are now either captured,
killed or on the run and we will continue to pursue them until
the Afghan people are safe.
Only two months ago, when we first gathered in Washington, the
international community lacked an Afghan partner. Many doubted
that it would be possible to bring the different factions together.
Well, it was done. Under the leadership of Mr. Brahimi and with
the help of so many other people, today a new multiethnic interim
authority is in place in Kabul, led by Chairman Karzai. And an
agreed process is in place that will lead to a broad-based Afghan
government, a government that represents all the people of the
country -- people of every ethnic background and region, women
as well as men. There are other achievements that are just as
significant and far-reaching for the future of Afghanistan. Once
deserted market places are bustling. Music drifts into the streets.
Everywhere there are sights and sounds of a city of a nation returning
to life. As the funds we pledge today help the reconstruction
process gather force and gain momentum, we must cooperate closely
with the interim authority. My government will ensure that part
of the $296 million pledge we make today is devoted to help cover
the interim authority's start-up costs. And in accordance with
the recent lifting of the sanctions against Afghanistan by the
United Nations, we will search out and release to the Afghan authority,
frozen Afghan assets worth hundreds of millions of dollars.
Afghans themselves, as has been noted, must take the lead, and
are ready to take the lead, in the rebuilding of their country.
The interim authority, as you also have heard, has begun to define
its priorities and there is broad agreement on the key areas.
First, Afghanistan must have a political system that is capable
of representing the interest of all the people and that is accountable
to the people. Chairman Karzai and the interim authority have
made clear their firm commitment to this goal.
Our reconstruction efforts must focus on high-impact projects
that quickly create jobs, generate income, get money flowing through
the economy again, rebuild critical infrastructure, and encourage
the successful return of the millions of refugees and internally
displaced persons. We must help to restore the agricultural sector,
the heart of the Afghan economy. We must have agricultural alternatives
to poppy cultivation in order to prevent drug processing and trafficking.
We have to rebuild the education and health systems, both of which
are devastated from decades of war and oppression. We must provide
rehabilitative care and vocational training for Afghanistan's
millions of disabled citizens, not least the appalling number
of Afghans injured by landmines. Humanitarian demining in Afghanistan
must be high on the agenda. Action in this area promotes public
safety, helps to heal the wounds of war, facilitates the delivery
of humanitarian assistance, opens economic opportunities for shattered
communities, and creates a secure and stable environment where
political and economic freedom can thrive.
Reconstruction cannot take place without a secure environment.
A lack of security is one of the main reasons why Afghanistan
disintegrated into anarchy into the 1990s, leading to the emergence
of the Taliban. The mobilization of former combatants and their
reintegration into society is a vital priority. In particular,
we must reach out to the child soldiers, showing them that the
way to a better life is to put down their Kalashnikovs and pick
up schoolbooks -- and we must provide the schoolbooks. The interim
authority also needs our support toestablish and train a national
army and a police force that are firmly under civilian control
and meet international human rights standards. Even as we move
forward in reconstruction, we will not forget the pressing humanitarian
needs of the Afghan people.
The United States is the largest donor of humanitarian aid to
Afghanistan. The United States government is providing approximately
$400 million of humanitarian assistance to Afghanistan above and
beyond the funds we are committing to reconstruction. Every one
of these priority areas will require a systematic, sustained and
large-scale commitment of resources. Our shared goal is to help
the Afghan people rebuild a politically stable, economically viable,
secure Afghanistan. An Afghanistan where terrorism and traffickers
can never again flourish, an Afghanistan to which refugees will
want to return, an Afghanistan whose sons and daughters can contribute
fully to the life of their nation and to the world. President
Bush has made it clear that the United States will not abandon
the people of Afghanistan and we, as an international community,
must not fail them. Today, let us all pledge the resources needed
to help the people of Afghanistan build a future that is worthy
of their highest hopes and of ours.
For hundreds of years, the people of the world met in Afghanistan.
Traders bought the essentials and the luxuries of their nations.
Ideas ebbed and flowed from one side of the world to the other
-- north and south, east and west. Civilizations and religions
gave to each other and fought each other in bloody wars. Let us
meet again now in Afghanistan. This time, let us help the Afghans
in their search for a stable and prosperous future. Let us build
on the richness of Afghanistan's past. Let us a build a new history
that will protect and ennoble us all.
Thank you very much.