 Congratulations. Mr. President, yes, it's been a wonderful future. Mr. President, great to be with you. How are you? Unless you're going to speak Russian, I'm not going to make those. No, that's for tomorrow morning's very tomorrow's meeting. Yes. Right here. Yeah. How are you? How are you? How are you? How are you? I'm good. You don't need three? How are you doing? How are you? How are you? How are you? How are you? How are you? How are you? How are you? How are you? How are you? How are you? How are you? How are you? What's the problem with reconciliation, David? Well, after the leadership all agreed to fall on a sword, which wasn't too sharp anyway. Now we've got committees rewriting the whole package. So we're either going to have a leadership package that includes the President, the Russian leaders, or not. And I guess they're up in my office trying to redo some of it. And Nancy and I think Phil have other ideas on the whole package. So, I might just explain if you want me to. Sure. My thought is, certainly, Mr. President, I've said from the very beginning that I would be supporting the negotiated package. And in no way would I even try and block waning the budget act to bring it to a vote or bring it to the floor. I should have known this was up. Well, you've been five times. You've been 39. That's right. Thank you very much. Very possible. Bye-bye. I should have cleared. No, thank you. Thank you. Mr. Schifter. Congratulations for all of your support. Thank you very much. Mr. President, I'm happy by your narrows, the head of the US delegation. I'm proud to have him here. This is Dr. Anatoli Koriagin. Great psychiatrist. A student for two cars. Next one is Mr. Bittarpe's squad. The name of the show. Well, we used to see you on the head here. Next one is Mr. Bittarpe's squad. Hello. Mr. President, I am lead to and without the squad. Pleased to have you. Thank you. If I can count you, remain here. Well, thank you very much. Happy to see you. God bless you. Thank you. Ms. Ezrazie from Ethiopia. Hello. Nice to see you here. Nice to see you here. Great to have you. Thank you. I'd appreciate about the dinner and the crime. Hello there. Nice to see you on the head here. Nice to meet you. Thank you very much. Thank you very much. You are an ambassador. Thank you. Thank you. This is Mr. Lido from Ethiopia. Nice to see you here. Hi, Mr. Kroos. I am Kroos from Hawaii. Hello, Mr. President. I am Mr. Kroos from Hawaii. Nice to see you here. Nice to see you. I'm Mr. Kroos from Vietnam. Hello there. Thank you. Nice to see you. Nice to see you. President, all together, they served 102 years of prison. I just figured it out. My goodness. But we're very proud to have you all here. I know what you're doing in this cause. And I want you to know that human rights was a very major part of my meeting that has just ended here for these last few days with General Secretary of the Soviet Union, Mr. Gorbachev. And while we have great differences and a number of issues, I think we've made some great progress and human rights will continue to be a major part of our foreign policy. I want you all to know that and again, I want to thank you and recognize again how much you do for this cause. And now I think I'd better get over the sign of proclamation. Mr. President, I want to thank you that the United States has had our refugee to come to this country as a one part of our life and care of our life. And this is very important. I want to invite you and Mrs. President to visit us sometime in North Carolina. Thank you. Well, you know, I've often thought that the Lord put this continent here between the two great oceans for people like yourselves from every corner of the world to find it, people that had a special love in their heart for freedom and justice and so forth. I got a letter from a man the other day. I never thought of it this way. How unique we are. He said, you can go to live in Japan, but you can't become Japanese. You can go to live in France, but you can't become a Frenchman. And he went on to several other countries, but he said anyone from any corner of the world can come here and become an American. We're very proud of that. I also have a letter for you about the date and life of some of our people who were scared from Thailand and they pushed back and killed all 30 people across the American river. Thank you, Mr. President. Thank you. I wrote a letter to you, Mr. President, about the situation in Romania in the 15th of November, the workers were arrested, 200 or 3,000 people were arrested by the regime of the United States. Thank you very much. Thank you. I am just reading the book by his name, Pacheca. Pacheca. Yeah. I'm reading his book. Yeah. I'm excited to become an American. After years of heading up to the Union, literally second in command of the government. Thank you. We thank God to have you, Mr. President. All right. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. I'm Ukrainian. I'm Ukrainian from the Soviet Union. I'm an Ukrainian from the Soviet Union. I was in Soviet camp for 37 years and 7 months. I was in Soviet camp for 37 years and 7 months. I was in Soviet camp for 37 years and 7 months. When the declaration of human rights became by the way, in every history, the declaration of human rights should be an integral part. Thank you. Mr. President, Mr. President, Mr. President, the Soviet people who fight for human rights in the Soviet Union are for the principle of police. The people who fight for human rights in the Soviet Union are for the principle of police. I hope that the principle of cooperation will remain. Well, it will. In fact, as I say, that was a major part of our discussions these last three days of human rights. He said it was a large and long, long meeting this year. We had a difference of opinion, of course, but I think we've learned that young man back there is going to be a lot of tuning in here for us. Thank you. Thank you, Mr. President. When is the adjournment? I don't want to start. We've covered fully our four-part agenda, that includes human rights, regional conflicts and bilateral issues. I could just give you a, keep on eating. I'd just like to give you a brief summary of our talks and then I'll ask Howard Baker and Colin Powell to elaborate further. Howard Schultz, by the way, is on his way to Europe right now to brief our allied leaders and understand that he breathed many of you at the Capitol yesterday. We started right off on day one human rights and there was some movement, a resolution of a number of individual cases in which prisoners will be released or exit pieces granted and I'm encouraged by his assurance of more substantial movement in the future which I hope to see become a reality. We have been, if you don't know, we have been, instead of just talking generally on it, we have from every source, names that come into us, of people that are separated to my husband and wife and that sort of thing or anything else and we put those lists together and these firms and two of them request from us that they take action in those cases and that's, there has been quite a response to that. That's how Felsman the piano player got out of there. But the regional conflicts, I spoke very candidly to him on the issue of Afghanistan and while he assured me of the desire to withdraw their truths, we didn't get around to setting a date for when that would begin or end and there are some discussions that he wants to have about what follows their withdrawal and the coming together of a neutral government in Afghanistan but he talked about that and made a claim that in his mind it is definitely set that there will be a date set for a bleeding and for the completion of their departure. In the Iran-Iraq war, they wouldn't commit themselves to an enforcement resolution than the UN Security Council that might pressure Iran to end the war. They joined us as you know in 598 the resolution about ending the war. Iraq gave in, Iran still hasn't and I say they didn't commit themselves to that resolution, I don't know what's on their mind on that but they did say they wanted to stay in touch about the problems there and what they could do in the matter and by lateral issues we agreed to extend cooperation in ways that will break down some of the barriers between our peoples and the nations. For example, agreement was reached to expand and improve on air transport between our two countries. We have a number of other things there that we're talking about with them and certainly the exchange of people in various groups has been going forward and increased greatly. In terms of arms control, we of course signed not just an arms control treaty but an arms reduction treaty as you know and it won't just put a ceiling on the growth of nuclear weapons but that actually abolishes as we know that particular class of weapons. Major achievement was a good set of instructions to our negotiators in Geneva to conclude a start agreement. We're going to work on that preferably in time to be signed at the Moscow summit and that is no question we've agreed all of us that there will be such a meeting and it's up to us to set the date on it and we're simply waiting to know more about things like the economic summit and all that. And on defense and space we came to an agreement that protects our ability to develop and deploy SBIs. So I'm very satisfied with the results of the summit. I think we've achieved our objectives and now I'm going to interrupt Howard's breakfast over there and ask for his thoughts. Mr. President, thank you very much Jacksons that were agreed to for our negotiators on starting on the matters. I thought maybe it would be helpful to do that as some deal for how the meetings went. I was in each of the meetings all meetings and plenaries and watches. Not only from the standpoint of President's T.P.A. but also from the standpoint of a recent group of this group. And I must tell you that it was an interesting situation. You've got a dynamic, outgoing, valuable Russian leader who