MR. PRESIDENT, it is a great honor to welcome you and
Señora Arosemena, and your son and daughter here to the United States
again. It's a great source of satisfaction to us that you know our country
well, having served here at the Embassy of your country in the late forties,
and since that time having maintained happy relations with a good many
Americans who are your friends. It is a great pleasure to welcome you here
as President of your country, and it does give us an opportunity to reaffirm
and restate the great interest which this Government and country has in
the development of mutually beneficial and satisfactory relations between
the countries of Latin America and the countries of North America, between
Ecuador and the United States.
We are aided in this by your
knowledge of the United States. Your wife has been quoted as having said
that you could name all the Presidents of the United States in order, which
not even some Presidents of the United States can do. So we are delighted
to have someone who knows our country as well as this come here.
But we are also anxious, as
a result of your visit, that the people of this country know your country,
that they recognize how linked as we are by nature, linked as we are in
a sense by the future as well as the past, that Ecuador and the United
States, the people of Ecuador and the people of the United States, realize
that they want for each other what we want for our own countries, and that
is a better life for the people, and a life of peace. So, Mr. President,
you come at a most opportune time, and you are most welcome.
This country has committed itself
along with Ecuador and our sister republics to a great Alliance for Progress,
which is a common effort by all of us to provide a decent life for the
people of our hemisphere, an opportunity to work, to be educated, to find
jobs, to find security. This is your objective as it is ours, and I want
you to know, Mr. President, that this Government, and certainly I, as President,
are doing everything to provide for realization of these ideals. It will
take time, but time is not necessarily our friend. So I think that it is
very appropriate that you should come here and we should consider together
how best we can make this hemisphere an inspiration for all those who wish
to be free.
Mr. President, you are most
welcome here, back to the United States, back to Washington, and we're
especially glad that you are accompanied by not only the Señora,
but also by two distinguished future citizens of your country.
Mr. President.
Mr. President:
Thank you for those warm words
of welcome. As President of Ecuador, a free and sovereign nation, in you
I salute the people of the United States of America. It was for me a great
pleasure to accept the kind invitation that you extended to me to visit
your country, and I nourish the hope that this visit will extend cordial
relations that have always existed between our nations.
To return to Washington, a city
where some time ago I spent some of the best years of my life, is indeed
a special pleasure to me.
Let me assure you, Mr. President,
that you can always count on the cooperation of Ecuador in your struggle
to achieve greater justice for all men within a framework of peace, freedom,
and progress.
In connection with your joke,
maybe I can name the name of all of the Presidents of the United States,
but you must be sure that I cannot name all the Presidents of Ecuador,
because Ecuador has had many.
Thank you again for your welcome.