Remarks With Australian Foreign Minister Kevin Rudd After Their Meeting
Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of StateTreaty Room
Washington, DC
September 17, 2010
SECRETARY CLINTON: Good morning, everyone. And let me warmly welcome a friend and colleague back to the State Department in his new capacity as foreign minister. I was delighted to hear of the prime minister’s appointment of Kevin and I look forward to continuing to work with him on the full range of important regional and global issues that both the United States and Australia are facing.
After all, our relationship with Australia is long and deep, and this is a continuation of the extraordinary partnership that we’ve had going back so many years between our countries. I’d also like to congratulate the prime minister at the outcome of the recent elections. These were exciting to look at from afar, and the orderly transition to a new government were powerful symbols of the democratic traditions that our two nations share. The common values that we are both committed to are the pillars of our historic alliance.
And I am delighted to announce that I will travel to Australia in November to participate in the Australia-U.S. ministerial. Secretary Gates and I will be meeting with our Australian counterparts, Ministers Rudd and Smith, for what will be the 25th anniversary of the first such meeting. This will be my first trip as Secretary of State because I had to cancel my prior trip due to the earthquake in Haiti, and I am so looking forward to returning to a country that I admire so greatly.
This morning, we had the opportunity to discuss a range of issues. I thanked the foreign minister for Australia’s continuing sacrifice and contributions in Afghanistan. We had a long discussion about the dire humanitarian crisis unfolding in Pakistan. The minister arrived here from Pakistan, where he surveyed the damage from the devastating floods. And he and I will both be attending a meeting about Pakistan at the beginning of the United Nations General Assembly week on Sunday night. What Australia has done in terms of its commitment to Pakistan is exemplary, and now we have to make sure that the money gets to the people and alleviates the suffering that they are experiencing and helps with the reconstruction.
There are so many matters that are of mutual interest, from developing new technologies for clean energy to addressing climate change, halting nuclear proliferation, countering the threat of terrorism, and so much else. So I am delighted to have renewed my partnership and friendship with Kevin.
FOREIGN MINISTER RUDD: Thanks very much, Hillary. Thank you very much for making me feel so welcome here at the State Department. I feel very much as if I am here among old friends. And we’ve known each other for a long time, and I look forward very much to working with you in my new capacity as foreign minister of Australia.
This alliance of ours between Australia and the United States goes back a long, long time. For us, it’s our oldest continuing alliance and we’ve been with you in the field in so many operations over so many decades that this is a relationship we take deeply seriously. It is a core part of the Australian national interest.
Of course, in the discussions we’ve just had, we began discussing recent developments in Pakistan. As the Secretary of State noted, I was there yesterday in the southern Punjab and also met with Ambassador Richard Holbrooke and also with the Pakistan foreign minister, Minister Qureshi. The humanitarian situation in Pakistan is dire, and the Secretary of State and I will be attending a special donors conference on that in New York on Sunday.
My simple message to the rest of the international community is that this challenge has not gone away. The risk of waterborne diseases for the people of Pakistan is huge, and the possibility of epidemics still remains real. Therefore the challenge for us all is to remain focused on what’s happening in that country because of our common concern for our fellow members of the human family.
Also, strategically, the United States and Australia have deep and abiding interests in Pakistan, and it is therefore doubly important that we provide our ongoing support for the people and government of that country.
Afghanistan – Australia remains strong and robust in support for the United States in its mission and those of the other countries participating in ISAF in Afghanistan. This is not an easy conflict. It is a hard conflict. But we are resolved to stay the course with our friends and allies in the United States, and we will maintain a very close dialogue with the Administration on the future shape of our engagement there.
Within our region, very much we look forward to the participation of the United States in the East Asian Summit. This is an important institution for our region, and I look forward very much to discussing further with the United States and other members of the summit, Australia’s and the United States views on the future evolution of that institution. This is an important body in the future shape of our region in East Asia and the Pacific and, I believe, has a constructive and positive role to play for the future.
Finally, can I say how much we’re delighted to be in a position to welcome both the Defense Secretary and the Secretary of State to Australia on the 8th for the AUSMIN talks. This will be the 25th such occasion on which our two countries have met in that forum, and we intend to make it a really good time. (Laughter.) Not in the sense that you all think. (Laughter.)
SECRETARY CLINTON: Oh, I’m not so sure about that. (Laughter.)
FOREIGN MINISTER RUDD: We’re a very hospitable people. (Laughter.) And we believe that you can do some serious work and have a good time at the same time. But there is so much for us – Defense Minister Smith, myself, the Secretary of State, and Bob Gates – to discuss about our common interests for the year ahead. Now, this is an important forum for us. I believe it’s an important forum for the United States. And, Secretary, you will be made exceptionally welcome.
SECRETARY CLINTON: Thank you. Thank you so much, Kevin.
MR. CROWLEY: We have time for one question (inaudible) press side (inaudible) the AUSMIN people (inaudible) need to get up to the reception. (Laughter.) (Inaudible.)
QUESTION: Thank you, Madam Secretary. We haven’t had a chance to ask you about the release of Sarah Shourd yet. I’d like to ask you, first, if you’ve had a chance to call the sultan to thank him and what the United States plans to do to get the other two hikers out if Oman can play a role in that. Thank you.
SECRETARY CLINTON: Thank you very much. Well, of course, we were very relieved that Sarah was released, very grateful for the help we received both from the Swiss, who are our representatives in Tehran, and from Oman, which played a very active role in reaching out and working with the Iranians. We are absolutely committed to the return of Josh and Shane. These two young men have been held without cause now for more than a year. It would be a very significant humanitarian gesture for the Iranians to release them as well.
So we continue reaching out to the many countries around the world who have supported us in our efforts on their behalf. I spoke with the parents of Josh and Shane yesterday and assured them that we remain as committed as ever to bringing their sons home. And I will be speaking with the sultan to express our appreciation at 11:00 a.m. this morning.
MR. CROWLEY: (Off-mike.)
QUESTION: Madam Secretary and Minister Rudd, a question to each of you. Madam Secretary, the whole region was struck by your commitment of the U.S. to the East Asia Summit. And I now ask you really, did that – did the Australian proposal for an Asia-Pacific community play into your thinking in making that decision, was China an important context, and do we see this as part of the wholesale renovation of the U.S. presence in Southeast Asia?
And Mr. Rudd, there’s been some talk in Australia recently that America needs to see its primacy in Asia and that Australia should talk it into a power-sharing arrangement with China. How do you feel about that?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, first, let me respond by saying that the United States has been, is, and will remain a transpacific power. We are very fortunately located in the world so that we are both an Atlantic and a Pacific power. And one of my goals upon becoming Secretary of State was to reassert America’s role in the Pacific. So my very first trip was to our allies in Japan and Korea, to China, to Indonesia, where I committed that the United States would be more actively involved and that we would, for example, ratify participation in the ASEAN Treaty of Amity and Cooperation. So we are very committed to that.
I was influenced by Kevin Rudd’s very strong argument on behalf of an Asian-Pacific community. I think he was absolutely on point. We have a very strong Euro-Atlantic community and it has stood the test of time. Because of the growth in Asia and the many issues that are now having to be confronted by the nations there, we need a different architecture. So in addition to deepening our commitment to ASEAN, we began the process of exploring the opportunity for the United States to join the East Asia Summit. Australia, when Kevin was prime minister, now as foreign minister, was very supportive of that effort.
So I will be attending the East Asia Summit to be held at the end of October in Hanoi, and then President Obama will attend the next East Asia Summit to be held in Jakarta next year. So we certainly believed it was in America’s interests, but we were very encouraged by Australia’s understanding of the dynamics in the region and encouragement for us to become more involved in helping to create the architecture of the 21st century.
FOREIGN MINISTER RUDD: In terms of the question that you’ve asked me, the position of the Australian Government is that the strategic stability of East Asia and the Pacific remains anchored in the strategic presence of the United States of America. And furthermore, that is articulated, in part, through American alliance arrangements with Japan, the Republic of Korea, Australia, and other security arrangements with other countries within the region. I think it’s very important for those who discuss these questions to understand that so much of the economic growth that we have seen in East Asia and the Pacific in the last 30 years has come off the back of the strategic stability afforded to the region by the United States presence.
The fact that economic growth can occur, and at such rapid levels and rates that we have seen in these recent decades, is because the problems of peace and security have not had to confront us on a grand scale. And that has been guaranteed so much by the presence of the United States. So the Australian Government remains committed to this position. We believe it is in the wider region’s interests that this continue to be the case. Of course, bodies such as the East Asian Summit, bodies such as APEC and other regional arrangements also play a key role in maintaining peace and stability and development in the region as well. From our point of view, the underpinnings lie still very much with the continued strategic presence of the United States. Thank you.
SECRETARY CLINTON: Thank you all very much.
# # #
Archive for September, 2010
Video: Secretary Clinton’s Remarks With Australian Foreign Minister Kevin Rudd After Their Meeting
Posted in Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Secretary of State, state department, U.S. Department of State, tagged Australia, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Kevin Rudd, Secretary of State, State Department, U.S. Department of State on September 17, 2010| 22 Comments »
There’s Something About Hillary!
Posted in Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Secretary of State, state department, U.S. Department of State, tagged Australia, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Kevin Rudd, Secretary of State, State Department, U.S. Department of State on September 17, 2010| 22 Comments »
The remarks from her bilateral with Australia’s Kevin Rudd have not come out yet, but I simply had to share these early photos! Seriously! You return from heavily packed foreign travel early in the morning, and THIS is how you show up to work a little later? Seriously? Hillary seems to thrive on long, hard work days.
SECRETARY OF STATE HILLARY RODHAM CLINTON: Public Schedule for September 17, 2010
Posted in Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Secretary of State, state department, U.S. Department of State, tagged Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Kevin Rudd, Marty Natalegawa, Nirupama Rao, Secretary of State, State Department, U.S. Department of State on September 17, 2010| Leave a Comment »
Public Schedule for September 17, 2010
Washington, DC
September 17, 2010
SECRETARY OF STATE HILLARY RODHAM CLINTON
AM Secretary Clinton returns from foreign travel.
10:00 a.m. Secretary Clinton holds a bilateral meeting with Australian Foreign Minister Kevin Rudd, at the Department of State.
(JOINT PRESS AVAILABILITY FOLLOWING BILATERAL MEETING AT APPROXIMATELY 10:35 A.M.)11:30 a.m. Secretary Clinton chairs the first U.S.-Indonesian Joint Commission meeting with Indonesian Foreign Minister Marty Natalegawa, at the Department of State.
(OPEN PRESS COVERAGE FOR OPENING REMARKS)
12:45 p.m. Secretary Clinton holds a bilateral meeting and working luncheon with Indonesian Foreign Minister Marty Natalegawa, at the Department of State.
(JOINT PRESS AVAILABILITY FOLLOWING BILATERAL MEETING AT APPROXIMATELY 2:00 P.M.)2:30 p.m. Secretary Clinton conducts a Swearing-In Ceremony for Ambassador to Yemen Gerald Feierstein, at the Department of State.
(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)3:15 p.m. Secretary Clinton holds a bilateral meeting with Indian Foreign Minister Nirupama Rao, at the Department of State.
(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)
Upcoming: On Hillary Clinton’s VERY BUSY Agenda
Posted in Bill Clinton, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Secretary of State, state department, U.S. Department of State, United nations, Willam Jefferson Clinton, tagged Bill Clinton, Clinton Global Initiative, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Secretary of State, State Department, U.S. Department of State, UNGA, United nations, William Jefferson Clinton on September 16, 2010| 29 Comments »
In the wake of Hillary Clinton’s jam-packed, whirlwind, three-legged trip to the Middle East to nurture the peace talks, a trip from which she is likely not yet wheels down in the U.S.A., comes a wealth of press releases from the State Department in the run-up to next week’s opening session of U.N. General Assembly which coincides with her husband’s Clinton Global Initiative.
I chose the verb nurture above because it is a very feminine verb, and Hillary’s approach to encouraging the talks was a decidedly feminine one. Going forward into another whirlwind week in New York City, her kitten heels remain planted in female territory, the kitchen, and her agenda focused on women’s work and maternal issues. Hillary Clinton is probably the most adept person on earth at explaining how helping women, sometimes in very small, inexpensive ways, can change the future of a nation, and next week she is going to explain that in some detail, at various events.
Here are the press releases from today that help us piece together what some of next week will look like. I get very psyched when she is in NYC for UNGA. It is very exciting. It is going to be great!
Secretary Clinton and Irish Foreign Minister Martin to Host “1,000 Days: Change a Life, Change the Future” Event on Reducing Child Undernutrition
Office of the SpokesmanWashington, DCSeptember 16, 2010
Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and Irish Foreign Minister Micheal Martin will host a “1,000 Days” event in support of nutrition and food security efforts that focus on the crucial 1,000 day window for maternal and child health, on September 21 at approximately 9:15 a.m. at the InterContinental Hotel in New York City.
“1,000 Days: Change a Life, Change the Future” seeks to catalyze action to combat child undernutrition, focusing on programs targeted at the 1,000 days window of opportunity beginning with a woman’s pregnancy through a child’s second birthday.
The event provides a platform for the international community to highlight its work in nutrition, including the development of the Scaling Up Nutrition (SUN) Roadmap.
The Ministers will discuss the joint U.S.-Ireland effort to focus energy on priority actions within the SUN Roadmap – around the critical 1,000 day window and for 1,000 days.
Ireland and the United States have already made reducing hunger and undernutrition a key development and foreign policy priority: Ireland with its launch of a Hunger Task Force and the United States with Feed the Future and the Global Health Initiative. “1,000 Days” is more than simply one event; it includes commitments to specific follow-up actions to advance the SUN Roadmap and aims to support a broad-based movement to improve child nutrition.
Secretary Clinton and Foreign Minister Martin will be joined by leaders from other governments, the United Nations, civil society and the private sector. These leaders all share the goal of reaching the first Millennium Development Goal by eradicating extreme poverty and hunger.
InterContinental Barclay Hotel
111 East 48th Street
New York, NYThis event will be webcast live and open to credentialed members of the media.
Secretary Clinton to Announce New Global Alliance for Clean Cookstoves at Clinton Global Initiative September 21
Office of the SpokesmanWashington, DCSeptember 16, 2010
Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton will formally announce the Global Alliance for Clean Cookstoves, a new public-private initiative to create a thriving global market for clean and efficient household cooking solutions that will save lives, improve livelihoods, empower women, and combat climate change. The announcement will occur at the Clinton Global Initiative’s annual meeting on September 21 at approximately 1:00 p.m.
Along with EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson and other Founding Partners, Secretary Clinton will outline partnership and financial commitments of the Alliance. Led by the United Nations Foundation, the Global Alliance for Clean Cookstoves will address one of the greatest threats facing developing countries and their populations— the extraordinarily high exposures to toxic smoke from indoor fires and inefficient cookstoves which lead to nearly 2 million deaths each year, with young children and adult women suffering the vast majority of this disease burden.
Secretary Clinton’s speech will be streamed live on www.state.gov and http://live.clintonglobalinitiative.org.
Further details about next week’s events and agenda will be outlined tomorrow by Assistant Secretary Esther Brimmer.
Assistant Secretary of State Esther Brimmer to Brief on U.S. UNGA Priorities
Office of the SpokesmanWashington, DCSeptember 16, 2010
Assistant Secretary of State for International Organization Affairs Esther Brimmer will brief the press on the Administration’s goals and priorities for the upcoming UN General Assembly and some of the Secretary’s key activities during the week. This briefing will be on-the-record / on-camera and will take place in the Department of State Press Briefing Room (Room 2209) on Friday September 17th at 12:00 p.m.
As the news comes out, I will post it here, so stay tuned! Speaking of tuning, tune in on John Stewart tonight to hear Bill Clinton talk about CGI. Tune in on This Week with Christiane Amanpour on Sunday to see Hillary!
Secretaries Clinton and Gates on Senate Foreign Relations Committee Approval of the New START Treaty
Posted in Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Secretary of State, state department, U. S. Department of Defense, U.S. Department of State, U.S. Senate, tagged Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Robert Gates, Secretary of State, START, State Department, U. S. Department of Defense, U.S. Department of State on September 16, 2010| 3 Comments »
Senate Foreign Relations Committee Approval of the New START Treaty
Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of StateJoint Statement With Secretary of Defense GatesWashington, DCSeptember 16, 2010
Following is the text of a joint statement by Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and Secretary of Defense Robert Gates on Senate Foreign Relations Committee Approval of the New START Treaty.
Begin text:
We applaud the Senate Foreign Relations Committee’s strong bipartisan vote today to approve the New START Treaty.
If ratified, this agreement will advance some of our most critical national security objectives. It will provide stability and predictability between the world’s two leading nuclear powers, reducing the number of nuclear weapons held by the United States and Russia to a level not seen since the 1950’s while retaining a safe and effective deterrent. It will restore crucial inspection and verification mechanisms that ceased when the original START agreement expired last year, allowing U.S. inspectors back inside Russian nuclear weapons silos. And it will help keep nuclear material from falling into the hands of terrorists or rogue regimes.The Committee’s vote today continues a decades-long tradition of senators from both parties providing advice and consent on arms control accords. We especially appreciate the leadership of Chairman Kerry and Ranking Member Lugar in undertaking a thorough review of the treaty and developing the resolution of ratification that led to today’s successful vote.
Like previous arms control treaties, the New START Treaty deserves broad bipartisan support and prompt ratification by the full Senate. We urge Senators to act quickly and approve this Treaty.
Video: Secretary Clinton’s Remarks With Jordanian Foreign Minister Nasser Judeh
Posted in Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Secretary of State, Secretary of State Travel, state department, U.S. Department of State, tagged Amman, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Jordan, Middle East, Nasser Judeh, Secretary of State, State Department, U.S. Department of State on September 16, 2010| 1 Comment »
Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of StateMarka AirbaseAmman, , JordanSeptember 16, 2010
FOREIGN MINISTER JUDEH: (In progress) here in Amman today. Secretary Clinton is a longtime friend of Jordan, a distinguished and remarkable international figure, a champion of peace and a multitude of (inaudible) causes, and indeed, as Secretary of State of the United States of America, an ally, a close friend, and supporter of Jordan. So I personally am grateful, Madam Secretary, for the excellent (inaudible) relationship which I have.
His Majesty King Abdullah the II had very productive conference and talks with Secretary Clinton earlier today. The talks, as you would all expect, focused on developments pertaining to the ongoing direct negotiations between the Palestinians and the Israelis that began in Washington on September 2nd and resumed in Sharm el-Sheikh and Jerusalem in the past two days. His Majesty reiterated Jordan’s firm, unwavering commitment to exert every effort to ensure the success of these negotiations and their fruitful conclusion with an agreed upon timeframe and the realization of the two-state solution whereupon independent, sovereign, territorially contiguous Palestinian state living side by side in security, peace, good neighborly relations, cooperation, and integration with Israel and the other countries of the region within a regional context that also leads to the achievement of comprehensive Arab-Israeli peace on the basis of internationally agreed upon terms of reference for Middle East peace and particularly the Arab Peace Initiative.
We are encouraged by the focused and concentrated course of direct negotiations thus far. President Abbas and Prime Minister Netanyahu have met several times since the resumption of these direct talks on the 2nd of September. Secretary Clinton, who has presently attended several of these meetings herself with the two leaders, stated yesterday that the two sides have already delved into negotiations regarding all the core issues. And these core issues are Jerusalem, refugees, borders, security, and water. And of course, there is much discussion on settlements.
If you remember, Madam Secretary, many times when we have met in the past, we have spoken of the need to fast-track and pay special emphasis to borders and security, which may, in themselves, open the doors for a resolution of the – all points of contention.
As you all know, and needless to say, all these core issues are related to Jordan and its interests, and therefore we are happy that we are engaging with our friends on all fronts on this issue. And we are doing all that we can to ensure that this focused and concentrated engagement continues with a view of successfully concluding the negotiations and reaching agreement within one year.
We are grateful to President Obama, to Secretary Clinton, Senator Mitchell and his team for their relentless efforts, unshakable commitment, firm resolve, and deep engagement that contributed to the resumption of direct negotiations. We trust that this active engagement will continue and intensify as the leadership role of the United States in this endeavor is pivotal for its success, notwithstanding the fact that the parties themselves are the ones who eventually have to reach agreement. Nevertheless, the essential role of the United States in encouraging the parties and its continued active engagement in assisting them to surmount any obstacles is paramount. And on our behalf in Jordan and as His Majesty the King has stated, we will do our full share of the needed encouragement for the parties to arrive at an agreement and that the current negotiations will bring tangible progress and meaningful traction expeditiously and won’t become another open-ended process.
His Majesty the King stressed in his remarks during the event hosted by President Obama to launch direct negotiations in Washington that peace has eluded us for so long and that we must succeed this time in realizing the two-state solution and achieving comprehensive peace. The onus is on all of us to ensure that this endeavor succeeds, to make history and deliver the long-awaited peace and its dividends to the countries and peoples of the entire Middle East and to the world at large, which is united in its view that realizing the two-state solution and achieving comprehensive peace is a vital global interest and not only an interest for the countries and peoples of the region.
Goodwill, strong leadership, and matching words with action, and judging action rather than just words, is needed on the part of the parties to ensure success. Desisting from all provocative unilateral action and ensuring, Madam Secretary – and I think I speak on behalf of both of us – ensuring that nothing that is done or said derails this commitment and this effort. Success is very much contingent upon resurrecting mutual confidence and restoring faith on both sides of the divide.
On bilateral relations, I would like to say that this strategic relationship between us gets stronger by the day. We thank the United States for its support for Jordan on all levels. In my most recent meeting with the Secretary in Washington a couple of weeks ago, or just under a couple of weeks ago, we made serious headway on a range of issues. Particularly, I mentioned the nuclear cooperation agreement which is under discussion and hopefully nearing the end of that discussion, and we thank the United States for its strong and firm support for Jordan on that front.
And I think today in the meeting with His Majesty, the Secretary had some good news for Jordan, but I’ll let the Secretary talk about that. And I would just like to say, Madam Secretary, that – Hillary, if I may call you, you have many friends here in Jordan. You are no stronger to Jordan. You have people who admire you, admire your work and your commitment to peace. Welcome on this short visit, and I hope that the next one will be longer. Thank you, Madam Secretary. Please.
SECRETARY CLINTON: Thank you so very much. It is a great pleasure for me to be here not only with a colleague and counterpart foreign minister, but a friend. I have had an extraordinarily close and productive working relationship with Nasser Judeh. We have spent many hours talking about issues between our two countries in the region and indeed across the world. And I want personally to thank you for your constructive, constant contributions to all of the difficult issues that we are dealing with.
And so it is a pleasure to be back in Amman. I am very grateful that I had the opportunity to meet with His Majesty King Abdullah II and the great pleasure of being hosted by the King and Queen for a private lunch, where we had a chance both to catch up personally but also to delve into the issues that Nasser has referenced.
The United States values our strong, close relationship, our very important partnership with Jordan. It is rooted in respect and common purpose. And today, I am very pleased to announce that yesterday a new Millennium Challenge Corporation compact was voted on that will invest more than $275 million in sustainable development here in Jordan. We worked very hard on this, and it was in partnership with the Jordanian Government that we looked at the needs that the people of Jordan have. We consulted broadly, outside even the Jordanian Government, with the private sector, with academics, experts, and others. And constantly, we heard, “Help Jordan deal with the water and waste water issues that affect people across the country.”
So this compact will help rehabilitate the water supply network, improve waste water collection and irrigation, and expand a key waste water treatment plant. This investment will create jobs for the people of Jordan, so it has the added benefit of not only building infrastructure that will help people in their homes, in their businesses, and provide a base for further economic development, but put people to work right now. And at the end, more than one million Jordanians will be supplied with safe and reliable access to clean drinking water for the very first time.
I want to thank the Government of Jordan for its close cooperation. These were highly technical decisions because they require a lot of expertise about what will work, and we could never have reached the decision to make this commitment without the guidance and leadership of Jordan.
We make this investment because we care about the people of Jordan. We make this investment because we believe investing in Jordan is good for the region and for the world. Jordan goes way above and beyond the call to duty. There’s a saying that Jordan punches above its weight. It may not be a huge population, but it has a commitment to excellence in so many areas.
Jordan has continued to help build a stable, sovereign, and self-reliant Iraq, and I want to thank the government and people of Jordan for the assistance that you give to Iraqi refugees. I know that that was a difficult responsibility to accept, but I thank you for carrying it forward.
I also thank the government and people of Jordan for your efforts on behalf of peacekeeping missions around the world, where Jordan has proven time and time again to be a force for peace and progress.
And of course, as Nasser said, Jordan is a crucial partner working to end the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and bring a comprehensive peace to the Middle East. We were honored to host King Abdullah II in Washington as these talks got underway, and I want to publicly thank him, as I privately have, for his contributions both to the resumption of direct negotiations and to the constructive beginning that has occurred. Jordan’s steadfast support for this process is essential. And today, His Majesty and I discussed ongoing negotiations and I expressed my confidence that Prime Minister Netanyahu and President Abbas can make the difficult decisions necessary to resolve all of the core issues within one year.
Ever since September 2nd, despite the fact that I have known both of these men for many years, I have spent hours and hours with them and watched them interact with each other. I’ve watched them talk and listen to each other. They are serious about this effort. They are committed and they have begun to grapple with the hard but necessary questions. I am convinced that this is the time and these are the leaders who can achieve the result we all seek: two states for two peoples, living in peace and security.
I am well aware there are many skeptics and doubters, and I appreciate the concerns that many throughout the region have. But I ask: What is the alternative? What is the alternative for the Palestinian people, who deserve to have their aspirations fulfilled in a sovereign, independent, viable state of their own? And what is the alternative for Israel, who asks that they get the security that they are seeking so that they can live side by side with their Palestinian neighbors?
We believe that not only is it important to pursue the Palestinian-Israeli negotiations, but a comprehensive regional peace, the vision that is at the heart of the Arab Peace Initiative. And Nasser and I have spent a lot of time talking about the remarkable document that the Arab Peace Initiative is. I’m not sure many Arabs nor many Israelis have read it, and I would commend to you, particularly those of you in the media, read this document that was begun as a wholly Arab initiative. It was led by, it was written by, it was promulgated by Arab leaders. And it holds out the very promise that we seek.
And also, we are seeking to determine what direction we can head in order to pursue peace between Israel and Syria, and Israel and Lebanon. To this end, Senator Mitchell is on his way for consultations in Damascus and Beirut. We believe that progress toward regional peace will support and give confidence to the direct Israeli-Palestinian negotiations and also bring peace to those countries as well.
Now, I hope that we keep in mind what is possible, because I think peace is possible. And I also think peace is necessary. I will always remember watching the late King Hussein as he signed a treaty that ended decades of war with Israel. That was a historic achievement that continues to inspire me. And under the leadership of King Abdullah II, Jordan has continued to demonstrate its willingness to make difficult decisions in the name of peace that will lead to stability and security.
So with the commitment of an Israeli prime minister and a Palestinian president who both embrace the goal of a two-state solution, peace is once again within our reach. But it is really going to be up to all of us. The leaders may meet in the room and discuss these issues, the negotiators may debate around the table, but peace only comes from the people themselves. And I would ask that all of the people of this region do what you can to promote the possibility and then the reality of peace.
So again, let me thank Jordan and particularly my friend, the Foreign Minister Nasser Judeh, for your leadership and your active involvement in the pursuit of this important goal – important for Jordan, for the Palestinian people, Israel, the United States, and all the world who cares about what we are achieving and attempting to accomplish here today. Thank you all very much.
Video: Secretary Clinton’s Remarks With Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas
Posted in Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Secretary of State, Secretary of State Travel, state department, U.S. Department of State, tagged Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Mahmoud Abbas, Middle East, Palestine, Secretary of State, U.S. Department of State on September 16, 2010| 1 Comment »
Remarks With Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas
Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of State
Palestinian Presidential CompoundRamallahSeptember 16, 2010
PRESIDENT ABBAS: (Via interpreter) I warmly welcome Secretary Clinton to Ramallah today and I would like to express my appreciation for the efforts she is exerting, and also President Obama is exerting the American Administration in order to achieve peace in the region. I know that these are difficult times, circumstances are difficult, but unwavering American commitments and the tireless efforts give us hope that we will reach peace. We all know that there is no alternative to peace other than negotiating peace, so we have no alternative but to continue peace efforts.
I would like to introduce Secretary Clinton (inaudible).
SECRETARY CLINTON: Thank you very much, Mr. President, for not only receiving me here again in Ramallah with such warmth among now friends, but for your leadership and your commitment to peace for the Palestinian people. And as President Abbas said, the United States and all of us, led by President Obama, are very committed and determined to work toward a peace agreement through direct negotiations that leads to an independent, sovereign, viable Palestinian state that realizes the aspirations of the Palestinian people.
Thank you, Mr. President.
PARTICIPANT: (Inaudible) handshake, Madam Secretary?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Oh. (Laughter.) Just like you were saying that you’d seen previous footage of Senator Mitchell in Damascus.
PRESIDENT ABBAS: Yes.
SECRETARY CLINTON: They could just bring out one of the hundreds of pictures of you and I shaking hands. (Laughter.)
Thank you.
Slideshow: Hillary Clinton in Amman and Wheels Up for Home!
Posted in Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Secretary of State, Secretary of State Travel, state department, U.S. Department of State, tagged Amman, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Jordan, Middle East, Secretary of State, State Department, U.S. Department of State on September 16, 2010| 7 Comments »
Mme. Secretary’s whirlwind trip to the Middle East ends in Jordan, and she is now on her way home. Great job, Mme. Secretary! We are so proud of you. Safe home! You are precious to us!
Slideshow: Hillary Clinton in Ramallah and Amman
Posted in Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Secretary of State, Secretary of State Travel, state department, U.S. Department of State, tagged Amman, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, King Abdullah, Mahmoud Abbas, Middle East, Ramallah, Secretary of State, State Department, U.S. Department of State on September 16, 2010| 1 Comment »
SECRETARY OF STATE HILLARY RODHAM CLINTON: Public Schedule for September 16, 2010
Posted in Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Secretary of State, Secretary of State Travel, state department, U.S. Department of State, tagged Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Middle East, Secretary of State, State Department, U.S. Department of State on September 16, 2010| Leave a Comment »
Public Schedule for September 16, 2010
Washington, DCSeptember 16, 2010
SECRETARY OF STATE HILLARY RODHAM CLINTON
Secretary Clinton is on foreign travel, accompanied by Special Envoy Senator George Mitchell and Assistant Secretary Jeffrey Feltman. For more information, click here.
10:30 a.m. LOCAL Secretary Clinton holds a bilateral meeting with Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, in Ramallah.
(POOLED CAMERA SPRAY)3:00 p.m. LOCAL Secretary Clinton meets with Jordanian King Abdullah and Queen Rania, in Amman, Jordan.
(POOLED CAMERA SPRAY)4:30 p.m. LOCAL Secretary Clinton holds a joint press availability with Jordanian Foreign Minister Judeh, in Amman, Jordan.
(OPEN PRESS COVERAGE)PM LOCAL Secretary Clinton departs to return from foreign travel.













































