Statement on the Passing of the Crown Prince Nayif bin Abd al-Aziz Al Saud
Press Statement
Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of StateWashington, DCJune 16, 2012
I am deeply saddened by the passing of Crown Prince Nayif bin Abd al-Aziz Al Saud. I want to express my condolences to the Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques, King Abdullah bin Abdulaziz Al Saud, the family of Crown Prince Naif, and the people of Saudi Arabia. He devoted his life to the security of Saudi Arabia and its fight against extremism. Crown Prince Naif was a key and valued partner for the United States, and he was a dedicated and courageous leader for Saudi Arabia. I will personally miss Crown Prince Naif and his pivotal role in enhancing the bilateral relationship between the United States and the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.
Archive for June, 2012
Hillary Clinton on the Passing of the Crown Prince Nayif bin Abd al-Aziz Al Saud
Posted in Foreign Policy, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Secretary of State, state department, U.S. Department of State, tagged Foreign Policy, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Nayif bin Abd al-Aziz Al Saud, Saudi Arabia, Secretary of State, State Department, U.S. Department of State on June 16, 2012| Leave a Comment »
Bill and Hillary Clinton at Redondo Union HS Commencement Ceremony
Posted in Bill Clinton, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Willam Jefferson Clinton, tagged Bill Clinton, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Redondo Beach, William Jefferson Clinton on June 16, 2012| 4 Comments »
In case you wondered why Secretary Clinton had no public appointments yesterday it was because she was with President Clinton who gave the commencement speech at his nephew Tyler’s graduation from Redondo Union High School in California.
Diggin’ Manhattan Beach: Former President Clinton Takes Aim
By Liz Spear June 15, 2012
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton was in the audience as her husband former President Bill Clinton delivered an address Friday at the Redondo Union High School commencement ceremony. What did he say about Mira Costa?
Former President Bill Clinton and his wife Secretary of State Hillary Clinton attended their nephew’s high school graduation ceremony at Redondo Union High School Friday.
Many thanks to PYW who shared the link to ths cute picture. There is a slideshow here, but you must click on the link and see it at the source.
SECRETARY HILLARY RODHAM CLINTON: Public Schedule for June 15, 2012
Posted in Foreign Policy, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Secretary of State, state department, U.S. Department of State, tagged Foreign Policy, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Secretary of State, State Department, U.S. Department of State on June 15, 2012| 14 Comments »
Public Schedule for June 15, 2012
Public Schedule
Washington, DCJune 15, 2012
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE
PUBLIC SCHEDULE
FRIDAY JUNE 15, 2012SECRETARY HILLARY RODHAM CLINTON
Secretary Clinton has no public events.
#AskState: Hillary Clinton’s @StateDept Twitter Will Host a Briefing
Posted in 21st Century Statecraft, Foreign Policy, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Secretary of State, state department, U.S. Department of State, tagged #askstate, Foreign Policy, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Secretary of State, State Department, State Department Twitter, U.S. Department of State on June 14, 2012| Leave a Comment »
One of the hallmarks of Secretary Clinton’s tenure at the State Department has been her initiative on the use of social media to bring ordinary voices like yours and mine into the international diplomatic forum. Her vision of the citizen-diplomat is what has sustained this incarnation of this blog, in fact. Visitors/readers come here from all over the world, including China and Iran, to see what our Secretary of State is saying and doing. You may remember this video from 2009 when she assumed office.
If you have always wanted to participate in a State Department press conference, ask a question, or state your case, now is your chance!
U.S. Department of State Hosts Twitter Briefing
Media Note
Office of the SpokespersonWashington, DCJune 14, 2012
On Wednesday, June 20, 2012, at 2:30 p.m. EDT, the U.S. Department of State will host a special Twitter Briefing. Department Spokesperson Toria Nuland will take questions submitted to the Department’s official English-language Twitter feed @StateDept and official Arabic-language feed @USAbilAraby. Questions can be submitted starting today to @StateDept and @USAbilAraby using the hashtag #AskState.
Spokesperson Nuland will answer questions from the podium in the Department’s press briefing room. Video clips of her responses will be made available on the Department’s YouTube Channel at http://www.youtube.com/user/statevideo.
@StateDept and @USAbilAraby are two of the Department’s 11 official Twitter accounts. Others include @USAenEspanol (Spanish), @USA_Zhongwen (Chinese), @USAdarFarsi (Farsi), @USAenFrancais (French), @USAHindiMein (Hindi), @USAemPortugues (Portuguese), @USApoRusski (Russian), @ABDTurk (Turkish), and @USAUrdu (Urdu). These social media accounts serve as a conduit for the U.S. Department of State to inform and engage publics around the world on foreign policy issues. They also support the Department’s 21st Century Statecraft efforts, complementing traditional foreign policy by harnessing the digital networks and technologies of an interconnected world.
These Twitter briefings are part of the State Department’s on-going effort to engage audiences directly on foreign policy issues using our in-language social media properties.
Hillary Clinton and Leon Panetta at Post U.S.-Korea Ministerial Press Conference
Posted in Foreign Policy, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Secretary of State, state department, U. S. Department of Defense, U.S. Department of State, tagged Foreign Policy, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Kim Kwan-Jin, Kim Sung-hwan, Leon Panetta, Secretary of Defense, Secretary of State, State Department, U. S. Department of Defense, U.S. Department of State on June 14, 2012| Leave a Comment »
Remarks With Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta, Korean Foreign Minister Kim Sung-Hwan and Korean Defense Minister Kim Kwan-Jin After Their Meeting
Remarks
Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of StateSecretary of Defense Leon Panetta, Minister of Foreign Affairs and Trade of the Republic of Korea Kim Sung-Hwan, Minister of National Defense of the Republic of Korea Kim Kwan-JinThomas Jefferson RoomWashington, DCJune 14, 2012
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, let me welcome all of you, particularly our Korean friends, to the Thomas Jefferson Room here in the State Department. Today, Secretary Panetta and I hosted the second session of the U.S.-Republic of Korea Foreign and Defense Ministerial Consultation, what we call our 2+2 meeting. And it is a great pleasure to welcome Foreign Minister Kim and Defense Minister Kim to Washington as we continue to find ways to strengthen the global alliance and cooperation between our countries.
Today we discussed how our partnership has advanced in the three years since our two presidents set forth their joint vision for the alliance between the Republic of Korea and the United States. We are combating piracy together in the Indian Ocean, investing in sustainable development in Africa, promoting democracy and the rule of law and human rights around the world. It would be difficult to list all the ways we are working together.
We touched on how we are deepening our economic cooperation. Just a few months ago, the U.S.-Korea Free Trade Agreement officially entered into force, and it is already creating jobs and opportunities on both sides of the Pacific.
It is fitting that today is the Global Economic Statecraft Day at the State Department, because around the world in all of our embassies we are highlighting economic cooperation. And our relationship with the Republic of Korea is a textbook example of how our economic statecraft agenda can boost growth and create jobs.
As Korea has developed into an economic powerhouse, it has also steadily assumed greater responsibilities as a global leader. Today, it is an anchor of stability in the Asia Pacific and a go-to partner for the United States.
On the security side of our dialogue, we reaffirmed our commitment to the strategic alliance between our countries. Secretary Panetta will speak to our military cooperation, but I want to emphasize that the United States stands shoulder to shoulder with the Republic of Korea, and we will meet all of our security commitments. As part of this, we discussed further enhancements of our missile defense and ways to improve the interoperability of our systems.
Today we also agreed to expand our security cooperation to cover the increasing number of threats from cyberspace. I am pleased to announce that the United States and Korea will launch a bilateral dialogue on cyber issues. Working together, we can improve the security of our government, military, and commercial infrastructure, and better protect against cyber attacks.
With regard to North Korea, our message remains unchanged. North Korea must comply with its international obligations under UN Security Council Resolutions 1718 and 1874. It must abandon its nuclear weapons and all existing nuclear programs, including programs for uranium enrichment. And it must finally put the welfare of its own people first and respect the rights of its own citizens. Only under these circumstances will North Korea be able to end its isolation from the international community and alleviate the suffering of its people.
So again let me thank the ministers for our excellent discussions. And let me thank the Korean people for the friendship between our countries that continues to grow.
And now let me turn it over to Foreign Minister Kim.
FOREIGN MINISTER KIM: (Via interpreter) Let me first thank Secretary Clinton and Secretary Panetta for inviting Minister Kim and I to the ROK-U.S. 2+2 ministerial meeting. This meeting was first held for the first time in 2000 in Seoul. That was 60 years since the Korean War. And I am pleased that we held today the second 2+2 ministerial meeting this time in Washington. We took note that a number of alliance issues are proceeding as planned, and we had our agreement in that this will contribute to a greater combined defense system.
And we also agreed that should North Korea provoke again, then that we will show a very decisive response to such provocation. But we also shared our view that the road to dialogue and cooperation is open should North Korea stop its provocation and show a genuine change in its attitude by taking concrete measures.
Also, in order to enhance deterrence against North Korea’s potential provocation using nuclear and conventional forces, we decided to develop more effective and concrete (inaudible) policies. We also agreed to promote bilateral cooperation regarding North Korea, just as Secretary Clinton just mentioned, against cyber security threats, and will in this regard launch a whole-of-government consultative body.
We are concerned the human rights situation, the quality of life of the North Korean people, have reached a serious level and urge the North Korean Government to respect the human rights of its people and to improve their living condition.
The Republic of Korea welcomes the U.S. policy that places emphasis on the Asia Pacific. We agree that the increased U.S. role within the Asia Pacific region will greatly contribute to peace and stability in this region. We welcome the efforts of the Government of Myanmar to advance democracy and improve human rights and continue supporting such efforts.
Today’s meeting was very productive and meaningful in that it allowed us to review the current status of the alliance. And we also agreed to discuss a way forward for our strategic cooperation. We’ll continue to hold this 2+2 ministerial meeting in the future.
SECRETARY PANETTA: Secretary Clinton, Ministers, I was very pleased to be able to participate in this very important 2+2 meeting. I want to commend Secretary Clinton for her leadership in guiding us through this discussion, and also thank both ministers for their participation.
I’ve been very fortunate over the past year, since becoming Secretary of Defense, to have developed a very strong working relationship with my Korean counterparts. I’ve been – I made a visit to Korea last fall, and we have had a series of consultations such as this 2+2. I just returned, as many of you know, from a two-week trip to the Asia Pacific region, where I met with Minister Kim at the Shangri-La Dialogue in Singapore. And at the time, I made clear that the United States has made an enduring commitment to the security and prosperity of the Asia Pacific region, including the Korean Peninsula.
I also made clear that our military will rebalance towards the Asia Pacific region as part of our new defense strategy. As part of that strategy, even though the U.S. military will be smaller in the future, we will maintain a strong force presence in Korea which reflects the importance that we attach to that relationship and to the security mission that we are both involved with.
The United States and the Republic of Korea face many common security challenges in the Asia Pacific region and around the world, and today, we affirmed our commitment to forging a common strategic approach to addressing those challenges. I’m very pleased that we are progressing on our schedule to achieve the goals that we outlined in our Strategic Alliance 2015 base plan. We remain on track to transition operational control by December 2015 in accordance with the base plan timeline.
As the Strategic Alliance 2015 initiative proceeds, we will continue to consult closely with the Republic of Korea in order to ensure that the steps that we are taking are mutually beneficial and strengthen our alliance. During our meeting, we also discussed ways that we can further strengthen our alliance, including greater cooperation in the area of cyber security. To that end, we are making our bilateral military exercises more realistic through the introduction of cyber and network elements.
Another way to strengthen and modernize our alliance is by expanding our ongoing trilateral collaboration with Japan. On my trip to Asia, I was pleased to participate in a trilateral discussion that included the Republic of Korea and Japan, because this kind of security cooperation helps strengthen regional security and provides the additional deterrent with respect to North Korea. I’d like to thank the ministers again for their commitment to this alliance, and I look forward to hosting Minister Kim in Washington for the 44th Security Consultative Meeting in October. This alliance has stood the test of time, and today, we affirmed that it will remain an essential force for security and for prosperity in the 21st century.
SECRETARY CLINTON: Defense Minister.
DEFENSE MINISTER KIM: (Via interpreter) Today’s 2+2 ministerial meeting was held at a strategically critical moment amid continuing provocation threats from North Korea and volatile security environment in North Korea, a time which calls for a proactive alliance response.
Through today’s meeting, the two countries confirmed once again that the ROK-U.S. alliance is more solid than ever, and made it very clear that the alliance will strongly and consistently respond to any North Korean provocation, in particular regarding North Korean nuclear and missile threat. The ROK and the U.S. agreed to strengthen policy coordination to reaffirm the strong U.S. commitment to provide extended deterrents and to develop extended deterrent policies in an effective and substantial way. We also agreed to strengthen alliance capability against North Korea’s increasing asymmetric threats such as cyber threats like the DDoS attack and GPS jammings.
Furthermore, the two countries confirmed that the 2015 transition of operational control and the building of a new combined defense system are progressing as planned. We also confirmed that they were – ROK military will acquire the critical – military capabilities needed to lead the combined defense, and the U.S. military will provide bridging and engineering capabilities.
The two countries also confirmed that USFK bases relocation projects such as YRP and LPP are well underway and agreed to work to ensure that these projects are completed in time. We assess that combined exercises in the West Sea and Northwest Islands deter North Korean provocation and greatly contribute to the peace and stability of the Korean Peninsula. We agreed to continue these exercises under close bilateral coordination.
Next year marks the 60th anniversary of the ROK-U.S. alliance which was born in 1953 with the signing of the ROK-U.S. Mutual Defense Treaty. In the past six decades, the two countries worked to ensure a perfect security of the peninsula and have developed the alliance into the most successful alliance in history. In the future, the two countries will expand and deepen the scope and level of defense cooperation from the Korean Peninsula, and to the regional and global security issues, will continue evolving the alliance into the best alliance in the world for the peace and stability of the Korean Peninsula, and of the world. Thank you.
MS. NULAND: Scott starts.
QUESTION: Can we do it the reverse? I’m sorry. Scott and I always do this, get it a little confused. But in any case, thank you, Madam Secretary. I’d like to start out with Egypt, please. What is your reaction to dissolving parliament? Is this a step backwards?
And then also on Syria: For the second day in the media and the news, we’re talking about the weapons and the helicopters. By making this such a high-profile issue – and by pinning your strategy of shaming the Russians, are you running the risk of allowing Moscow to define what happens or doesn’t happen in Syria? In other words, I guess, where is the American strategy?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, first, with regard to Egypt, we are obviously monitoring the situation. We are engaged with Cairo about the implications of today’s court decision. So I won’t comment on the specifics until we know more.
But that said, throughout this process, the United States has stood in support of the aspirations of the Egyptian people for a peaceful, credible, and permanent democratic transition. Now ultimately, it is up to the Egyptian people to determine their own future. And we expect that this weekend’s presidential election will be held in an atmosphere that is conducive to it being peaceful, fair, and free. And in keeping with the commitments that the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces made to the Egyptian people, we expect to see a full transfer of power to a democratically elected, civilian government.
There can be no going back on the democratic transition called for by the Egyptian people. The decisions on specific issues, of course, belong to the Egyptian people and their elected leaders. And they’ve made it clear that they want a president, a parliament, and a constitutional order that will reflect their will and advance their aspirations for political and economic reform. And that is exactly what they deserve to have.
Let me also note that we are concerned about recent decrees issued by the SCAF. Even if they are temporary, they appear to expand the power of the military to detain civilians and to roll back civil liberties.
Now regarding Syria, I spoke extensively about Syria yesterday. Our consultations with the United Nations, our allies and partners, and the Syrian opposition continue on the best way forward. Today, my deputy, Bill Burns, had a constructive meeting in Kabul with Russian Foreign Minister Lavrov. We don’t see eye to eye on all of the issues, but our discussions continue. And President Obama will see President Putin during the G-20 in Mexico.
We’re also intensifying our work with Special Envoy Kofi Annan on a viable post-Assad transition strategy. And I look forward to talking to him in the days ahead about setting parameters for the conference that he and I have discussed and that he is discussing with many international partners. Our work with the Syrian opposition also continues. Ambassador Ford is in Istanbul today for a conference with the opposition that Turkey is hosting.
So we’re working on multiple fronts. I think our strategy is very clear. We want to see an end to the violence, and we want to see the full implementation of Kofi Annan’s plans, including the political transition so that the people of Syria have the same opportunity that the people of the Republic of Korea or the United States have to choose their own leaders and to build their own future. And the work is urgent, because as you know, the Syrian Government continues to attack its own people, and the bloodshed has not ceased. And we have to do everything we can to end the violence and create a framework for a transition.
MS. NULAND: Next question: Kang Eui-Young from Yonhap News, please.
QUESTION: (Via interpreter) Thank you for the opportunity to give you question. I’m – name is Kang from the Yonhap News Agency. My question is for Minister – Defense Minister Kim. It is written in this statement that you have decided to develop a comprehensive alliance approach towards the missile defense. I want to know what this means. If you are referring to the missile defense, are you intending to build a Korea air missile defense or are you saying that you will be integrated into a U.S.-led missile defense? Could you elaborate on what missile defense system you are envisioning? You mention comprehensive alliance defense system. What – how does this build into the U.S.-led assistance?
DEFENSE MINISTER KIM: (Via interpreter) The position of the ROK military regarding the missile defense is this given the terrain of the Korean Peninsula. The most effective approach is a low-tier defense. And how will this be linked to the U.S. missile defense system? This is of the analysis – the studies that are being conducted right now. That’s what I mean by saying an effective combined air defense system.
QUESTION: Secretary Panetta, is the United States expanding intelligence gathering across Africa using small, unarmed, turbo-prop aircraft disguised as private planes, as reported by The Washington Post?
SECRETARY PANETTA: Well, I’m not going to discuss classified operations in that region, other than to say that we make an effort to work with all of the nations in that region to confront common threats and common challenges. And we have closely consulted and closely worked with our partners to develop approaches that make sure that the nations of that very important region do not confront the kind of serious threats that could jeopardize their peace and prosperity.
MODERATOR: Today’s last question will be from Ju Young Jim of SBS.
QUESTION: (Via interpreter) Reporter from the SBS, Ju. This is a question for Defense Minister Kim and Secretary Panetta. Right now, the Korean media is dealing – covering very extensively about the range extension of the Korean ballistic missiles and that the ROK side is insisting on 800 kilometer whereas the U.S. is insisting on 500 kilometer, where although the countries have agreed on the payload. Senator Carl Levin said that he is positive when it comes to the range extension. Has this issue been discussed at the 2+2, and will the two countries be able to show a concrete outcome by the end of the year?
One additional question is – this one is for Secretary Clinton. Kim Jong-un, the new leader, he has taken over his father, deceased father, and is now already six month as the new leader. How do you assess his leadership so far?
DEFENSE MINISTER KIM: (Via interpreter) Let me first address this range extension issue. This is still being discussed on the working level. This issue was not dealt at today’s 2+2 ministerial meeting.
SECRETARY PANETTA: In consultation and negotiations with the Republic of Korea with regards to this area, I think we’re making good progress. And our hope is that we can arrive at an agreeable solution soon.
SECRETARY CLINTON: Regarding the new leader in North Korea, I believe leaders are judged by what they do to help their people have better lives, whether they create stability and security, prosperity, opportunity. And this new young leader has a choice to make, and we are hoping that he will make a choice that benefits all of his people.
And we also believe strongly that North Korea will achieve nothing by threats or provocations, which will only continue to isolate the country and provide no real opportunity for engagement and work toward a better future. And so we hope that the new leadership in Pyongyang will live up to its agreements, will not engage in threats and provocations, will put the North Korean people first. Rather than spending money on implements of war, feed your people, provide education and healthcare, and lift your people out of poverty and isolation.
This young man, should he make a choice that would help bring North Korea into the 21st century, could go down in history as a transformative leader. Or he can continue the model of the past and eventually North Korea will change, because at some point people cannot live under such oppressive conditions – starving to death, being put into gulags, and having their basic human rights denied. So we’re hoping that he will chart a different course for his people.
MS. NULAND: Thank you very much.
Hillary Clinton: On the Occasion of the Official Birthday of Queen Elizabeth II
Posted in Foreign Policy, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Secretary of State, state department, U.S. Department of State, tagged Foreign Policy, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Queen Elizabeth II, Secretary of State, State Department, U.S. Department of State, United Kingdom on June 14, 2012| Leave a Comment »

Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II, center, talks with US Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, left,and French President Nicolas Sarkozy, right, during a reception at London’s Buckingham Palace for world leaders attending the G20 summit. (AP Photo/John Stillwell/pool)
On the Occasion of the Official Birthday of Queen Elizabeth II
Press Statement
Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of StateWashington, DCJune 14, 2012
On behalf of President Obama and the people of the United States, I am delighted to send best wishes to the people of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland as you celebrate Queen Elizabeth II’s official birthday this June 16. The United States has long viewed the Queen and her service to her nation with the deepest respect. In this Diamond Jubilee Year, her tireless dedication is a beacon of hope to peoples and countries around the world.
Our nations have a special history of friendship and close cooperation based on shared democratic values and respect for the rule of law. I am looking forward to the London Olympics where the international spotlight will shine on your country’s culture, commitment to democratic principles and human rights. Our nations are united in the pursuit of a more just and democratic future and these Olympics will give us the chance to once again come together in celebration of these values.
I send Queen Elizabeth II and the British people my most heartfelt congratulations on this special day. Best wishes for a year of peace, prosperity and happiness.
Secretaries Clinton and Panetta at the U.S.-Korea Ministerial Dialogue
Posted in Foreign Policy, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Secretary of State, state department, U. S. Department of Defense, U.S. Department of State, tagged Foreign Policy, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Kim Kwan-Ji, Kim Sung-hwan, Leon Panetta, Secretary of Defense, Secretary of State, South Korea, State Department, U.S. Department of State on June 14, 2012| Leave a Comment »
Remarks at the U.S.-Korea Ministerial Dialogue 2+2 Meetings
Remarks
Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of StateSecretary of Defense Leon Panetta, Minister of Foreign Affairs and Trade of the Republic of Korea Kim Sung-Hwan, Minister of National Defense of the Republic of Korea Kim Kwan-JiThomas Jefferson RoomWashington, DCJune 14, 2012
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, thank you very much and let me welcome you to the plenary session of the second U.S.-Republic of Korea Ministerial 2+2 with the foreign ministers and defense ministers of both of our countries. It’s a real pleasure to have you here for this occasion. The relationship between our two countries has never been stronger.
In the three years that we have been working to implement our joint vision for the alliance between our nations, we have reached several milestones. Last October, we hosted President Lee in this room for the first state visit by a Korean president to the United States in over a decade. During that visit, we also celebrated the passage of the U.S.-Korea Free Trade Agreement, which has already begun to spur job creation and greater economic opportunity in both our nations.
At the same time, Korea has taken on a rising global profile. In the past few years, Korea hosted the G-20 showcasing its economic power; the Fourth High Level Forum on Aid Effectiveness in Busan, which I was very pleased to attend; the Nuclear Security Summit, highlighting its leadership on global security; and now the World Expo in Yeosu, building ties between the Korean people and visitors from around the world.
So it’s clear that on many of the pressing issues of the 21st Century, the world is looking to Korea, and Korea has shouldered and welcomed its new and growing responsibilities. We share an unshakable partnership and we continue to seek new opportunities to strengthen our cooperation. We’ve enjoyed unprecedented coordination on a number of bilateral, regional, and global issues.
And most importantly, we consult closely and regularly on developments in North Korea. We continue to stand shoulder to shoulder with our Republic of Korea allies in the face of threats and provocations. And I look forward to continuing these consultations today.
Finally, I’d like to note that we are not only building our institutional ties through dialogues like this, we are also building connections between our people. This year we inaugurated our diplomatic exchange program between the United States State Department and the Korean Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade. And we have enjoyed hosting Kim Jae-shin. She’s become an invaluable member of our team enhancing our work with her insight and building connections between our offices. We would keep her forever if we could, Minister. And Minister Kim, I hope you will feel similarly when we send our first exchange officer to work with you later this year.
So thanks again to both Foreign Minister Kim and Defense Minister Kim. Thanks to Ambassador Choi for his presence here in Washington and working on our relationship year round. And thanks to my colleagues from the State and Defense Departments. We look forward to a productive discussion. And on that note, let me turn it over to Foreign Minister Kim.
FOREIGN MINISTER KIM: (Via interpreter) Secretary Clinton, Secretary Panetta, about two years ago the ROK and the U.S. held a 2+2 ministerial meeting for the first time. And now that we are holding this meeting the second time, I am very pleased.
Just as Secretary Clinton commented just a while ago, during the past year there have been great changes in the Republic of Korea, as well as the world as a whole, in keeping pace with the changes in the security environment. It is very significant that we are here today to review the changes that we need to continue making based on a very solid trust between our two leaders.
During the past four years we have laid very strong foundations for our alliance. Despite the continuing North Korean threat, the sinking of Cheonan warship, or with the shelling of the Yeonpyeong Islands, or the long-range missile launch, and we have shown an almost perfect cooperation. We’ve also handled some very complex alliance issues such as the OPCON transition or the base relocation.
And the Free Trade Agreement that entered into effect earlier this year has increased the scope of our alliance into the economic sector. Now we must ensure that we are not complacent with the achievement we’ve made thus far and try to move out into the world as an alliance under the slogan of a global Korea, that the Republic of Korea will continue to contribute to global issues, and we’ll continue to cooperate with the United States in this regard.
Hopefully this meeting will not only strengthen our alliance and send clear message to North Korea, but also try to seek what we can contribute to the region and the world as a whole. Thank you very much.
SECRETARY CLINTON: Thank you, Minister Kim. Secretary Panetta?
SECRETARY PANETTA: Thank you very much, Secretary Clinton. I would also like to join in welcoming Minister Kim and Defense Minister Kim to this second 2+2 ministers meeting dialogue.
We greatly appreciate the opportunity to assess the ongoing efforts of the alliance between the United States and the Republic of Korea, particularly as we continue to commemorate the 60th anniversary of the Korean War.
I want to extend my sincere and solemn appreciation for the shared sacrifice of our two nations’ veterans of the Korean War. It’s through their sacrifice and it’s through their commitment, and it’s through their continuing service that our men and women in uniform truly put their lives on the line in order to protect both of our countries. We are privileged to sit here today because of their efforts, and we embrace as always a very strong and enduring friendship.
As we face the many security challenges and opportunities on the horizon on the peninsula regionally and globally, we must forge a common strategic approach and address these issues collectively, rooted in friendship and in mutual interest.
One of the things that we have done at the Defense Department is to enact a new defense strategy that has made clear the importance of rebalancing to the Asia Pacific region. One of the cornerstones to our ability to effectively implement that strategy is the close partnership and relationship that we have with the Republic of Korea. That’s why it’s so important for us to come together, to meet to discuss our common views on the shared security challenges that we face, and to forge a common strategic approach to those challenges.
Thank you for your friendship and most importantly thank you for this historic alliance.
MODERATOR: (Inaudible) Defense Minister (inaudible).
DEFENSE MINISTER KIM: (Via interpreter) We are holding today here in Washington our second 2+2 ministerial meeting. And this is a very significant event. I want to first thank the U.S. side for hosting such a wonderful event. The current ROK-U.S. relationship, just as our two leaders named it last October, a partnership for peace and prosperity, is developing into a multi-dimension strategic alliance which address not only the security issues of the Korean Peninsula but moves out into the Asia Pacific and into the world. A recent poll show that over 80 percent of the ROK public believe that the alliance is contributing to the security of the ROK peninsula, of the Korean Peninsula, which is contributing also for the peace and stability of the region.
Especially in the defense area, the two countries have managed very stably the situation in the Korean Peninsula following the death of Kim Jong-il through a very close policy and military cooperation, especially the intelligence sharing and the combined crisis management system that we operated before and after North Korean long-range missile launch shows that we are very much prepared to counter North Korean threats. And we are going over – beyond these cooperations by addressing regional and global cooperation to show that we are indeed becoming multi-dimension strategic alliance.
Through our historic 2+2 meeting today, we want to reconfirm our will and our commitment for the peace and stability of the Korean Peninsula as well as this region and the world as a whole, and demonstrate to the world the solidness of our alliance.
SECRETARY CLINTON: Thank you very much, Minister.
Hillary Clinton at the Child Survival Forum
Posted in Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Secretary of State, state department, U.S. Department of State, tagged Child Survival Forum, Foreign Policy, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Secretary of State, State Department, U.S. Department of State on June 14, 2012| Leave a Comment »
Remarks at the Child Survival Forum
Remarks
Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of StateGeorgetown UniversityWashington, DCJune 14, 2012
SECRETARY CLINTON:Well, good morning.AUDIENCE: Good morning.
SECRETARY CLINTON: It’s wonderful being here in one of my favorite spaces in Washington, and to see all of you for this incredibly important summit. I want to begin by thanking Senator Isakson. As he said, Johnny and I served together in the Senate. In fact, we were on the same committee, a committee called the HELP Committee, standing for Health, Education, Labor and Pensions, where we worked on a range of issues, including children’s health. And I so greatly appreciate his leadership and his heart. He is one of the champions for working on behalf of a better future for children everywhere and in particular in Africa. And he has a great commitment to the call to action that we are here today to endorse.
I also want to thank our co-hosts, Minister Azad from India, Minister Tedros from Ethiopia. You have already heard from the ministers, and I think you know why I admire them and their commitments. Ethiopia and India are two of the countries hardest hit by child mortality, but they are not shying away from the challenge that that poses. In fact, as you heard from the ministers, the Ethiopian and Indian Governments are putting this problem front and center, not just at home but on the global stage. And so when we talk about the concept of country ownership, as I did in Oslo two weeks ago, this is exactly what I mean. India and Ethiopia are exemplars of countries stepping up and taking responsibility, and I thank them for their leadership and their partnership.
There are so many partners here from the private sector, the nonprofit groups, the faith-based organizations, because of course, saving children’s lives cannot be just a job for governments. It requires partnerships involving many of the governments, corporations, and civil society groups represented in this room. And this partnership has yielded nearly a quarter of a billion dollars for fighting preventable child deaths. More than 60 faith-based organizations from 40 countries are making new commitments that will reach more than 250 million people – encouraging mothers to breastfeed their newborns, to immunize their children, to seek healthcare when their kids are sick. That is what shared responsibility is all about.
I also want to thank UNICEF, whose director Tony Lake is here, and I’m grateful for UNICEF’s constant reminder that if we don’t care for our children, we are indicting ourselves and beggaring the future. Margaret Chan from the World Health Organization is here, and I thank her for her leadership of that absolutely essential organization. I thank Carol Lancaster, a colleague from years ago who is now serving with such distinction as the dean of the School of Foreign Service here at Georgetown.
And of course, I thank my partner and colleague, Raj Shah. Raj Shah has brought energy and innovation to the work of development and is an outstanding leader at USAID. And he’s making partnerships with his counterparts around the world. Andrew Mitchell from DFID in the United Kingdom is here, and Raj and Andrew are always conspiring about how to be more efficient in delivering lifesaving and life-changing interventions.
Now some of you may have seen a picture of a very young Raj Shah in the last few weeks as part of this campaign. I also dug up a photo. (Laughter.) But it was so long ago, I think I’m five. (Laughter.) Somebody – it looks like my father’s handwriting – wrote “1952,” which would make me five. But if you look closely, I’ve lost some teeth, so I was very confused. (Laughter.)
But regardless, the picture reminded me of how fortunate I was. I could be looking forward to growing up, to going to school, to making friends, all the things we want for our own children. I know I was lucky. All those dreams were possible for me and some that I could have never imagined all those years ago. But this year, millions of children will never get to take a similar photo because they won’t survive their first five years. That cannot be the future we want for our children or anyone’s children. And so we are all here today with one vision: To make sure every child everywhere lives to see his or her fifth birthday, to eliminate preventable child death in a generation. Now, I know this is a big goal to say the least. Last year I laid out a vision of an AIDS-free generation. Well, ending preventable child deaths is just as ambitious.
Now, not everyone agrees that goals like this are achievable or that we should set our sights so high. But I believe in setting goals and I believe we have good reasons for optimism. We already have many of the tools and much of the knowledge we need, whether it’s good nutrition for expecting mothers or the best way to prevent malaria in the first few years of life. And these tools and knowledge have brought us a long way together.
In just the past 50 years, child mortality has plummeted by 70 percent. In two decades we’ve cut the number of children who die each year by more than 4 million. This is truly one of history’s great development stories. And yet, progress is not the same thing as success. The raw numbers are mindboggling. This year more than 7 million children will die from preventable causes before they reach their fifth birthday. That is slightly less but roughly the population of New York City.
And the gap between rich and poor is just as shocking. A child born in sub-Saharan Africa is seven times more likely to die before the age of five than one born here in the United States. Child mortality rates are coming down, but too slowly. On the current trajectory, they will be the same in rich and poor countries in a century. That’s too long to wait. We can’t wait a hundred years for a child from Pakistan or Nigeria to have the same chance at life as a child in the United States or Europe. Think about the millions of lives we will lose. Think of the parents who will grieve the loss of maybe not just one child, but perhaps two or even three. None of us want to live in a world where a child’s life comes down to the luck of the draw.
And this isn’t only about building a more just and equitable world, bringing down child mortality rates also makes the world more prosperous and more stable. Consider the so-called demographic dividend. In many developing countries, the population looks like a pyramid with a small number of working age adults supporting far more children and young people. In the developing world, 40 percent of the people are under the age of 20. That limits the opportunities for economic growth and puts an enormous strain on government to provide schools, health care, and other necessary services.
But we can change the shape of this pyramid if we drive down child mortality, along with investing in girls’ education and improving access to voluntary family planning. It sounds, perhaps, like a paradox, but when fewer children die, people choose to have smaller families, knowing with greater confidence that their children will survive to adulthood.
And then eventually there are more working adults supporting fewer dependents, which makes it easier for a country to make investments that drive sustained economic growth. And with that sustained economic growth, the country will likely be more stable, less prone to political crises, and more apt to become a partner to help solve global problems. So for all these reasons – politically, economically, and morally – we see the benefits of saving children’s lives. That’s why I am so excited about the goal of this conference: to accelerate our progress; to make sure that one day all children, wherever they’re born, have the same chance to survive; and to see this day arrive not in a hundred years, but within my lifetime.
So how do we speed up our progress? How do we bend the curve and drive down the number of child deaths even faster? I think it begins by changing the way we approach the problem. The evidence tells us what works, but we need to be more rigorous about following that evidence. We’ve set targets for reduction, but even if we achieve Millennium Development Goal 4, millions of children will still die every year from preventable causes.
To accelerate progress, we need to agree on a new way forward: That’s why we’re all here –representatives from 80 countries. That’s the goal of the new global roadmap for reducing child mortality that you will be discussing over the next two days. Later today, Secretary of Health and Human Services Sebelius will commit the United States to this new plan, and I ask that each of you join as well.
This roadmap identifies five ways we can shift our work – shifting based on evidence – to speed up our progress and save far more lives. First, we’ll focus our efforts in the countries where child mortality rates are the highest. Eighty percent of children’s deaths occur in 24 countries, but those countries don’t receive nearly 80 percent of global support or funding. We want to work with those governments that are willing to lead the effort within their own borders.
And we are joined today by leaders from India, Pakistan, Ethiopia, Nigeria, and the Democratic Republic of Congo, the five countries that together suffer half of all childhood deaths before the age of five. You will hear from all of them about how they are working to meet this challenge, just as you’ll hear about our efforts in the United States.
Yet, even as we focus on the hardest hit countries, we will also identify the specific populations where children are most vulnerable. That’s the second shift. Wherever you find inequality holding people back, you are likely to find a higher child mortality rate. It may be in a slum where vaccinations are hard to come by or in a rural area where the water is deadly to drink. No matter the solution, we will find the communities where children are suffering most and tailor our responses to their specific needs.
Third, we will prioritize fighting the illnesses and conditions that are claiming the most lives: pneumonia, diarrhea, neonatal complications. We will scale up the most effective solutions and support innovative research into new lifesaving, cost-effective measures.
At the same time, we recognize that children aren’t born into a vacuum; they are surrounded by families and communities and the strengths of those families and communities can mean the difference between life and death. So the fourth shift in the strategy is to look at the broader social and economic factors that are closely linked to high child mortality. For example, are girls being educated? Are women being empowered? Do women have access to family planning? Can they make decisions about when to take their children to the clinic? Is the government making investments that drive inclusive economic growth? Child survival is strongly correlated with each of these areas, and we will seek to advance them.
I’ve always believed that if we had a concerted, persistent, public message into countries and communities where the answers to the questions I just posed were all in the negative, that in effect the failure to provide positive answers led to the loss of more children, and do it over and over and over again, we would be able to make progress in getting to the right answers.Finally, we will make mutual accountability and transparency a centerpiece of our efforts. Now, the word accountability gets used a lot in development circles. If everyone who talked about accountability was actually held accountable, we wouldn’t need to have events like this one. But by coming together to support this agenda, we can all work to give accountability some teeth. Ethiopia’s leadership is a great case in point. As Minister Tedros said, his government is using a scorecard to track their progress providing transparency and accountability for their commitment. If every country developed their own scorecard or, even better, adopted a uniform scorecard, then we could come and evaluate our efforts every year based on shared data and know who was living up to their commitments and who was falling short.
For our part, the United States is committed to making these five shifts part of our broader effort to change the way we do business in development. Already, we are the largest funder of children’s health, including maternal health, family planning, nutrition, and other areas. Last year alone, PEPFAR reached 660,000 HIV-positive pregnant women, enabling 200,000 babies to be born HIV-free. And PEPFAR has joined UNAIDS in leading a partnership to virtually end mother-to-child transmission by 2015. We will maintain that kind of financial, technical, and diplomatic commitment, even as we do a better job coordinating our programs and aligning our resources to support country-led plans.
And we’re also supporting several new initiatives that will help put this new roadmap to the test. Along with the Norwegian Government, Merck Pharmaceuticals, Every Mother Counts, and the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, we recently helped launch Saving Mothers, Giving Life, a public-private partnership that will work to protect mothers and newborns during labor and delivery. We have also partnered with seven organizations to launch Survive and Thrive, which will connect healthcare professionals in the United States with their counterparts in low and middle-income countries so they can share insights and strengthen their skills in caring for mothers, newborns, and young children.
And finally, we are launching the Women’s Health Innovation program, a partnership with the What to Expect Foundation and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation that will provide expecting mothers with pregnancy information, education, and social support. I’m very eager to see what other commitments will be made today and tomorrow.
But more importantly is what happens when we leave this summit – what happens on Monday and the next week and the week after that into the years ahead, because we can only meet our ambitious goal if we keep up our efforts day after day and year after year, and if we are relentless about holding each other to the task.
I think about the great global health stories of our time. In the 20th century, the world came together to eradicate smallpox. We are close to finishing the job on polio, and I congratulate India on having a full year with not a single polio case. If we meet the goal – (applause) – if we meet the goal we are committing to today, if we make sure that every child everywhere has the same chance to reach his or her fifth birthday, then we will have added another story to the short list of the greatest things people have ever done for one another. And we will have set ourselves on a path to a world that is more stable, more prosperous, and more just. And it will have all started here with a simple call to action, with pictures of all the participants and what we looked like when we were five to remind ourselves of what’s at stake. And I am honored to be with all of you as we make this pledge together. Thank you all very much. (Applause.)
Now I get to exercise one of the perks of being Secretary of State, and that is to welcome the next speaker, a tireless partner in this effort, someone whose work has shined a bright light on the struggles facing the people of Eastern Congo, particularly women and children. When I visited there in 2009, I saw firsthand how the Eastern Congo Initiative is supporting civil society groups to meet some of the biggest challenges in that country. I’ve known this young man for a long time, and I have watched him start his own family with three beautiful children and a wife who makes it all work. I have enjoyed him in person, I’ve enjoyed him on the screen, but I particularly admire his commitment.
Please help me welcome the Eastern Congo Initiative’s founder, Ben Affleck. (Applause.)
Hillary Clinton at the AGOA Forum
Posted in Foreign Policy, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Secretary of State, state department, U.S. Department of State, tagged AGOA, Foreign Policy, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Secretary of State, State Department, U.S. Department of State on June 14, 2012| Leave a Comment »
Remarks at the African Growth and Opportunity Act Forum to Mark Global Economic Statecraft Day
Remarks
Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of StateDean Acheson AuditoriumWashington, DCJune 14, 2012
Well, good morning, everyone, and it is once again a great pleasure and honor for me to join you for this year’s AGOA Forum. It gives us the opportunity every year to look back on what our countries have achieved together, and all that still needs to be done as we move forward.
I want to thank Assistant Secretary Carson for his leadership and passion about not only Africa, but the relationship between Africa and the United States. I’ve had the great personal pleasure of knowing him now for about 15, 17 years, and seeing him in action. And I was so pleased when he accepted my request to come and lead our efforts here at the State Department. I’m also delighted that we’ve been joined by Ambassador Ron Kirk, who leads our efforts at the United States Trade Representative’s Office and has been a tireless advocate of making AGOA even better.
And to all my colleagues across our government, I thank them for their participation. I also wish to acknowledge and thank Prime Minister Ahoussou of Cote d’Ivoire for joining us today. I’m pleased that we also have the Zambian Minister of Commerce and Trade, Minister Sichinga, who was our host last year, as well as other government ministers, members of the business community, representatives from civil society from nearly 40 African countries.
Now I want to begin by thanking you for traveling to the United States for this week’s events here in Washington and next week’s in Cincinnati. We are very grateful for your commitment to making AGOA and our economic partnership as strong and successful as it can be. I cannot promise you, however, that you will have as much fun as I did in Nairobi and Lusaka. In Nairobi, unfortunately, because of social media, we did some dancing – (laughter) – which made clear to everyone I needed more practice. (Laughter.) In Lusaka, we did some singing, which also made the same point. But it was such a great honor for me to represent our country, the Obama Administration, at both of the AGOA forums held in Africa during my time as Secretary of State.
I well remember when, during my husband’s administration, the United States passed the African Growth and Opportunity Act. We believed that the countries of Africa had enormous untapped economic potential that could and should be developed. We shared a vision with many of you of a future in which economic growth in Africa would fuel growth and prosperity worldwide; trade and investment would multiply, both within Africa and between Africa and other regions; and people across the continent would have new opportunities to start their own businesses, earn higher salaries, improve their lives, and lift the fortunes of their families and communities.
Now at the time, some thought this vision was a fantasy. I remember very well making the argument to members of Congress who were not convinced but felt that it would be worth trying, but that it was a dream that would take decades, maybe generations, to come true. Well, just look at Africa today: one of the fastest growing regions in the world; home to six – soon to be seven – of the world’s 10 fastest growing economies. In the past decade, trade between Africa and the rest of the world has tripled, private foreign investment has surpassed official aid, and it will surely keep rising. Because – and I want all of my fellow American citizens, particularly our business community, to hear this – Africa offers the highest rate of return on foreign direct investment of any developing region in the world. (Applause.) In fact, it is the only developing region where the growth rate is expected to rise this year. The middle class is growing. Consumer spending is increasing. Urban centers are becoming vital economic hubs.
Well, we in the United States like to talk about ourselves as the country that is the land of opportunity. It’s a point of national pride. Well, in the 21st century, Africa is the continent that is the land of opportunity. And I salute all of you who have contributed to this progress. (Applause.) Here amongst us, we have entrepreneurs who have helped new businesses get off the ground, government leaders who have worked to create the political stability and regulatory environment that sustained economic growth requires, civil society leaders who have reached out into your communities to connect people with training, jobs, and other skills so that they too can be part of this new wave of opportunity.
We are also proud of how AGOA has contributed to this progress. Last year, imports from AGOA countries were more than six times as high as they were 10 years ago. And AGOA has helped promote not just oil, but value-added exports, including apparel, manufactured goods, and agricultural products. It’s led to new jobs, the rise of new sectors, and new business opportunities for people in every country represented here as well as the United States.
But progress does not guarantee success, and our charge is to keep the progress going to achieve success. We believe there is still a great deal more potential for trade and investment among our countries, and there is certainly a lot of room for every country here to grow even faster and more.
Now I realize that the matter of renewing AGOA is on many people’s minds right now, and renewing the Third Country Multi-Fiber provision is even more urgent. It is vital to textile manufacturers across the continent and has widespread business support here in the United States. Please know that the State Department is working closely with the USTR’s Representative’s Office, with our partners in Congress, to accelerate this process, and I have every confidence that we will see AGOA’s Third Country Multi-Fiber provision renewed.
But in the meantime, we have our own work to do. At the AGOA Forum last year in Zambia, I said that the question we need to ask ourselves is not whether we can do more to fulfill our economic potential, because of course we can. The question is: Will we? Will we learn from all that we have already accomplished together? Will we look honestly at what we all must do better? Will we then work together to improve? This isn’t a one-time question. It’s a challenge we must continually pose to ourselves and each other if we want to see the economic potential of this partnership continue to grow.
I want to just mention a few areas that I believe deserve our attention.
One is the focus of this year’s forum: infrastructure development. This is something I hear about frequently from my counterparts in the region, as well as from business people looking to invest in Africa: It is still much harder to do business than it should be because the right infrastructure is still not in place. I mean both physical infrastructure, like roads, ports, modern power grids, and regulatory infrastructure, like how easy it is to register a new business or get a construction permit. We’ve heard some numbers today about how burdensome it can be just to ship goods from one country to the country next door.
I know everybody wants roads, and we want to see more roads. But I want people to start thinking about the importance of the regulatory infrastructure. It’s just as critical as the physical infrastructure. Now, many countries are focused on this and taking steps, taking a hard look at corruption, for example, that impedes healthy trade and investment. And some are making key investments in regional infrastructures by building, for example, regional transportation corridors that promote more economic integration, an issue I have mentioned frequently in my conversations with you at AGOA. There’s so much more potential for the people of Africa to trade and invest more with each other, and I know this is a priority for many of you as well.
We’re also working together to help improve energy infrastructure. Earlier this year, Assistant Secretary Carson led an energy trade mission to four countries in Africa to identify ways that the United States can help improve the power supply, since lack of reasonably priced, reliable power is a significant constraint on economic growth.
And next week in Cincinnati, the U.S.-Africa Business Conference will focus on how to leverage public and private sector resources and channel them toward infrastructure improvements. We will match African and American firms working in the energy, transportation, water, and sanitation sectors.
So there is progress underway, and we have to keep the momentum going.
The third kind of infrastructure is what we could call the human infrastructure, how to give people the chance to contribute. Yesterday, I met with this group of 62 young entrepreneurs from 40 African countries who are here for an innovation summit. At a time when 60 percent of the people of Sub-Saharan Africa are under 25, and millions of them are out of work, there has to be a concerted effort by all of us to help equip these young people, to support them, because our economies and our societies need their talents, their energy, and their ideas.
The same is true for women. Here today are participants in the African Women’s Entrepreneurship Program, or AWEP, a State Department program that supports the professional development of women who run small and medium-size businesses across Africa. They are here for three weeks to explore opportunities for partnership, develop their skills, and build their professional networks.
Let me share just one story of these women. Comfort Adjahoe is here with us from Ghana. Comfort, where are you? Where are you, Comfort? Way back there. She manages a shea butter production and export company called Ele Agbe. It started small, but it’s not small any more. Today Comfort employs – listen to this – Comfort employs – that attractive woman right back there – 5,000 small-holder farmers in northern Ghana and 300 employees in Accra. (Applause.)
Now, she is a vivid example, but she is by far not the only example of how women can be powerful drivers of economic growth and how, by supporting women entrepreneurs, there can be a multiplier effect across economies. That’s why I personally, the State Department, and the United States are strong supporters of women’s economic empowerment, not only in Africa but worldwide. To that end, I’m pleased to announce a new partnership between AWEP and Intel, the Exxon Mobil Foundation, the NGO called Vital Voices, and the Cherie Blair Foundation for Women to give women more access to digital literacy training, business training, and professional mentoring.
Through programs like AWEP and the partnerships made possible by AGOA, we can see economic transformation with our own eyes. And in fact, we are taking what we’ve learned from the work with many of you and elsewhere in the world to bring it to a new level, because today is not only the 11th AGOA Forum; I’ve also designated it the first Global Economic Statecraft Day, because we are elevating economic issues as a key element of our foreign policy. Our diplomats are engaging more on economic matters worldwide because we all know economic forces are increasingly shaping our world and our economies will be more and more interdependent.
In honor of Global Economic Statecraft Day, our Embassy in Nairobi is hosting Kenyan firms that are, quote, “export-ready,” to start them on the process of exporting to the United States. Our Embassy in Gaborone is bringing together entrepreneurs, young professionals, and business school students to kick off a new network of future business leaders for Botswana. Our Embassy in Abidjan is convening a roundtable of business people to begin rebuilding the American Chamber of Commerce, which was shut down during the post-electoral unrest, because encouraging private investment in Cote d’Ivoire and across Africa is a key to our global economic statecraft agenda.
Those are just three of the nearly 250 events happening in 130 different countries. Our goal with them is the same one that brings us together in AGOA, to work as partners to promote growth and prosperity so more people can contribute to and benefit from our countries’ economic ties.
So, taking stock: Twelve years after AGOA went into effect, we have a good record of results. AGOA has helped to increase trade and investment and opened new doors of opportunity for millions of people. But we can and must do better by deepening our cooperation and improving our performance.
This is a priority for the United States. As you heard from Deputy National Security Adviser Michael Froman, earlier today President Obama signed a new Presidential Policy Directive on Sub-Saharan Africa. It’s a continuation of a conversation President Obama began nearly three years ago in Ghana, about how our countries can work in partnership to reach shared goals, to solve challenges. President Obama believes so passionately that the future is here, and we can make a commitment knowing that it’s not only about economic growth, but also democratic progress, improved security, development gains. Because all taken together, we will strengthen the security, the prosperity, and the democracies across Africa, and by doing so help to fulfill that dream of a future of peace, freedom, prosperity, and dignity for all Africans.
So thank you for believing in this vision. There are a few familiar faces here that have been on this journey with us for the past 12 years. Some of you even lobbied the Congress on behalf of AGOA. But whether you’re a veteran of these efforts or someone new to what we are trying to do together, the United States will stand with you as your partner on the basis of mutual respect in order to make sure that the benefits that we see as so potentially achievable are available for you and particularly for the next generation.
Thank you all very much. (Applause.)
SECRETARY HILLARY RODHAM CLINTON: Public Schedule for June 14, 2012
Posted in Foreign Policy, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Secretary of State, state department, U.S. Department of State, tagged Foreign Policy, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Secretary of State, State Department, U.S. Department of State on June 14, 2012| 1 Comment »

Public Schedule for June 14, 2012
Public Schedule
Washington, DCJune 14, 2012
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE
PUBLIC SCHEDULE
THURSDAY JUNE 14, 2012SECRETARY HILLARY RODHAM CLINTON
9:20 a.m. Secretary Clinton delivers remarks to the Child Survival Forum, at Georgetown University. Please click here for more information.
(OPEN PRESS COVERAGE)
10:45 a.m. Secretary Clinton delivers remarks at the African Growth and Opportunity Act Forum and marks Global Economic Statecraft Day, at the Department of State. Please click here for more information on the event and here for more information on Global Economic Statecraft Day.
(OPEN PRESS COVERAGE).12:00 p.m. Secretary Clinton hosts a working lunch in honor of the U.S.-Korea ministerial dialogue 2+2 meetings with Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta, Minister of Foreign Affairs and Trade of the Republic of Korea Kim Sung-Hwan, and Minister of National Defense of the Republic of Korea Kwan-Jin, at the Department of State.
(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)1:00 p.m. Secretary Clinton participates in the U.S.-Korea ministerial dialogue 2+2 meetings with Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta, Minister of Foreign Affairs and Trade of the Republic of Korea Kim Sung-Hwan, and Minister of National Defense of the Republic of Korea Kwan-Jin, at the Department of State.
(OPEN PRESS COVERAGE FOR REMARKS)2:10 p.m. Secretary Clinton holds a press availability with Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta, Minister of Foreign Affairs and Trade of the Republic of Korea Kim Sung-Hwan, and Minister of National Defense of the Republic of Korea Kwan-Jin, at the Department of State.
(OPEN PRESS COVERAGE)
3:45 p.m. Secretary Clinton meets with the 2012 African Women’s Entrepreneurship Program (AWEP) delegates, at the Department of State.
(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)4:15 p.m. Secretary Clinton meets with Chief Israeli Negotiator Isaac Molho and Special Envoy for Middle East Peace David Hale, at the Department of State.
(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)


































