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Archive for November, 2012

When she is away on foreign travel and has to miss an event or wants to mark a special occasion, Mme. Secretary sends a video message along for the participants.  Here are some video messages she left for events today.

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Video Remarks for the National Archives “Heritage Award”

Remarks

Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of State
Washington, DC
November 14, 2012

I’m sorry I couldn’t be with you tonight.  But I am delighted to have the chance to thank the National Archives and its Foundation for preserving the records of our democracy and bringing them to life for the American people.  You inspire us to learn more about our history and to share our stories and experiences with people around the globe.It is so fitting that the foundation has chosen to honor Jacquie Mars and the Mars family as the first recipient of its Heritage Award.  Jacquie and the Mars family have worked to inspire a deep appreciation of America’s heritage.  Tonight you will hear all about how they have given their time, energy, and money to promote American art, culture, and history.

But Mars has also been a shining example of corporate social responsibility.  It has supported development across Africa, training cocoa farmers and championing education in Ghana and Cote d’Ivoire.  In 2010, I was pleased to give Mars a State Department award in recognition of this work.

As the State Department works to promote U.S. business overseas, we need more “corporate ambassadors” like Mars.  They strengthen the American brand, creating export opportunities for American products and making American firms the most sought after employers in the world.

Jacquie, thank you for all you’ve done and continue to do.  Please accept my heartfelt congratulations.

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Remarks for International Center for Journalists

Remarks

Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of State
Washington, DC
November 14, 2012

I am delighted to join you in honoring journalists for their commitment to the truth, and celebrating the field of journalism for helping to build a world that is more free and more fair.Journalists expose corruption and highlight issues that are critical to our common future – from election transparency in the Balkans to human trafficking in Asia. This can be difficult, dangerous work.  You ask the tough questions, travel to the most remote places, and put your lives on the line each and every day.  You tell the stories that need to be told and shed light on issues that have been hidden in the shadows.

As Secretary of State, I appreciate the role of the media in keeping government officials accountable.  Because a free press is key to any thriving democracy.  I commend the work of the International Center for Journalists for promoting quality journalism around the world.  Congratulations to each of you and thank you for your invaluable contributions.

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Video Remarks for the New Deal for Fragile States

Remarks

Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of State
Washington, DC
November 14, 2012

 


I want to thank all of you for highlighting the unique needs of fragile and conflict-affected states.We all know the statistics.  Right now, these states are home to 1.5 billion people.  So far, not one of these states is on track to meet a single Millennium Development goal by 2015.

The New Deal for Fragile States, which you have developed from the very beginning, is an exciting and fresh approach that has the chance to deliver real results.  It recognizes that promoting peace and prosperity in a fragile state is a long, difficult road—and it starts with a few clear priorities, from a legitimate political system to improved justice, stronger security, more economic opportunities.  It requires dialogue with counterparts from other Ministries and Parliaments, between civil society and government.  It takes leadership from within each country—and all of us working together to support these priorities.

That’s why the United States is proud to be a partner and champion of your work. Delivering better results to enable peaceful and prosperous countries is central to our foreign policy and humanitarian priorities.

We also must work to include society’s most marginalized groups – especially women and girls.  Bring together civil society and government to promote a more inclusive set of processes.

If we promote these ideals and harness the opportunities presented by this New Deal, we can create lasting change for these 1.5 billion people.  Thank you for being agents of change in your communities and countries.

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Remarks at the Opening of the AUSMIN Ministerial

 

Remarks

Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of State

State Reception Center

Perth, Australia

November 14, 2012

 


Well, thank you, Foreign Minister Carr and Defense Minister Smith for welcoming us and our delegation for this AUSMIN meeting here in Perth. We are delighted to have this opportunity once again in this setting to exchange views on a broad range of issues.
Let me begin by congratulating Australia on your election to the United Nations Security Council. That achievement opens the door to even closer cooperation between us and lends an additional dimension to our AUSMIN agenda.

We will be speaking, of course, about bilateral issues, but also on matters where Australia’s voice has been important, but now Australia’s membership on the Security Council will be essential, for example on Iran, where the international community remains firm and united in our efforts to prevent Tehran from acquiring nuclear weapons, and on Syria, where we need to stand together now to increase pressure on the Assad regime and expand humanitarian assistance to people in need.

We will, of course, be discussing the important work we do together in Afghanistan. After great sacrifices, ISAF is on track to transition responsibility for security to the Afghan Government in 2014 and bring our combat mission to a close. But that will not mark the end of our commitment to the people of Afghanistan, because we will be discussing ways in the next months that the United States and Australia will have to work closely together with international partners to support Afghanistan’s continued progress so that it never again becomes a staging ground for international terrorism.

Now, all of our work together, whether it’s on the world stage or here in the Asia Pacific or the Indo Pacific, is driven by the values and the vision we share. You can see that in Prime Minister Gillard’s recent white paper. And we recognize that stability and security increasingly depend on balanced and vibrant economies. We’re also committed to working hand in hand with Australia to build a more mature and effective multilateral architecture for the region that can help settle disputes peacefully, promote universal rights, spur greater trade and commerce within an economic system that is open, free, transparent, and fair.

That means finalizing the Trans-Pacific Partnership, which will lower trade barriers, raise labor and environmental standards, and drive growth across the region. And it includes, of course, working closely together at the upcoming East Asia Summit to advance a shared agenda.

Now, there is much that we will be discussing that concerns the region and the world, but certainly bilaterally we are very pleased at the close cooperation between us. And I applaud the approval by your parliament of the new U.S.-Australian Defense Trade Cooperation Treaty. We can now move forward together implementing it and it will make it easier for our militaries to work together and further boost the two-way commerce that has soared since our Free Trade Agreement was signed seven years ago.

We also are eager to implement, in a continuing fashion, the agreements reached by President Obama and Prime Minister Gillard last November, which are helping the United States move to a more geographically distributed, operationally resilient, and politically sustainable force posture in the region.

So we have a very busy agenda, but that’s what the AUSMIN Ministerial is all about. It’s why I think we started 27 years ago with then Minister now Ambassador Beazley in the lead, and it’s why we value so greatly the partnership we have every day, but especially at this annual gathering, where we can really take stock of where we are and the way forward.

So again, thank you for having us here.

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Video Remarks for International Education Week

Remarks

Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of State
Washington, DC
November 12, 2012

This year, nearly 300,000 Americans will study somewhere outside our border and nearly one million students will come to the United States for a world class education. These numbers tell an exciting story: even in an age when we can take a virtual trip to far-flung places just by clicking a mouse, we still want to see the world for ourselves and discover our common bonds firsthand.At the Department of State, we have always recognized the power of studying abroad to build bridges of understanding. That’s why we created the Fulbright Program in 1946. Today, it is stronger than ever with thousands of scholars traveling to and from over 150 countries.
For those of you already pursuing an education abroad, I am grateful. The ties of friendship and understanding you are building are the most effective forms of diplomacy — and they will help shape our common future.

To those students who have yet to study abroad: I urge you to stretch your boundaries and your imaginations and set off on your own adventure. Studying abroad can be one of the most rewarding and enlightening experiences of your life. It was for me, and will be for you. Thank you.

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Public Schedule for November 14, 2012

Public Schedule

Washington, DC
November 14, 2012

U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE
PUBLIC SCHEDULE
WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER 14, 2012

SECRETARY HILLARY RODHAM CLINTON

Secretary Clinton is on foreign travel to Perth, Australia. She is accompanied by Assistant Secretary Campbell, Spokesperson Nuland, Director Sullivan, and VADM Harry B. Harris, Jr., JCS. Please click here for more information.

8:45 a.m. LOCAL Secretary Clinton and Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta participate in a wreath-laying ceremony, in Perth, Australia.
(OPEN PRESS COVERAGE)

9:00 a.m. LOCAL Secretary Clinton and Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta deliver remarks at the AUSMIN Session I, in Perth, Australia.
(OPEN PRESS FOR OPENING REMARKS)

11:15 a.m. LOCAL Secretary Clinton and Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta participate in AUSMIN Session II, in Perth, Australia.
(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)

12:40 p.m. LOCAL Secretary Clinton and Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta participate in the AUSMIN working lunch, in Perth, Australia.
(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)

2:30 p.m. LOCAL Secretary Clinton holds a joint press availability with Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta, Australian Foreign Minister Robert Carr, and Australian Defense Minister Stephen Smith, in Perth, Australia.
(OPEN PRESS COVERAGE)

3:25 p.m. LOCAL Secretary Clinton and Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta attend a reception hosted by Western Australia Premier Colin Barnett, in Perth, Australia.
(OPEN PRESS COVERAGE)

4:15 p.m. LOCAL Secretary Clinton meets with the staff and families of Mission Australia, in Perth, Australia.
(POOLED PRESS COVERAGE)

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We are lucky to have a wealth of photos available from today in Perth Australia.  We see Mme. Secretary with Australian Minister for Foreign Affairs Bob Carr coming out of the Perth Airport, Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, US Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta and Australian Minister for Defense Stephen Smith.

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Remarks at the Launch of the Perth USAsia Centre

Remarks

Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of State

University of Western Australia

Perth, Australia

November 13, 2012


Thank you very much, Minister Evans and thanks also to Premier Barnett, hereafter known as Premier Sputnik – (laughter) – and Chancellor Chaney, our excellent two ambassadors – your alumnus, Kim Beazley, who served you so well in Washington, and our Ambassador, Jeff Bleich, who I think knows more Australians than most Australians do at this point – and Dr. Gill, thank you for your primary work at the U.S. Studies Centre.

This is a wonderful opportunity for me to be here at the University of Western Australia, a campus that looks remarkably like Stanford University, where my daughter attended, and to be in this fabulous art gallery that I will not get a chance perhaps to see, but which certainly piques my interest, and to be part of helping to launch this center that will shape strategic thinking in this dynamic region.

This is my first visit to Perth, but I heard much about it, not least of all from your ambassador, and Stephen Smith, your Defense Minister. And one story in particular stands out because from the time I was a little girl, Premier, I was fascinated by space exploration, and you and I are of a vintage where we can actually remember Sputnik going over. And I even wrote to NASA, our space administration, when I was about 13 and asked what I needed to do to become an astronaut myself. I unfortunately received an answer that said they weren’t taking women. Thankfully, that has changed in the years since.

But I was riveted by the space program, and certainly when my friend and a great American, John Glenn, became the first American to orbit the earth in 1962, it was so exciting to know that the people of Perth were literally with him and cheering him on, because, as you know so well, when John’s capsule passed overhead, every light in this city came on to signal support for his mission. And I will tell you that he never forgot the gesture of friendship from the city of light.

So for me to be here is a dream come true, and I suppose if one were to go up into space today and look down at Perth, you would see a city that is sitting on a very strategic part of our planet, Australia’s gateway to the vibrant trade and energy routes that connect the Indian Ocean to the Pacific, the oil, the natural gas, the iron ore produced here that flows through those trade routes to the entire world. It is no surprise that foreign investment is soaring, including more than $100 billion from the United States, because increasingly, these waters are at the heart of the global economy and a key focus of America’s expanding engagement in the region, what we sometimes call our pivot to Asia.

We never actually left Asia; we’ve always been here and been a presence here. We consider ourselves a Pacific power. But in the 21st century, it’s important that we make absolutely clear we are here to stay. And how we think about the Asia Pacific or the Indo Pacific region is going to be critical to our future as well as yours. We’ve made it a strategic priority to support India’s Look East policy and to encourage Delhi to play a larger role in Asian institutions and affairs. And it’s exciting to see the developments as the world’s largest democracy and a dynamic emerging economy begin to contribute more broadly to the region.

It’s also important to see the burgeoning relationship between Australia and India. And we support a Look West policy here in Australia, and certainly applaud the Australian Government’s strategic white paper on Asian policy. We would welcome joint Australia-Indian naval vessel exercises in the future, and we’re eager to work together in the Indian Ocean Rim Association for Regional Cooperation which Australia will chair in 2013 and which the United States has now joined as a dialogue partner.

I’m here for what are called the AUSMIN meetings. These are annual meetings that our Secretary of State and Secretary of Defense hold with our counterparts, Stephen Smith and Bob Carr. We will be reviewing implementation of the military agreements that Prime Minister Gillard and President Obama reached last November, including the rotational deployment of U.S. marines in Darwin and improving interoperability between our two navies. These steps will help both countries safeguard commerce and respond to natural disasters in the sea lanes connecting the Indian and Pacific Oceans.

So here at the University of Western Australia, you are at the leading edge of a crucial strategic shift linking two great oceans and strengthening an historic alliance. And I hope that the work that you do here will help to light the way just as Perth did for John Glenn 50 years ago, because when one stops to ponder it, our commercial, cultural, and personal relationships are really at the core of how we see and hope the world will develop in this century. Commercially, it’s already been set. We have deep and growing ties. Culturally, we also share the values that democracies share. We share the values of freedom and human rights, the dignity of every person. And personally, the connections between us only grow stronger.

So opening this center, and so well named the Perth USAsia Centre, will give an additional impetus to exploring how we can broaden and deepen our commercial, cultural, and personal relationships. It shouldn’t be any surprise that the United States is just as interested in Australia as you seem to be interested in us. We’re constantly following your sports. You seem to have a flood of entertainers who take the American market by storm. The kinds of connections that we have between us are ones that we highly value.

Now of course, we’re living in a region that is changing so quickly, and there are other countries whose interests and profiles are equally important for each of us. We look for ways to support the peaceful rise of China, to support China becoming a responsible stakeholder in the international community, and hope to see gradual but consistent opening up of a Chinese society and political system that will more closely give the Chinese people the opportunities that we in the United States and Australia are lucky to take for granted.

We have great relationships with our other friends and allies from Japan and South Korea, Thailand, and the Philippines. Of course, we both enjoy close and growing relations with Indonesia. So as we think about how this region will change, it’s important that Australia and the United States work together, look to see how we can contribute to the kind of region and world we hope to see for both of us to give our young people the opportunities that they so richly deserve.

So I thank you for your steadfast commitment to the U.S.-Australia partnership. It is a partnership that is of itself of importance to each of us, but is also a partnership that must remain at the core of the kind of engagement we have in the Asia Pacific, Indo Pacific regions for now and for the future.

Thank you all. (Applause.)

# # #

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Public Schedule for November 13, 2012

Public Schedule

Washington, DC
November 13, 2012

DEPARTMENT OF STATE
PUBLIC SCHEDULE

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2012

SECRETARY HILLARY RODHAM CLINTON

Secretary Clinton is on foreign travel to Perth, Australia. She is accompanied by Assistant Secretary Campbell, Spokesperson Nuland, Director Sullivan, and VADM Harry B. Harris, Jr., JCS. Please click here for more information.

4:30 p.m. LOCAL Secretary Clinton meets with Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard, in Perth, Australia.
(CAMERA SPRAY PRECEDING MEETING)

5:00 p.m. LOCAL Secretary Clinton meets with Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta, Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard, Australian Foreign Minister Robert Carr, and Australian Defense Minister Stephen Smith, in Perth, Australia.
(CAMERA SPRAY PRECEDING MEETING)

5:45 p.m. LOCAL Secretary Clinton meets with Australian Foreign Minister Robert Carr, in Perth, Australia.
(CAMERA SPRAY PRECEDING MEETING)

6:30 p.m. LOCAL Secretary Clinton attends the launch of the Perth USAsia Centre, in Perth, Australia.
(OPEN PRESS COVERAGE)

7:20 p.m. LOCAL Secretary Clinton attends a dinner in honor of AUSMIN hosted by Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard, in Perth, Australia.
(CAMERA SPRAY PRECEDING MEETING)

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United States Reelection to the Human Rights Council

Press Statement

Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of State
Washington, DC
November 12, 2012

The United States is pleased to have been elected by the United Nations General Assembly to a second term on the Human Rights Council. We thank the countries that voted for us in what was a highly competitive race among several qualified Western candidates that are all strong champions of human rights. We pledge to continue to work closely with the international community to address urgent and serious human rights concerns worldwide and to strengthen the Council. While much hard work remains to be done, especially ending the Council’s disproportionate and biased focus on Israel, we look forward to cooperating with other Council members to continue to address human rights concerns and to ensure that the Council fully realizes its promise.

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As you know, Mme. Secretary is traveling again next week when several House and Senate Committees called hearings on Benghazi.  For those who would like some details on who from DOS will attend  these hearings and what kind of information DOS is providing,  this snip from today’s press briefing is helpful.

TRANSCRIPT:

12:56 p.m. EST

MS. NULAND: All right, everybody. Happy Friday. Apologies for the delay. I think you know that the President is coming out with a statement very shortly, so we will do as much as we can until we hear that he’s going out. And then if we have things to clean up later, we can do it by phone or by email.

I want to just start by coming back to something that we mentioned either yesterday or the day before, which was that we would be participating in some Hill engagements next week on Benghazi. Just to give you the list there, on Tuesday, Under Secretary Kennedy and Assistant Secretary Boswell will brief members of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. Let me, sorry, go back and say that all of these are going to be closed sessions at the Hill’s request. Okay?

So first, on Tuesday, Under Secretary Kennedy and Assistant Secretary Boswell will brief members of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. On Wednesday, Under Secretary Kennedy and Assistant Secretary Boswell will brief members of the Senate Homeland Security and Government Affairs Committee. On Thursday morning, Under Secretary Kennedy will testify in a closed hearing before the House Permanent Select Intelligence Committee, and in the afternoon, he’ll testify before the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence. And on Friday morning, Under Secretary Kennedy will brief Chairmen and ranking members from the House. And again, all of those are in closed, classified session and at the Hill’s request. Let’s go to what’s on your minds.

QUESTION: I’m sorry, because I came in late. This is on Benghazi, right?

MS. NULAND: Correct.

QUESTION: All of these are in closed session at the Hill’s request?

MS. NULAND: Correct.

QUESTION: Do you have – did they say why these needed to be closed sessions, since they seem to be the source of all the documents that are leaking out in dribs and drabs?

MS. NULAND: Well, my understanding is that they wanted to have a conversation that incorporated classified information, including intelligence reporting.

QUESTION: Was there not classified information – did members of Congress not complain that classified information was released at the House Oversight Committee hearing that already had been held?

MS. NULAND: Matt, they’ve asked for closed hearings, closed briefings; that’s what we’re complying with.

QUESTION: The Secretary won’t appear before any of these committees?

MS. NULAND: The Secretary has not been asked to appear. They’ve asked for the individuals that are coming.

QUESTION: Would she be willing to fly back from Australia to appear?

MS. NULAND: Again, she has not been asked to appear. She was asked to appear at House Foreign Affairs next week, and we have written back to the Chairman to say that she’ll be on travel next week.

QUESTION: Are you aware that any Libyans will be called to the hearings to be talked to?

MS. NULAND: That sounds like a question for the Hill. I’m not aware of any panels other than the government panels.

QUESTION: But you have not been asked to facilitate any visas or anything like this for –

MS. NULAND: To my knowledge, no.

QUESTION: — maybe some Libyan officials?

MS. NULAND: No.

QUESTION: Toria, I’m sorry. I was running down here to get here. You may have said this: Is there any effort by the State Department to brief us on anything that might not be classified or any information, any progress that we could talk about next week that could come out of that?

MS. NULAND: I don’t anticipate that we’re going to have new information for the press before we have the ARB report, but let’s just see where we go there.

QUESTION: Do you know – do you anticipate that you’ll have new information for members of Congress?

MS. NULAND: Well, again, they’ve asked for classified hearings.

QUESTION: I understood that.

MS. NULAND: Some of them have been – there are a lot of folks who have been out of town during this – the period that the Congress was out of session. These hearings and briefings were requested by them now that they’re coming back into session, so I can’t speak to what different members know and how much different members have followed.

QUESTION: Yeah. But, I mean, do you expect Pat Kennedy to get up there and say anything substantially different than what he’s already said in public?

MS. NULAND: I can’t speak to what might be spoken about in a classified session. I would guess, Matt, that it’s also going to go to issues of intelligence, which we haven’t been briefing.

QUESTION: And Pat is the person that’s discussed issues of intelligence with them?

MS. NULAND: Again, Pat is the Under Secretary for Management. He can speak to the entire threat environment that we were working under, which included both unclassified and classified information.

Jill.

QUESTION: Toria, the Congress has asked for a lot of documents, obviously. Can you give us an update on even percentage-wise how much the State Department has collected, how you’re giving them these documents, or whether you’re waiting to get everything together, compiled, and then you will give it to them?

MS. NULAND: Well, thanks for that question, Jill. As you know, we’ve had requests for documents from a number of committees and from a number of staff and members. We have now made documents available to members of and staff on the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, the Senate Homeland Security and Government Affairs Committee, the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. We have told all of these requesting committees and their staff that they can see these documents as many times as they’d like to see them, for as long as they’d like to see them.

Our understanding, in fact, is that today Senator Corker of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee is reviewing documents at his request. So there have been some reports out there that we’ve been withholding information or that we’ve been limiting time. None of that is accurate. We’ve really done our utmost under the Secretary’s instructions to be fully compliant, transparent, and open with the Congress.

QUESTION: And do they come over here to view them?

MS. NULAND: No, we take them up there to their classified rooms.

QUESTION: And same question really, and then you – and they review them, and then you take them back and await the next request to see them?

MS. NULAND: Exactly. We arrange whatever requests are needed after they’ve had a chance to take a first look. And sometimes you have staff looking and then they want their members to see, subset, et cetera. So we’ve been facilitating all of that.

QUESTION: Just on these hearings, I’m wondering, given the fact that the refrain from the Hill or at least some members of the Hill, has been since this all began that the American people have the right to know, they deserve to know, was there any pushback from you guys when they said that we want to have these closed, we want to have these closed hearings rather than having open so that the American people could hear?

MS. NULAND: Well, as you know, relatively soon after the events, there was a set of open hearings. It’s obviously up to the Congress to ask for what it wants to have. In this case, they’ve asked for a set of closed briefings and hearings, so we’re going to comply with that.

QUESTION: Fair enough. I understand, but did – was there any suggestion from this building that, hey, if you really want the American people to know, maybe these shouldn’t be held behind closed doors?

MS. NULAND: I think we are in the posture of complying with what the Congress is asking for to help them in their review and to be supportive of their understanding of the situation as we go forward. As we’ve said, we have the ARB running. We also have whatever the FBI will come forward with. So there will be a time to be as open as we can be about the findings of the ARB with the public understanding the need to protect classified.

Please.

QUESTION: More clarification on the documents. Many – there have been many different requests and sometimes defined with different parameters. How did you collect those documents? Is it the full collection of documents that has been asked for? Is it this committee gets exactly what they ask for? Or if you can get into a little more depth in terms of which documents go where and how many, and whether this is it or whether there will be more.

MS. NULAND: Whether this is it, whether this – there’ll be more, I mean, that depends on whether the scope is broadened by committees. But in fact, whenever we have – particularly when we have classified documents requested, we have to do a full search. It involves both telegrams, intelligence reports, classified email, all of that kind of thing. And then we meet the requests that the different committees have, that the different staff members have. It’s not unusual for a first set of documents to be reviewed and then additional things to be requested. All of that has to be gone through. So it’s really specific to the requests as they come in.

QUESTION: Toria, there are currently Pentagon teams that are studying the situation in Libya to see how best an army, or a Libyan army, can be built. Is the State Department involved in any way in these processes, or are you involved in any way in sort of restructuring Libyan security?

MS. NULAND: Well, first of all, as you know, there is a UN-sponsored effort underway to be supportive to the Libyans. We also have made bilateral proposals. We’ve had teams, mil-mil teams and other teams, out there offering support in all of the various categories where we often help transitioning countries, whether it’s destruction of excess equipment, whether it’s nationalizing a military, whether it is training, all those kinds of things.

I think one of the issues, as the Libyans have been clear about, is that in this – in the context of their being an interim government first and then having a relatively protracted period of establishing the current transitional government, they have been loath to make some of the larger structural decisions that would enable us to provide more help. But we are hopeful that, now that they have a fully agreed upon transitional government, that we will be able to do more together to help them meet the security needs of the country and to provide stronger population security. And we’re open to doing all of that.

Please, Margaret.

QUESTION: Toria, when you’re talking about this process, going up to the Hill, delivering these documents, is there a chief Benghazi point person at State? Who’s doing this? It sounds extremely time consuming. So who is focused on this specifically?

MS. NULAND: Well, there are a whole bunch of folks who, obviously, have to look at things to ensure that we’ve been complete. But as has been clear by our public presentations, Under Secretary Kennedy has the line authority for ensuring that we’re fully compliant, and obviously, our Assistant Secretary for Legislative Affairs Dave Adams.

Andy.

QUESTION: You mentioned that Senator Corker is looking at some of this stuff today. Is he the only person up there who’s so far gotten hold of any of these documents, or have they gone to other offices as well? Can you tell how many?

MS. NULAND: I think I just did that about five minutes ago.

QUESTION: Did you? I’m sorry.

MS. NULAND: Maybe you slept through that piece, Andy. (Laughter.) I can do it again.

Members and staff of House Oversight and Government Reform, Senate Homeland Security and Government Affairs —

QUESTION: Okay. I got that list. So it’s actually gone up to all of these folks?

MS. NULAND: Correct. Correct. Yeah.

QUESTION: Okay. That was it. Right.

MS. NULAND: And again, with members in and out before they came back into session, we now have some members whose staff have seen documents who want to see them themselves, et cetera.

QUESTION: Okay.

MS. NULAND: Yeah. It’s the usual —

QUESTION: Victoria, will the Secretary be appearing before the House Foreign Affairs Committee next week?

MS. NULAND: I spoke to that about 15 minutes ago.

QUESTION: Oh, sorry. It’s just been posted on their website.

MS. NULAND: She is traveling next week, as you know. We just put out a message. So she will not appear, but we – I did give a list, at the top of this, of multiple briefings and hearings where Pat Kennedy will be appearing.

QUESTION: So just to make 100 percent sure, the Secretary is not going to interrupt her trip to come back and testify?

MS. NULAND: She has a commitment with the Secretary of Defense to the AUSMIN Ministerial. So —

QUESTION: And doesn’t she also have a commitment with the President to go to certain other countries in the region?

MS. NULAND: She does. Was that the – okay. Sounds like the President’s going to come out, so we can do the rest of this in gaggle format afterwards. Thanks.

(The briefing paused at 1:08 p.m. and resumed at 1:28 p.m.)

MS. NULAND: Here we go. Friday briefing, round two. All right, where were we, guys?

QUESTION: (Inaudible) fiscal cliff and the President’s plan to avert going over it. Are we done with Libya?

MS. NULAND: I think we are. Let’s keep moving on.

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