Meets with the Embassy Staff and Their Families
Remarks
Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of StateEmbassy RigaRiga, LatviaJune 28, 2012
Thank you so much, Ambassador. And oh my goodness, it’s wonderful to see you in these absolutely fabulous surroundings. I am so pleased to have this opportunity to express in person my gratitude for the work that you do every day. I want to start with Ambassador Garber. Thank you for the last three years and your leadership. You’re wrapping your time up, but it is certainly going to be a loss for many, because you’ve been such an active, engaged ambassador. And I thank you for that.
I’m told that this has been quite a challenge to move into such beautiful surroundings in the winter. (Laughter.) But I assume that we’ll get the insulation brought up to date. The Ambassador’s office, I understand, was pretty cold. But I appreciate everything you’re doing because this new Embassy compound is a real testament to the importance we place on our relationship. And so many of you are working in the security area, improving strategic cooperation with Latvia as our NATO ally. You’re working on trade and investment, and you’re working to strengthen those bonds between our people. Cultural and educational exchanges are increasing; outreach to Latvian schools is helping young people in this country learn more about our own country. And I don’t know how many American ambassadors have presented the equivalent of a Grammy award in their host country – (laughter) – but that certainly earns a place in the annals of people-to-people diplomacy.
Now, a strong embassy community makes all of that possible. And I know today marks a somber anniversary of the passing of DCM Bruce Rogers. I know how much he contributed to this Embassy family. And the way that you all supported each other, recovered from that terrible tragedy, and moved forward in his memory was very impressive.
I want to also thank not only those who serve here at the Embassy, but every one of you who supports those who serve. So I’m particularly pleased to see family members and young people here as well. And let me especially thank our locally employed staff, the Latvians, who keep this Embassy going year after year. Because as you know, ambassadors come and go, Secretaries come and go, but the Latvian staff are really the continuity. You are the brain center, or the memory center, of everything that we are doing. And I want you to know that back in Washington, President Obama and I and everybody in the foreign relations team appreciates greatly what you’re doing.
This is a critical relationship. This country has been totally free and independent for a relatively short period of time. It’s made an enormous amount of progress. It has integrated into the Euro-Atlantic community. It has just gone through a terrible economic crisis and all the adjustments and tough decisions that were required to not only survive it, but get back on their feet and keep moving forward. So we want to continually make clear how much we value Latvia, value our relationship, and we want to broaden and deepen it at every turn.
So I can come and make that message in a very public way, as I’ve tried to do today, but the day-to-day work is really up to each and every one of you. And I greatly appreciate all you are doing. And I look forward to hearing about the continuing good work that will come out of this great Embassy. Thank you all very much. (Applause.)
Archive for the ‘Foreign Service’ Category
Hillary Clinton With Families And Staff Of Embassy Riga
Posted in Foreign Policy, Foreign Service, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Clinton Images, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Secretary of State, Secretary of State Travel, Tea Party, U.S. Department of State, tagged Embassy Riga, Foreign Policy, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Latvia, Secretary of State, State Department, U.S. Department of State on June 28, 2012| 1 Comment »
Hillary Clinton with Families and Staff of Embassy Helsinki
Posted in Foreign Policy, Foreign Service, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Secretary of State, Secretary of State Travel, state department, U.S. Department of State, tagged Embassy Helsinki, Foreign Policy, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Secretary of State, State Department, U.S. Department of State on June 27, 2012| 1 Comment »

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton walks with the U.S. Ambassador to Finland, Bruce Oreck, Wednesday, June 27, 2012, before speaking during an event highlighting the Climate and Clean Air Coalition and Greening Diplomacy Initiatives at the U.S. Embassy in Helsinki, Finland. (AP Photo/Haraz N. Ghanbari, Pool)
Meeting With the Embassy Staff and Families
Remarks
Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of StateAmbassador’s ResidenceHelsinki, FinlandJune 27, 2012
Thank you for your patience and thank you so much for everything you’ve done to make this trip both successful and enjoyable. I wanted to come and personally thank you for what you do every single day. I want to begin by thanking the Ambassador and Cody for their leadership, not on just all of the traditional work that an ambassador must do but on the expansion of our relationship with Finland and in particular the emphasis on energy and sustainable development, the Innovation Center, so much that will really demonstrate and point dramatically what we are doing and what we are doing together with Finland. Bruce, you’ve really taken a relationship that was already strong and pumped it up, and now we’re flexing our bilateral (inaudible) unlike any time before. So I’m grateful to you.
But this is really a stellar Embassy team. You’ve worked to strengthen defense cooperation. You signed an important agreement today on expanding information sharing, particularly of classified information. You’re working together with our Finnish partners against terrorism and other common threats. We’re expanding our people-to-people ties and we’re promoting new trade and economic and investment relationships as well.
U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton speaks during an event highlighting the Climate and Clean Air Coalition and Greening Diplomacy Initiatives, Wednesday, June 27, 2012, at the U.S. Embassy in Helsinki, Finland. (AP Photo / Haraz N. Ghanbari, Pool)
Being on the forefront of green diplomacy, to me, is really significant. And I know it’s not always easy working on a construction site as all of the work gets done, but this will send a strong message of the American Government’s commitment to reducing emissions, operating more efficiently, lowering costs, moving Embassy Helsinki toward LEED platinum status, running the League of Green Embassies out of Helsinki, really setting a model and a lot of best practices.
I also want to say a special word of thanks to our local staff. Secretaries come and go, ambassadors come and go, but really the local staff provide the continuity. They provide the real memory bank about what has been the mission of this Embassy. And I am grateful to you as well.
And it’s wonderful to see so many of the young people here who are really a constant reminder of why we do the work we do to try to make the world better for all of you and to give you more opportunities to live up to your own potential in the years ahead.
Thanks so much for everything you’ve done to make this visit a success. Please know that I speak for our government and our country when I tell you how appreciative we are. Now, usually when I leave, people have a big sigh of relief. (Laughter.) I go on to be somebody else’s responsibility. And I understand that the Ambassador is going to have a barbeque tomorrow. (Laughter.) Well, if he wasn’t before, he is now. (Laughter.) And it’s only a well-deserved tribute to all of you and a celebration that you survived a Secretary of State visit. (Laughter.) Believe me, it’s an accomplishment.
###
Secretary Clinton With Staff and Families of Consulate General Rio de Janeiro
Posted in Foreign Policy, Foreign Service, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Secretary of State, Secretary of State Travel, state department, U.S. Department of State, tagged Consulate General Rio de Janeiro, Foreign Policy, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Secretary of State, State Department, U.S. Department of State on June 22, 2012| Leave a Comment »
Remarks at Meeting With Staff and Families of Consulate General Rio de Janeiro
Remarks
Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of StateWindsor Atlantica HotelRio de Janeiro, BrazilJune 22, 2012
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, I am delighted to be here, and thank you, Consul General. Thank you for your long service, thank you for your service here in Brazil and particularly in Rio, although, it’s not exactly a hardship, folks. (Laughter.) But we appreciate greatly your dedication, and I am delighted to be here to thank all of you because, as Consul General Hearne said, this is such a consequential relationship between the United States and Brazil. And there is unprecedented growth in every way between our two countries – between our governments, our private sectors, our civil societies, and most of all, between our people.
And in the past year, you’ve more than doubled personnel. This has become the second most visited post in the Western Hemisphere, and I think that will only grow in the future. And this team that is here and everyone who scattered around Rio taking care of all the rest of us has really been first rate. You’ve established an incredible record in the past year. The long hours that you’re putting in are really paying off, and you have really stepped up and handled high-level visits, including the very successful visit of President Obama and half the cabinet, which has been here as well. And I know that both planning and implementing these visits is not easy. So let me thank you for all the visits, including this one, for Rio+20, and all that are yet to come, because it will only continue at this pace.
I want to thank Ambassador Tom Shannon, who has done such a superb job leading our efforts here in Brazil. He’s actually holding those flowers because we – (laughter) – want to give them to the consulate so that you can display them, because I can’t take them back on the plane, and they are so, so beautiful.
I also want to really congratulate you on how you have handled the visa application surge. Tom was bragging on you last night as I drove in with him from the airport. You have processed more than twice the applications in the first seven months of this year than in the same period last year. That translates directly into more Brazilians visiting, studying in, and doing business in America. It means closer understanding and more jobs, greater opportunities for both our countries.
And I want to take a moment to recognize the local staff. How many Brazilians are here? Ah. Well, thank you so much, and thank you for what you do. You are the backbone of this mission. With all due respect to the ambassador, the consul general, and myself, we all come and go as do political officers, econ officers, and everyone else. But the local teams are the continuity. You are the brains and the heart of our ongoing mission. And I know that the pay freeze has made things tough for a number of you, especially with the rising cost of living in Rio, and I want you to know that we are aware of it, and we’re going to try to do what we can about it. I can’t make any promises, but I want you to know that I am very grateful and will do my best to try to provide some recognition of what you are doing.
It’s also nice to see families here, and I thank you for that. So in general, keep up the great work. First of all, it’s paying off, and secondly, it’s a real model relationship going forward. There isn’t any doubt to that, and we couldn’t do what we try to do out of Washington without all of you here. So thank you, and Godspeed as we continue this important work.
And let me start there, and I’ll shake some hands. Thank you all. (Applause.)
Hillary Clinton Meets with Families and Staff of Embassy Baku and Moves on to Turkey
Posted in Foreign Policy, Foreign Service, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Clinton Images, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Secretary of State, Secretary of State Travel, state department, U.S. Department of State, Uncategorized, tagged Azerbaijan, Embassy Baku, Foreign Policy, Georgia, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Secretary of State, State Department, Turkey, U.S. Department of State on June 6, 2012| Leave a Comment »
Mme. Secretary was in three countries in one day today. After departing Georgia, she spent a busy day in Azerbaijan, met with Embassy Baku families and staff, and then was wheels up for Istanbul where we see her deplaning. She is in Turkey for talks on Syria.
Meeting with Staff and Families of Embassy Baku
Remarks
Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of StateEmbassy BakuBaku, AzerbaijanJune 6, 2012
Well, it’s wonderful to see you again. How many of you were here when I was here two years ago? Oh, good. (Laughter.)
Well, it’s great to be back and to have this opportunity to thank you in person once again for the outstanding work you do every day on behalf of this very important relationship between our two countries, and I want to thank Adam Sterling for taking the reins in Baku once more. I know it’s been difficult not to have an ambassador for much of the last few years, but we are very lucky to have Adam’s leadership. And I’m hoping, hoping, hoping that we’ll put the ambassador-designee who has his hearing next week on a fast track, because I certainly heard firsthand from the government here how much they are hoping to get an ambassador and be able to go from there.
I’m glad to be back in this beautiful chancery garden, though I know it is a somewhat bittersweet reminder that Embassy Baku just lost a member of the Embassy family. I know how difficult it was for you when Myaka passed. He had been – was one of the very first employees when our Embassy opened in 1992, and he was one who saw our relationship grow over the last 20 years. He was, by all accounts, an exemplary colleague, and the tree that you planted in his memory will be a lasting memorial to his service.
During the past few years, you’ve done so much. You worked hard to gain openings for freedom of political expression and to support the people of Azerbaijan, to stand up for our values and our interests, to work on behalf of American businesses. I just came from the Gas & Oil Exhibition and saw a number of the American businesses represented there. I thanked the locally employed staff for your critical monitoring services during the past election. Our Foreign Service and local staff are empowering women and girls to become innovative business leaders. And I’m especially pleased to hear about your work helping girls at risk of early marriage develop practical skills, find jobs, and gain financial independence.
And when you launch programs that show farmers how to produce enough crops to feed their families and have enough left over to earn a decent living, you are truly expanding economic opportunity. Just as when you connect American businesses with Azerbaijan markets, you’re helping create American jobs. And when you talk to Azerbaijani students about opportunities to study in the United States, you are helping to build bridges between our people. So on these and so many other areas, I’m very grateful.
I spoke specifically to President Aliyev today about building a new, state-of-the-art chancery for you to work out of, and I reminded him that this discussion began when my husband was president. So – (laughter) – we need to speed it up, and we’re trying to do just that. I hope one day soon you can work together in one modern and secure location. In the meantime, I especially want to thank Gunnery Sergeant Lance Grubin and the Marine security guards for all the extra hours they put in to help keep you safe over the last year.
Now I know that you’re going to keep working long after I’m gone, and I know that secretaries, charges, ambassadors come and go, and our locally employed staff provide the memory bank for all that went before and are absolutely instrumental. And I know that many of you representing the United States Government in all our various incarnations here in this mission are going to be absolutely devoted to doing everything you can during your time here in Baku to broaden and deepen this significant relationship. I think we’re making real progress. There’s a long way to go, but it is one of the most strategically located countries if you look at any map, and the opportunities for us to work closely on everything from security to the economy to human rights to opportunity for women and others is just unlimited.
So please take a moment to think about how much you’ve already done, and I look forward to hearing from Adam and then from the new ambassador all that you are continuing to do. Thank you all very much. (Applause.)
Hillary Clinton With Staff and Families from Embassy Tbilisi
Posted in Foreign Policy, Foreign Service, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Secretary of State, Secretary of State Travel, state department, U.S. Department of State, tagged Embassy Tblisi, Foreign Policy, Georgia, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Secretary of State, State Department, U.S. Department of State on June 6, 2012| Leave a Comment »
Meeting With Embassy Staff and Families from Embassy Tbilisi
Remarks
Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of StateSheraton HotelBatumi, GeorgiaJune 6, 2012
AMBASSADOR BASS: So, ladies and gentlemen (inaudible). Before I introduce the Secretary, I just wanted to say thank you to all of you here in Batumi and also to all of our colleagues and families back in Tbilisi.
Madam Secretary, you mentioned yesterday that this is a relationship that gets things done, and together with our Georgian partners, the people you see here today in this room and via video teleconference in Tbilisi are the main reason that’s true.
So it gives me great pleasure and it’s a tremendous honor and privilege to introduce our Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton. (Applause.)SECRETARY CLINTON: Thank you. Well, I am so pleased to have a chance to thank you in person here in Batumi and by miracle of technology in Tbilisi. I want to start by thanking the Ambassador and Holly for not only this wonderful time we had here in Batumi, but also for their service.
And I’m very pleased that I have had a chance to see you, because I know how much work it took. I understand it took more than 30 vehicles to caravan all the people and equipment to Batumi, and I know you’ve got a 200-mile trip to get everything back home. But I am very grateful because this is such an important relationship, and we have invested 20 years in our diplomatic relations with Georgia.
We’ve worked hard every day to help Georgia move along its path of economic and democratic reform. I know that the progress can be hard-fought here to make sure that you are contributing to the remarkable story of Georgia over the last 20 years, but you really are making a difference. The work you’re doing, which has had an influence across the board, is really very prudent. We’re going to do everything we can to support you in that work, and we want to see Georgia fully integrated into the Euro-Atlantic community.
I have every confidence that this team can continue to deliver. We have the parliamentary elections upcoming and we want to work as hard as we can to ensure that – the level playing field that we all talk about to make a competitive environment, to ensure that the people of Georgia have a free, fair, and transparent election, and that it validates the progress that Georgia is making toward institutionalizing democracy.
I also want to recognize that we have 30 American agencies represented at our Embassy. And I’m grateful that we have this very diverse whole-of-government team. And I want to thank all the family members. And I see some of them here with us today in Batumi. Are there any Peace Corps volunteers here? Oh, good. (Laughter.) Peace Corps volunteers, well, thank you so much, because you are important ambassadors living and working with the Georgian people every single day, being living examples of American values and leadership.
And I particularly want to thank our locally employed staff, our Foreign Service nationals, our Georgians who have made such a difference. Secretaries of State come and go, even ambassadors come and go – (laughter) – and DCMs come and go, but the Georgians who are the backbone and memory bank of our team here are with us year after year. And I didn’t get a list, like I sometimes do, as to who’s been here longest, who’s been here since 20 years of diplomatic relations. But let me thank each and every one of the Georgians who is on this team.
I want to end by just saying here in Batumi and in Tbilisi, we really believe in Georgia’s future, and that’s because we really believe in the Georgian people and particularly the young people of Georgia. We have seen so many remarkable young people – young ministers and deputy ministers, young people working at the Public Service Hall in Batumi, young coast guard men and women serving their country. The young people of Georgia deserve the best possible future. And we want to be their partner as they continue to fulfill the aspirations of a modern economy embedded in strong democratic values that really does provide opportunities for every single child.
So I’m going to stay very focused on Georgia. I asked the Ambassador for updates as to how things are going, because I want to be here in 20 years – (laughter) – to celebrate with more progress on behalf of this remarkable country and the partnership and the friendship between our people. Thank you all very much. (Applause.)
# # #
Secretary Clinton’s Meet-and-Greet with Embassy Brasilia Families and Staff
Posted in Foreign Policy, Foreign Service, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Clinton Images, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Secretary of State, Secretary of State Travel, state department, U.S. Department of State, tagged Embassy Brasilia, Foreign Policy, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Secretary of State, State Department, U.S. Department of State on April 16, 2012| 5 Comments »
Meets With Embassy Brasilia Staff and Their Families
Remarks
Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of StateThomas A. Shannon, Jr.
Ambassador to BrazilU.S. Embassy BrasiliaBrasilia, BrazilApril 16, 2012
AMBASSADOR SHANNON: It’s a tremendous pleasure to have you all here today and to have with us the Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton. Madam Secretary, I would like to present to you the men, women, and children of the American Embassy in Brasilia and their families. This is an incredible group of people, Americans and Brazilians, committed to the relationship between the United States and Brazil, in recognizing that we are building a partnership for the 21st century. And as part of that partnership, we are building an essential component and an essential driver for making this partnership a reality.
So it’s with enormous pleasure that I present to you, the men and women of – and children of the American Embassy here in Brasilia, and Madam Secretary, the stage is yours.
SECRETARY CLINTON: Thank you so much, Tom. (Applause.) Well, it’s wonderful to see you all again, many of whom were here when I last stood in this spot, I think, in 2009?
AMBASSADOR SHANNON: 2010.
SECRETARY CLINTON: 2010. So let me begin by expressing my delight to be able to come here and thank you in person for everything you do on behalf of this absolutely essential relationship. I think it’s fair to say that our relationship has changed quite a bit since Ambassador Shannon served here as a special assistant to Ambassador Melton in 1989. But clearly, that experience was good training because Tom has become a great ambassador and leader of an absolutely fabulous team consisting of all of you.
I know that you have a bunch of Washington visitors coming, and Secretary Salazar and I are here today, but I want to let you know this is a time when our relationship is really poised to get to the next level. The meeting between President Dilma Rousseff and President Obama last Monday, just a week ago, was an extraordinarily constructive one. And you have made a lot of progress in advancing our relationship. We’re not only working on people-to-people ties and economic ties, but we are becoming strategic and political partners.
Let me just mention two quick examples. When President Rousseff announced a program to send a hundred thousand Brazilian students overseas to study science and technology, you leapt into action and made sure that the United States was the first country to open our doors. So now we have nearly 700 young Brazilian students already beginning their studies in the United States. Hundreds more will join them in the fall, and I think that other than the fact that they had to eat Tom Shannon’s and DCM Chapman’s hamburgers at the – (laughter) – Burgers Without Borders event, they’re still excited about – (laughter) – coming to our country. And we couldn’t be doing this without your leadership.
And in the past two years, you’ve expanded consular operations at lightning speed. So as a result, you’ve already handled more visa applications so far this fiscal year than you did in all of 2010. And that spike in travel from Brazil has helped to create more than 8,000 new American jobs. It also has helped a lot to forge personal ties. And I know a lot of the changes are challenging for you – you’re bringing out a lot of new staff members, I think you’ve had a bit of a parking problem here. (Laughter.) But you’re making progress and it’s noticeable, certainly to those of us in Washington.
And I’m so pleased to see family members here, particularly the young ambassadors who are with us, because they also are serving our country and representing the United States in everything that they do. And a special word of thanks to our locally employed staff for the backbone of this Embassy, especially as the mission expands so quickly. I thank all of our locally employed staff. You’ve been dedicated to this mission, some of you for many years, and I know that a number of you have even volunteered for assignments in Afghanistan and Iraq.
So please know that we in Washington appreciate what you are doing here in Brasilia and across the country in our consulates, that we value your work very much and we’re seeing the results every single day because of a stronger, more dynamic relationship between two such extraordinary democracies as the United States and Brazil. Thank you all very much. (Applause.)
Secretary Clinton’s Meeting with Staff and Families of Embassy Riyadh
Posted in Foreign Policy, Foreign Service, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Clinton Images, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Secretary of State, Secretary of State Travel, state department, U.S. Department of State, tagged Embassy Riyadh, Foreign Policy, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Saudi Arabia, Secretary of State, State Department, U.S. Department of State on March 31, 2012| 2 Comments »
Meeting With Embassy Staff and Their Families
Remarks
Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of StateRitz Carlton HotelRiyadh, Saudi ArabiaMarch 31, 2012
AMBASSADOR SMITH: Secretary Clinton, this is our family, Mission Saudi Arabia. We’ve got 34 countries represented. And I will tell you that they’ve done things that, three years ago, none of us would have thought possible. Ladies and gentlemen, your Secretary of State, Hillary Rodham Clinton. (Applause.)
SECRETARY CLINTON: Good morning.
AUDIENCE: Good morning.
SECRETARY CLINTON: It is absolutely wonderful to see all of you here this morning and giving me the opportunity to say thank you. Thanks first to Ambassador Smith and to Mrs. Smith. Thanks both to Jim and Janet for their energy and enthusiasm and leadership of this really important mission. It’s exciting to find so many more ways of bringing about the kinds of connections between our countries and the people of our countries that are really at the core of this strong, enduring relationship. And I am so pleased to see families in the audience. I know that that hasn’t been the case for a long time. After years of the one-tour unaccompanied assignments, it’s really progress to see families here, and I’m thrilled that I get to take a look at the children as well as everyone else who is part of this Embassy family.
With your help, the United States and the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia are working together to promote peace, prosperity, and stability in the region and around the world. We’re building new bridges of understanding and cooperation between Americans and Saudis at all levels. You, because of your work, have reduced visa wait times for over – from over three months to less than two weeks, even as the number of applications continues to grow. That makes it easier for businesses to do business with each other, to expand trade between our countries. It’s easier for students to travel. It’s easier in the promotion of the kind of mutual respect that we value highly between our two peoples. And I’m delighted that the number of Saudi students studying in the United States is at an all-time high. So thank you for all the work that you did to make that possible.
I also see the difference that you are making in the trade delegations that you arrange that are traveling to the United States, looking to invest in power companies, electronics, and other industries. And they’re also bringing new investments back to Saudi Arabia, expanding our bilateral investments now by nearly 30 percent since 2009. And I know that the Ambassador is particularly proud that he personally has led 15 trade delegations to the United States, helping the Obama Administration meet the ambitious goal of doubling U.S. exports by 2015.
But probably most importantly are those relationships that you’re forming with activists, with women, with human rights campaigners, youth leaders, students, scholars, so much more. I had a wonderful meeting at the Ambassador’s Residence with some very active women who are involved in all aspects of the kingdom’s social and economic activity. Now I know between sandstorms and social norms, it may be difficult to get around from time to time, but when you do, you talk with students on a one-on-one basis, and it’s really important because that’s what lasts. It’s those personal connections, and I thank you for everything you’re doing. And I know it’s only possible through hard work and sacrifice. Many of you work long days. I know that the heat in the summer and the security challenges year-round often make this challenging, but thank you, because you are making a difference, and I’ve just highlighted a few of the ways that that is happening.
And now, let me say a special word of thanks to our locally employed staff. I want to thank each and every one of you for being part of this incredibly important relationship, working with our Embassy staff. I want to thank those of you who come from other countries to be part of this team. Many of you are away from your families and your homes, and what you’re doing is invaluable. So thank you again. I don’t get to come as often as I would like. There are a lot of countries in the world and I try to get around as much as I can, but I’m always pleased when I do, because I know that this is one of the relationships that is really going to determine the quality of life and the future potential for people not only in our two countries, but people everywhere.
Thank you all very, very much. (Applause.)
Video: Hillary Clinton Opens 2nd Global Chiefs of Mission Convocation
Posted in Foreign Policy, Foreign Service, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Secretary of State, state department, U.S. Department of State, Uncategorized, tagged Foreign Policy, Foreign Service, Global Chiefs of Mission Conference, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Secretary of State, State Department, U.S. Department of State on March 13, 2012| 39 Comments »
One of the many important innovations Mme. Secretary has brought to the State Department is the Global Chiefs Of Mission Conference. She inaugurated it last year, and today, for the second time in our history, all of our ambassadors gathered back home at the State Department to be greeted by the SOS and be updated on policy and QDDR issues. Mme. Secretary positively glows. Who wouldn’t want to come home to see this boss?
Vodpod videos no longer available.
Remarks at the Opening Session of the Global Chiefs of Mission Conference
Remarks
Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of StateDean Acheson AuditoriumWashington, DCMarch 13, 2012
SECRETARY CLINTON:Thank you, Cheryl. Thank you all. So welcome, and welcome home. It is a great pleasure for me to start this conference, our second-ever Global Chiefs of Mission Conference. Most of the time I see any of you, I am causing you more work and maybe more headaches as I’m either on the end of a phone or actually in your country. And this time, I get to host. And we’ve planned, as Cheryl said, a full day of events. We could’ve filled a week, but we know how busy each and every one of you happen to be, so we couldn’t take that much time away from what you’re doing on behalf of our country.I want to especially thank again the team that put this together and also Cheryl Mills, who has been both chief of staff and counselor and all-around troubleshooter and problem solver for the last three plus years, for which I am very grateful.
And it’s almost hard to imagine how much has happened in the last year, since we last met. The world has changed very quickly under our feet and before our eyes. The proof is in this room. We have one more person than we did last year, our ambassador to the newest country, South Sudan. When we hold this conference in the future, I hope we can count on an ambassador to Burma among our ranks, because I know that we have no status quo in the world today. It is a dynamic, challenging environment, and each of you is called on to play an increasingly complicated role. Several of you have had to face not only uncertainty, but danger and even physical threats over this past year.
So I really want to extend my thanks to all of you. You truly are the finest colleagues I’ve ever had the pleasure of working with. I can’t imagine any Secretary of State ever having a better team than all of you, and I am deeply grateful for your service and your support.
Well, over the last three years, we have ended one war, and we’ve begun to wind down another. We are affirming our place as a Pacific power, in case anyone ever doubted. We are strengthening our alliance with our European and NATO partners. We are elevating the role of economics and development within our diplomacy to help create jobs here at home and to advance our strategic interest around the world. And of course, we are reaching beyond governments to engage directly with people. And many of you have been so creative and smart about doing that: conferences, seminars, travel, Twitter, Facebook. I mean, it’s really been remarkable to see the accelerated outreach that I monitor back here in Washington.
And we’re doing this amidst great volatility, but also great possibility. As we watch these transformations, first and foremost in the Arab world, but not exclusively there, we’re watching new powers rise, the redrawing of the strategic map. It brings new opportunities for partnership as well as growing economic competition and yes, new threats. Al-Qaida is weakened, but still dangerous, and we have to be literally on our toes all the time.
I believe that in this fast changing world, American leadership is even more important. Only America has the reach, resources, and relationships to anchor a more peaceful and prosperous world. And as leaders within our country’s foreign policy here at the State Department and USAID, our goal must be to bolster America’s position, not just for the rest of this year, but for decades to come.
Last year, I spoke about our institutional efforts to do so, with the first-ever Quadrennial Diplomacy and Development Review that you will hear more about. Now we have implemented many of those recommendations to transform diplomacy and development efforts to better position us to deal with the world we face today and tomorrow. This includes adapting to new foreign policy imperatives, such as cyber security and the full range of cyber issues, standing up the first-ever bureau dedicated solely to energy issues and all that it entails, creating a new family of civilian security bureaus so we can better address the full range of inter-related issues that fuel conflict and instability, and of course, we have a lot of work still ahead of us to try to consolidate the progress we’ve already made and to build on it.
I want to highlight some of the priority policy areas that we are working on to sustain and deepen our leadership. I presented these same themes to Congress a few weeks ago with our budget request. As you know, I’ve worked very hard to make the case to Congress and the American public. And given the difficulties of our budget environment, I am grateful for the support that the President and the Administration and the Congress have given us. They seem to recognize that our efforts to elevate diplomacy and development alongside defense in pursuit of smart power is exactly what we need to be doing in this period of time.
First, as I mentioned to Congress, we are ending a decade of armed conflict. But when all the troops come home, thousands of State Department and USAID employees – American and local staff – will still be there on the frontlines in Iraq, Afghanistan, and Pakistan. They will be working under very difficult conditions to advance our vital interests through civilian power. Tom Nides, our extraordinary Deputy for Resources and Management, is leading our American efforts to help Iraq become a stable, sovereign, democratic partner, and he could not have had a better partner than Jim Jeffrey. I’m grateful to all who have been on the team regarding Iraq because it has been a very big challenge for us to get our arms around.
A critical element of our path forward in Afghanistan will be the success of the Afghans in securing and leading their country for themselves. Ryan Crocker has brought his tremendous lifetime experience to this really difficult job at this moment. They will need help. And I’ve asked many of you, as a key element of President Obama’s policy, to press the governments to which you are accredited to pledge substantial financial support to the Afghan security forces for the period beyond 2014.
I’m also counting on your personal vigorous engagement regarding Pakistan. Cameron Munter, and before him, Anne Patterson, have had a very challenging assignment. There are multiple overlapping worlds in Pakistan and we have to deal with all of them simultaneously. But the country is vital to our counterterrorism, economic stability, and regional cooperation goals for the region. And we will continue to engage where we even have legitimate concerns and disagreements.
In these frontline states and in all countries facing instability, we put a special focus on protecting universal human rights, increasing political participation, and enforcing the rule of law. It also puts an extra burden on us to live our values and to, both on the military and civilian side, demonstrate who we are as a people. Because when people feel safe and empowered to pursue their legitimate aspirations, they are more likely to reject extremism and to invest in their own societies. So human rights and global security are deeply and directly linked. We cannot sacrifice one without damaging both. And we have been working to use our position on the UN Human Rights Council to continue standing up for universal human rights on the international scene.
Now I recognize that sustainable progress on human rights and democracy can only happen from within. But we do have an obligation to help amplify those voices of those advocating for change in their own societies, including nongovernmental human rights and democracy activists. In recent years, a number of governments have taken actions aimed at disempowering these groups. And today in the Middle East and North Africa and elsewhere, governments are challenging the propriety of American support for civil society organizations.
In response to these charges, I need each of you – and especially those of you operating in restrictive environments – to communicate our commitment to working with and supporting individuals and groups that represent not only what we believe are our values, but universal values, freedoms, and human rights. We need to be clear that this support is a fundamental part of our global human rights policy that is aimed at supporting the building blocks of sustainable democracy. Now I do think we have to be smart about how we do it, and perhaps we can talk more about that in the town hall, because a lot of the countries have legitimate questions and particularly a lot of the transitioning new democracies. So I don’t think we can assume anything. We need to be very humble in making our case, and to do so effectively and consistently.
Now for much of the past decade, we have focused by necessity on places where threats and instability are greatest. In the decade ahead, we must also be just as focused on the areas of our greatest opportunities. I think that happens to be the rest of the world. But our second priority is our relationship with the Asia-Pacific region. And when we talk about Asia Pacific, we are talking about from the Indian subcontinent to the Americas. We want to expand the aperture of what this means to the United States. So we are helping lead a government-wide effort to build a new network of relationships and institutions that spans the Pacific to complement the success of our durable Atlantic partnership. We are strengthening our alliances in Asia, launching new strategic dialogues and economic initiatives, creating and joining important multilateral institutions to underscore that America is and will remain a Pacific power.
In the coming century, no region will be more consequential to America’s future. This is not just a concern for EAP. It’s also for WHA and SCA. But it’s really for all of us, because the security and economic interests will affect everything we do everywhere. So we have to engage you in our efforts. And we’ve reached out to, for example, EUR to help us with an Asia dialogue with the EU. We’re working hard with our friends in Latin America to expand their reach to Asia, but to do so in a way that helps themselves and not just creates a market for natural resources.
We should engage everyone as partners to work to establish a rules-based order for coming years. And that is particularly true, but again, not exclusively in the Pacific. Our relationships with Latin America and all the countries of our hemisphere are vital in their own right, and I’m looking forward to participating in the Summit of the Americas in a few weeks and discussing how we will continue strengthening our ties close to home. In talking with counterparts in the Middle East and North Africa, we often use examples from Latin America – transitioning from military dictatorships, autocratic regimes, to the most vibrant democratic region in the world right now.
With such dynamic growth happening on both sides of the Pacific, there are great opportunities and natural affinities for our countries to cooperate, an idea we have proven with free trade agreements that have boosted economic growth from the Canadian north to the Straits of Magellan. Of course, as we invest in these new opportunities in Asia, we must also engage with the most consequential development of the past year: the wave of change sweeping the Arab world. Throughout the region, our missions have responded in remarkable, unprecedented ways, but then again, we’ve had to. It couldn’t be business as usual from Morocco all the way to Yemen, and everyone serving there has had to really work and think outside the box. So our third priority area is helping those countries complete their transitions to democracy. And this will not be easy, and it certainly will not happen overnight.
I often tell leaders in this region that the United States has been working on our democracy for more than 235 years. We’re still in the process of trying to perfect it. But we have to make steady progress. That’s not an excuse for either standing still or going backwards. Engaging with Islamist parties is going to be a new but necessary effort on the part of the United States, which we are undertaking at every level.
Now obviously, not all countries in the region are embracing the mantle of reform. We continue to apply pressure on Assad and his regime in Syria to stop the brutality, and we work with the opposition and like-minded countries to try to help them be in a position to be part of a successful political transition.
So as the region transforms, so must our engagement. We must be ready to respond to an unanticipated flood of needs in a way that reflects our leadership. As people and governments make meaningful commitments to reform, we will support them in tangible ways. Whether that means advising on how to build a vibrant civil society, ensuring the full participation of women, providing loan guarantees, or promoting educational opportunities, we have to be active across the board. We need to provide the right assistance, at the right moment, to the right people. And this is also true in sub-Saharan Africa and Southeast Asia as well.
Promoting democracy and accountable government that delivers results for people should be at the heart of our agenda in every part of the world. In this effort, and in each of the other areas I’ve discussed, Europe remains our partner of first resort. From the frontlines in Afghanistan to the table at the UN Security Council, our alliances and friendships with our European friends and with the institutions that they have built have never wavered. And we look to Europe as we take on these global challenges in the 21st century, just as much as we did in the 20th.
And that brings me to our fourth priority: economic statecraft. I sent a cable on this subject to every embassy and consulate last October, but I want to reinforce in person how important our actions at the crossroads of economics and diplomacy are. At every turn, we should be asking ourselves, how can we use diplomacy and development to strengthen our country? How can we leverage our economic strength to promote our diplomatic goals? How do we build a global economic system that is open, free, transparent, and fair?
Now these are not new questions. But we have to bring them to the forefront of our discussions. I think for too long, Treasury did economics, the Commerce Department and USTR, Export-Import, OPIC, but we have the global presence. We are everywhere. We have a thousand economic officers. We have to be right there, at the point of the spear, looking for these opportunities, working with and sometimes advising our colleagues in government about the best way to cut through all of the barriers.
Several weeks ago, we hosted a unique, unprecedented event. We partnered with the American Chamber of Commerce and invited chambers from across the world, along with business leaders. I told them we’ve made jobs diplomacy a priority mission here at the State Department. And I want to put that phrase jobs diplomacy in front of you as well. So we do need to do more to help American companies expand their business overseas and to promote foreign investment here at home. Where we see corruption, red tape, favoritism, distorted currencies, or intellectual property theft that disadvantages American companies, we must push back, because those practices create unfair barriers to competition and slow our economic recovery.
It was fascinating at the conference, because a lot of the businesses, from very large to quite small but agile exporting businesses said, “You know, I always used to think there was really no role for the government. I was out there. I was competing. It was a free market system. I didn’t need your embassy or your State Department to help me. And now, I look around and I see every other country, from our European friends to our Asian ones, who have a full partner with their government. And we need your help.”
So, what we’re trying to do is to enhance our consular efforts, speed up the visa process – more people are visiting and the more people who visit, the more people here at home actually work. We’re using development dollars to improve the quality of life for millions of people in order to create future trading partners and new markets.
Now oftentimes, people who have a very clear view about what diplomacy and development are for find this kind of jobs diplomacy pitch a little bit jarring because it’s not exactly what either diplomacy or development has been conceived of, but it’s always gone on and it always will go on. We just have to be more intentional and effective in delivering.
My fifth point has to do with continuing to elevate development. It’s an indispensible pillar of our national security strategy. And effective development requires indigenous political will, responsive, accountable and transparent governance, economic frameworks that create opportunities. And to achieve that, we need to broaden our traditional development assistance tools and focus on mobilizing reform through influence and engagement that draws on the strengths and resources of all relevant government agencies.
Diplomacy is central to that, and part of the work we did through the QDDR to help you as the chief of mission truly become the chief executive of the U.S. Government presence in your countries was to ask you to really support the development side of the ledger as well. I will soon be sending you detailed guidance that covers modernizing our diplomacy to better support development. And as we pursue our signature initiatives – the Global Health Initiative, Feed the Future – we are transforming the way we do development. Now sometimes, it’s a little frustrating because we emphasize country ownership. And a lot of people who have done development over the years, they go into a country and they say, well, here’s what you need, and now countries are saying, no, here’s what we want. And so negotiating that is really a diplomatic effort that requires your participation.
Our Global Health Initiative will reach 6 million people with lifesaving HIV/AIDS treatment by 2013, creating the foundation for an AIDS-free generation. And our Feed the Future Initiative is driving agricultural growth and improving nutrition. So we’re increasing our capacity within countries so they can take on more responsibility. We have to move for – towards sustainability. We’ve had so much rhetoric about that and now we have to translate it into an active agenda. It just doesn’t work anymore that when we go into a country with our aid, the government in the country basically withdraws from that area and uses the money that they were using, for example, on health, to do something else.
So we have to be much more engaged at all levels of the government. It’s not just the ministers of development. It’s the finance ministers, the foreign ministers, and everyone else. So I think where we are looking to move is to partner with governments, local groups, and the private sector – not substitute for them – and then to deliver measurable results. And Dr. Raj Shah has made creating a results-oriented AID his highest priority.
And finally, of course, I couldn’t speak to this group without stressing the global focus that we have on advancing the status of women and girls. You know the arguments. I’ve set them forth in a series of speeches, particularly the APEC speech in San Francisco last fall, making the case that the full participation of women in every economy, including our own – namely knocking down the barriers to participation, whether they be education or access to credit or the right to inherit – would raise the GDP of every country in the world. Now, some would only go up a little bit, like Finland, but some could go up a very long way. And it would be a tremendous step forward for prosperity.
And we also are stressing women’s unique contributions to making and keeping peace. We worked hard with the Defense Department and the White House on the first-ever National Action Plan as to how we could involve women more effectively, because most peace treaties fail, they don’t have buy-in, they don’t have support from the populace, and where – it’s just coincidental, perhaps, but there is a correlation where women have been involved, like Liberia, the chances of it lasting are at least greater than not.
So this week, I am issuing the first-ever Secretarial policy directive on promoting gender equality. It contains specific steps to ensure that we integrate women and promote gender equality in every aspect of our work – in our policy development, our strategic planning, our budgeting and programming, our monitoring and evaluation, our management and training practices.
Women are often the canary in the coal mine. Well, when it comes to transitioning to democracy or sustaining democracy, we need to pay attention to whether they’re thriving or not, because that’s one of the earliest indicators as to whether any society is going to sustain its democratic progress. And I’m counting on your leadership as chiefs of mission to implement this guidance around the world.
Now I should also note that there will be changes in our ambassadorial corps, both this summer and following the November elections, as is customary at the end of a presidential term. The foreign policy of the United States, however, does not stop for elections. It requires consistent direction and management, so it is important that our ambassadors work to remain at their posts until either the Senate has confirmed a replacement or specific departure instructions are given.
As I’ve traveled in so many countries over the last five, six months, a number of you have told me that your time will be up in the spring or in the summer. But we don’t know if we will get people confirmed in the current political climate. We don’t know who will or won’t get confirmed in some last-minute deal that might be worked out before the Congress basically goes out for elections. So we very much encourage you, in so far as possible, to stay. We need you, we look to you, and there is no country in the world that can do without you.
Now, obviously, there are many other important issues that I haven’t touched on. We can, I’m sure, look forward to hearing about those from the speakers today but also at the town hall later this afternoon.
The simple truth is we have a lot to do, but we have a great team, a great team out in the field and a great team here in Washington. I look forward to seeing you at lunch and then later this afternoon, along with my colleagues, to take your questions.
But now I have the great privilege to introduce Deputy Secretary Bill Burns. I kind of think of Bill as a one-person brain trust when it comes to policy and diplomacy. He was here as Under Secretary, the P man, when I arrived, and it didn’t take me longer than a nanosecond to know that I wanted him by my side as we continued to move forward in this uncertain but exciting time. So please join me in welcoming Bill Burns. (Applause.)
Hillary Clinton at the Ground-Breaking for the New Embassy in Rabat
Posted in Foreign Policy, Foreign Service, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Secretary of State, Secretary of State Travel, state department, U.S. Department of State, tagged Embassy Rabat, Foreign Policy, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Morocco, Rabat, Secretary of State, State Department, U.S. Department of State on February 26, 2012| 4 Comments »

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton (C) participates in a groundbreaking ceremony for the new U.S. Embassy in Rabat, February 26, 2012. REUTERS/Jason Reed (MOROCCO - Tags: POLITICS)
Remarks at New Embassy Compound Ground Breaking Ceremony
Remarks
Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of StateRabat, MoroccoFebruary 26, 2012
AMBASSADOR KAPLAN: (In progress) One important additional feature: She is a woman who is focused. She’s focused on whatever the problem is or whatever the relationship is that she has to deal with at that moment. She’s one of the most powerful women of the world, but she’s very much a woman of the people. And I’ll tell you one last thing: I was watching and listening to her very carefully today. We had several different meetings, several different discussions, several different press conferences, and the tone was there – the tone of friendship between this Secretary of State and the country of Morocco. She can change the words, she can change the text, but she can’t change the tone. The tone comes through clearly and effectively. You’re about to hear from one of Morocco’s great friends, Secretary Clinton. (Applause.)
I’m sorry. We’re now going to hear – (laughter) – the program got – we are going to hear next from the foreign minister. And I don’t pay attention because I skipped you before. (Laughter.) The foreign minister is a renaissance man. He’s a man who is a psychiatrist, he’s a man who’s a doctor, he’s a man who understands politics, and now he joins the rest of us in the world of diplomacy. It’s not easy, but you’re welcome to join us, and we’re welcome to have you with us. So it is with great pleasure that I introduce the foreign minister of the country of Morocco. (Applause.)
FOREIGN MINISTER OTHMANI: (In Arabic.) (Applause.)
AMBASSADOR KAPLAN: The mayor of Rabat is a distinguished gentleman who has served as the finance minister of this country. He has been a member of parliament on several occasions. And he is a mayor of a very difficult city to govern, because after all, this is the city of government, and there are representatives from all over the world. We are here today because of the mayor’s cooperation and the willingness of his staff to help us through the extraordinary bureaucratic issues that are arising every time you have to build a building this complex in the middle of the city.
To the members of our Embassy, he is our hero, and I’m delighted to welcome him today. (Applause.)
MAYOR OUALALOU: (In Arabic.)
AMBASSADOR KAPLAN: Now, as I was saying about Secretary Clinton – (laughter) – she’s a remarkable woman, you know. Twelve years as the first lady of the State of Arkansas, eight years as the first lady of America, eight years as a senator from our most powerful state, the State of New York, and now the Secretary of State. I only regret, because I know so many of you, that there isn’t time for her to speak to each one of you, because I know her engaging quality and I know how it is when she talks to people and she focuses on what they are saying. If that isn’t possible to do, but it’s wonderful to have her on this day and to tell you she’s one of the great Americans and she’s really one of the great people of the world. So once again, I introduce you to the Secretary of State. (Applause.)
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, it’s wonderful being introduced by a friend and an ambassador and someone who represents our country so well here in Morocco. And I want to thank not only the ambassador but his wonderful wife, Sylvia, as well, for their tireless work on behalf of the relationship between the United States and Morocco.
I want to begin by thanking the foreign minister for the great hospitality and warm welcome he extended to me and to my delegation. I am so delighted at the prospect of working closely with him and the new government as we take our relationship to a new level of cooperation and partnership. And I look forward to welcoming you, Foreign Minister, to Washington, where we can continue our dialogue. Thank you, sir, very much.
I also wish to thank the mayor for hosting us in his beautiful city. I think there is not a city in Morocco that isn’t beautiful. Morocco is blessed by beautiful cities, and here today, on an absolute perfect day, which I’m sure the mayor helped to order up for us, we are, once again, having a chance to thank you for hosting us in this beautiful city.
And I wish to recognize all of the people here on the stage with me. I thank them for their tireless work on behalf of humanity, on women, on the law, on the rule of law, on a better Morocco, the work that is done for our embassies around the world, and *Sabi Abdul Baki*, thank you for serving not only in the United States Embassy for 40 years, but serving as a bridge between the Moroccan and the American people. We are deeply grateful.
So to all of you, thank you for joining us on this auspicious occasion. You represent many voices that will help determine Morocco’s future. And I’m looking forward not only to the partnership with the government but collaboration with many parts of Moroccan society for years to come.
As has already been said, our relationship stretches back more than two centuries. Sultan Mohammad III became the first world leader to recognize America’s independence. We entered into a treaty of friendship that has stood the test of time. And in 1820, Morocco presented the United States with a gift, a legation building in Tangier, our very first diplomatic property anywhere in the world. I don’t know how far along we would have made it without Moroccan help, so you’ve been thanked before, but let me thank you again. This is our only national landmark outside our own borders, so the connection between Morocco and the United States is deep and personal.
Now, of course, the way we conduct foreign policy has changed a great deal since those days, and I think it’s fair to say the challenges we face are far more complex, but the opportunities are greater, and the world seems smaller. But that legation building in Tangier stands as a testament to the continuity of our relationship. It has lasted through wars and upheaval. It has remained steadfast in times of crisis. Today, it is a museum and a cultural center that focuses on the rich history between our countries. But what that building in Tangiers preserves and symbolizes is the past. What we’re doing here today represents the future. And we are committed to renewing, in a profound way, our commitment in this new chapter of our long relationship.
I have talked often about how Morocco once again is leading the way, not just here in Morocco, where I have not had the privilege of being for two years, but throughout the Maghreb and the Middle East and beyond. The constitutional referendum last summer and November’s elections signaled an acceleration of reforms that began under his Majesty King Mohammad VI more than a decade ago. And the Moroccan Government is now moving forward with the momentum necessary to deliver on the promise of democratic reform.
Now, we understand, as well as any country in the world, having survived to be the oldest democracy in the world, that this is a long journey that you are taking together. But I want you to know, Minister and friends all, that the United States will stand with you on that journey. We’ve had a lot of our own ups and downs over 235 years, so we are not surprised when it is difficult to reach political compromise in the give and take of a parliament. We are not surprised when there has to be a lot of hard work done to translate into reality the promises of politics. So we will be there as you make your own way forward.
We are especially focused on efforts that will create economic opportunity and greater prosperity for all Moroccans. We are promoting entrepreneurship, because new businesses mean more jobs, faster growth, and greater innovation. We are spearheading new initiatives to bring together government officials, leaders from the private sector, and young entrepreneurs who have the vision and drive to succeed in the 21st century global economy.
Last fall, we brought a group of American business leaders here and to neighboring countries to meet aspiring young innovators, to cultivate ideas, and to share promising ideas as well. And I want to acknowledge our friends on the Moroccan board of the North African Partnership for Economic Opportunity, called NAPEO. Will you raise your hand, those who are from NAPEO who are with us? I want everyone to see our businessmen and women who are part of a public-private program called Partners for a New Beginning. It represents a concerted effort by business leaders to reach the business leaders of the next generation, to create jobs, and grow prosperity.
And we remain committed to helping in every way. So I am proud to announce today that this spring the State Department will launch our Global Entrepreneurship Program here in Morocco. We will connect investors and thinkers, mentors and pioneers, so that we can tap into the ingenuity of young Moroccan women and men, who have good ideas, who may need to know how to do a business plan, who may need advice about getting credit from the bank, but who are willing to work hard to generate economic growth from the bottom up, right here in Rabat and across Morocco.
So the building that we are breaking ground for today will serve as the new home for America’s Embassy, but it will also stand for the new chapter in our relationship. It will be state-of-the-art, because we believe that we have no more important commitment than to our first partners, going back to the very beginning of America’s journey.
And we want to do all we can to help forge an even deeper relationship and to help Morocco deliver on the vision that Moroccans have set for themselves. This is coming organically from within Morocco. It is not being imported. It is not being imposed. It is coming because of the thinking and hard work, starting his Majesty, the king, going down to the men and women who stood in line to vote in the parliamentary elections. And we are very excited by what we see happening here, and we want you to know that you can count on your long-time friend and partner in the 21st century, as we counted on you in the 18th century so long ago.
Thank you very much. (Applause.)
I am sure her country squire would have LOVED to have been with her for this event. I remember him mentioning in an article that he had leveled a hill on his property by himself. Many may remember the tree-planting at the White House (early in the Obama administration) when he went beyond the photo-op of planting one tree and went on do plant one or two more, telling Obama “This is the way you do it.”
Her remark about our long relationship with Morocco refers to their being the first country to recognize the United States as an independent country. I remember her mentioning this when the newly-minted SOS was visited at the State Department by Morocco’s foreign minister in 2009.
Hillary Clinton at Embassy Rabat
Posted in Foreign Policy, Foreign Service, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Clinton Images, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Secretary of State, Secretary of State Travel, state department, U.S. Department of State, tagged Embassy Rabat, Foreign Policy, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Morocco, Rabat, Secretary of State, State Department, U.S. Department of State on February 26, 2012| 7 Comments »
When Secretary Clinton met with staff and families at Embassy Rabat today, she also participated in a groundbreaking ceremony for a new embassy.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton participates in a groundbreaking ceremony for the new U.S. Embassy in Rabat

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton participates in a groundbreaking ceremony for the new U.S. Embassy in Rabat
Meeting With Embassy Staff and Families
Remarks
Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of StateRabat, MoroccoFebruary 26, 2012
Thank you. Thank you, Sam. That was really lovely. Thank you, Sylvia. Well, I don’t need to tell you how blessed you are here at Embassy Rabat and across Morocco to have such a dynamic duo as Sam and Sylvia. I want to personally thank them in front of their Embassy family, including the cute children, Sylvia, because they’ve brought so much enthusiasm and energy to representing our country. Thank you very much, Ambassador, and thank you, Sylvia, for all you do. (Applause.)
And the Ambassador is right. I wanted to come and thank you personally when I was last in Morocco as Secretary of State in ’09. I didn’t get to Rabat, and I missed having this opportunity, so I did not want to forego it today. And I also wanted to let you know I’m well aware of how much is asked of you, particularly this last year, whether you worked as election monitors or you got ready for the construction of a new embassy whose ground we will break in a very short time from now, or just, every day, handle the myriad of tasks that you are responsible for. We see the results of your hard work.
In the last eight months, the Moroccan people have made their voices heard through a constitutional referendum and an unprecedented parliamentary election. And the United States friendship with Morocco that dates back to 1777 – I want all the young people to know that Morocco was the very first country that recognized us before we really won our revolutionary war. We were just beginning it, and Morocco believed in us and said, “We’re with you,” and we’ve had that kind of partnership ever since.
I’m excited about the groundbreaking of the new Embassy. It will finally bring together our Foreign Service and development professionals under one roof. That’s part of our – what’s called QDDR, the Quadrennial Diplomacy and Development Review, where we have to maximize the impact of U.S. Government efforts. We have the best diplomats, the best development experts in the world, and we need to multiply the impact of each. And having everyone under one roof will help us do that.
I also want to thank the Peace Corps volunteers, because wherever I go, they always can bring a crowd of enthusiasm. (Applause.) When in doubt, bring on the Peace Corps and – (laughter) – we’ll get the energy going. And I’m also very much aware that we could not do the work that we do here without the locally employed staff, all of the Moroccans who have served with us and done so much for our relationship. (Applause.)
In fact, Ambassador, I know from many years, starting back in the 1990s when I would travel alone or travel with my husband when he was president that presidents come and go, and certainly secretaries and ambassadors come and go, but the locally employed staff is here. And they remember and they help and they greet every new representative from the United States Government with the kind of background and experience that we need.
This is an exciting time to be serving in Morocco. It’s an exciting time to be representing the United States. It’s also, I think it’s fair to say, quite a challenging time. But if we stick to our values of democracy and freedom, of human rights, of women’s rights, of the kind of protections that are now enshrined in the constitution of this country, then we will be able to help not only Moroccans who are doing quite well, but using Morocco as an example, reach out to the country that I was in yesterday, Tunisia, or Algeria or Libya, countries that are also seeking their own new democratic future. And then we have to work to make sure democracy delivers jobs and opportunity for the hardworking people of the Maghreb.
So I appreciate greatly everything you have done and are doing. I think it’s fair to promise you that the rollercoaster ride is not over. There will be a lot more ahead of us. But I think we are living through such a consequential time in world history, and nowhere more so than in this region. So again, thank you, and what I would like to do is first maybe go over and take a picture with the children, if I could, because I love being – I don’t tell my daughter, but I would love to be a grandmother. (Laughter.) Anyway, don’t tell her. So I will go and get our picture with the children – they’ve been so patient – and then I’ll shake as many hands as I can before we go on to the groundbreaking.
Thank you all very much. (Applause.)
She always gets a big response when she mentions the Peace Corps. Well, she is on her way home now, and Mme. Secretary do not think for a moment that we have not been watching. We are, and we appreciate that you have gone for two weeks straight without a weekend off. You are amazing! Thank you for all the personal sacrifices you make to serve our country. We love you!





































