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Meeting With Embassy Staff and Families from Embassy Tbilisi

Remarks

Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of State
Sheraton Hotel
Batumi, Georgia
June 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.)

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Mme. Secretary was accompanied to the Batumi International Airport by Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili.  She was greeted with a beautiful bouquet in Baku, Azerbaijan by Azeri Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov.

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At the end of  a very busy and productive day in Batumi, Georgia, today, President Saakashvili and his wife Sandra Roelofs took Secretary Clinton out for an evening on the town.  They supped at the Adjarian Wine House where Mme. Secretary explored an ancient wine basin and sampled some fine Georgian wines.  After dinner,  they took in a cultural singing and dancing performance at the Piazza. and strolled through the streets.  The ferris wheel at Batumis Bulvari provided a lively backdrop.

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Remarks With Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili

Remarks

Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of State
Public Service Hall
Batumi, Georgia
June 5, 2012

PRESIDENT SAAKASHVILI:Madam Secretary, I will speak in English (inaudible). They have heard me already speak in Georgian many times.It is an immense pleasure to welcome you here again today in Georgia. You have always been an outstanding friend of our nation. I want, in the name of Georgian people, our multiethnic nation, to express our deep gratitude to you, Hillary, for your personal leadership on all our issues and your longstanding support for Georgia’s democracy.

Ladies and gentlemen, if Georgia is today an independent state progressing at a good path on its way to the EU and NATO, it is, of course, first thanks to the Georgian people’s commitment and courage. But the support of the United States of America throughout all these 20 years, and in particular the support of President Obama and Secretary Clinton in the recent period, was instrumental, fundamental for our survival and our continued success.

I want to commend here the firm commitment of the U.S. to our sovereignty, our territorial integrity within our legitimate borders. Its constant help in our reform process, its firm denunciation of the illegal occupation of our territories, and it repeated calls for the rights of hundreds of thousands, around 500,000 internally displaced persons of Georgians of all ethnic and religious backgrounds, to go back to their houses. This American policy allows the Georgian democratic sphere to overcome key challenge as it achieves striking results. The partnership between our two nations is made from shared values and for its purpose – standing up for freedom and also of its common interests.

Secretary Clinton’s visit, the strategic partnership charter meeting, and the discussions held today constitute another step forward in the constant enhancing of our cooperation. These talks are following the meeting held with President Obama at the White House in January – really very interesting talks and meeting – they allowed us to progress on all objectives that were set last January. Our security cooperation is on the right track. Today’s ceremony with the coast guard was a good symbol of our progress in that matter, the (inaudible) process of enhancing our self-defense capacity is now real and concrete. The U.S. is committed to it, and the forward steps were discussed today.

I welcome our (inaudible) close cooperation in order to ensure the irreversibility of the Georgian democratic reforms. My government is committed to have free and fair parliamentary elections this October. Georgia’s public attachment to democracy (inaudible) is expressed in the Rose Revolution, and (inaudible) ever since, so I am sure that these elections will express the free will of the Georgian people.

And I also welcome (inaudible) support to our request for international observation missions. We really want to have as many legitimate observers in place as we can get to make the transparent – elections as transparent, as fair, as trustworthy as we can get. Your support, Madam Secretary, for my government calls toward minorities and to our commitment to an open, democratic, and multiethnic society is essential.

Progress on our people-to-people relations is good. More Georgians now travel to the U.S., including for study, and we have thousands of America’s teachers teaching English to Georgian kids here. We also would be – we are also grateful for the support for our policies of engagement of the Georgian citizens living in the occupied territories.

President Obama mentioned in January the prospect of a free trade agreement between the U.S. and Georgia. That has made Georgia the only country in Europe that might have eventually free trade agreement with the United States – quite a big privilege and thrill to get there.

I welcome the concrete process of high-level dialogue that has started since then and that will allow us to progress toward that amazing goal, which, as the American president has put, are in the mutual interests of the American and Georgian business.

Finally, I want to thank you, Madam Secretary, for your Administration’s leadership and your personal leadership of the decided question of our integration into Euro-Atlantic alliance. The last summit in Chicago was an important step forward toward that process for Georgia. The language of the communiqué, the meeting of the 28 allies with the four aspirant countries that put Georgia in the same group as the three Balkan states, and the words you pronounced during the meetings on enlargement perspectives and talking to them at length about Georgia’s continued reform and progress and success showed to everybody that Georgia was closer than ever to fulfill its Euro-Atlantic aspirations. Your words in Chicago were like music to the ears of my people, I can tell you right now. I know that. We need for that to keep up the momentum for the course and to count on our allies’ commitment. We are confident of both, in a large part thanks to your unwavering friendship.

Thank you again. It’s a great honor to host you here.

SECRETARY CLINTON: Thank you very much, Mr. President, and it is a great pleasure to be back in Georgia, and particularly to be here on the Black Sea and to see all of the development taking place in Batumi. When I was last here in Tbilisi, you showed me posters of everything that was happening in Batumi and urged me to come see for myself, and I’m very pleased that I have this opportunity to do that.

The partnership between Georgia and the United States reflects the energy, the entrepreneurship, and the dynamism of our people and societies. More than that, our relationship delivers results. You can see that just from what we have achieved in the past few weeks.

This morning, we held the third annual plenary session of our Strategic Partnership Commission, covering topics from bolstering peace and security to promoting global economic growth and deepening democratic values. We confirmed plans for a new agreement to help our scientific communities collaborate more closely.

We also discussed the Millennium Challenge Corporation’s plan to move forward with its second compact with Georgia, a show of confidence in Georgia’s future. Reforming and modernizing Georgia’s defense establishment is also one of our shared priorities. Earlier today, I attended the commissioning of a coast guard vessel that the United States and Georgia refurbished together to help Georgia defend against threats from terrorism, drugs, and human trafficking.

We also discussed Georgia’s commitment to the ISAF operations in Afghanistan, including your pledge to help sustain the Afghan National Security Force after the 2014 transition. Georgian troops fight bravely alongside American forces in Afghanistan, and we greatly honor their courage and sacrifice. Georgia is already the largest per capita contributor of troops to our efforts in Afghanistan, and we thank you for sending a second battalion which will make you the largest non-NATO contributor.

We have also agreed this year on several new areas of defense cooperation. The United States will provide training and support for Georgian defense forces to better monitor your coasts and your skies. We will help upgrade Georgia’s utility helicopter fleet so it can more easily transport supplies and people throughout your country. We are also going to help Georgia give its officers the 21st century training they need for today’s changing missions. With these efforts, Georgia will be a stronger international partner with an improved capacity for self-defense.

Of course, Georgia’s long-term security and prosperity will depend in large part on the quality of your democracy. And this is a moment of great opportunity for your country. The United States will stand with the Georgian people as you take the next steps to strengthen the rights, freedom, and opportunities of all your citizens. Every Georgian deserves to live in a tolerant, democratic, inclusive society.

Today, I met with leaders of opposition parties and discussed their vital role in deepening Georgia’s democratic development. The United States believes competing energies and ideas drive the democratic process. Civic activism, open debate, a level playing field, citizens’ access to information are all vital as you move toward parliamentary elections and then presidential elections. We expect Georgia will hold free and fair elections this fall, and then complete a democratic transfer of power in 2013. And we believe that every party and every candidate should respect the political process, and we look forward to welcoming a strong relationship with those that the Georgian people choose.

Let me also say, as both President Obama and I have repeated many times before, the United States remains steadfast in our commitment to the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Georgia within its internationally recognized borders. Today we also discussed ways Georgia can reach out to the people of Abkhazia and South Ossetia regions, including providing status-neutral travel documents and identification cards. Soon U.S. Embassies and consulates around the world will accept the status-neutral travel document for any resident from these regions who chooses to use them for travel or study in the United States. This would be a strong step toward reconciliation that supports a peaceful and just resolution of the conflict.

Finally, when President Saakashvili met with President Obama in the Oval Office earlier this year, one of the key issues they discussed was how to increase trade and investment between our countries. And just last week we launched our new High-Level Trade and Investment Dialogue. This group will explore a range of mechanisms to continue strengthening trade relations between our countries, including the possibility of a free trade agreement between Georgia and the United States, an updated investment agreement, and other measures that could facilitate trade and investments.

This is a relationship that gets things done and has for 20 years, because after all, Mr. President, we commemorate the 20th year of our diplomatic relations. We’ve seen a lot of change in that time. Georgia has moved from a closed country under communist rule to an active member of the Open Government Partnership. We are meeting in a building, the Public Service Hall, that is a testament to the positive changes that Georgia has made. And I would like to say as someone who has the honor of traveling the world, so many countries, particularly new and struggling democracies, are looking to Georgia. They want to know how Georgia has accomplished so much in such a short period of time. I look forward to seeing where the next 20 years take you.

Now before I conclude, I’d like to take a moment to send congratulations to Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth on behalf of the American people. For 60 years, the American people have admired her strength, her resilience, and her commitment to freedom and human dignity for all people. We join her subjects and people around the world in celebrating Her Majesty’s historic Diamond Jubilee.

So thank you once again, Mr. President, for your friendship and to the people of Georgia for the strong partnerships between our people and our governments. This is an exciting time in the history of Georgia, and we want to see you go from strength to strength and continue to improve the lives of the Georgia people as well as serve as a model for people everywhere. Thank you.

PRESIDENT SAAKASHVILI: Madam Secretary, we don’t want to be – thank you so much for these very kind and supportive words. We don’t want to be left out, so we’ll join in your congratulations to Her Majesty the Queen and all the best wishes and wish her another hundred years of her very fruitful reign. And by the way, when you talk about (inaudible) Public Hall, on the right there you see the University – the American university that is being built in Batumi. And I can tell you the joke with this: If you go and look at this building now as it is, you would never believe it, but (inaudible) the highest building in the Caucasus, the tallest building in Caucasus, and actually, it will be the university that’s a symbol of democracy. And it shall be not just another university, but an American university. UCLA and other major American universities are right now organizing (inaudible). It was first ever American – fully American university in post-Soviet state because – there are some others, but they are not really run fully by American universities. And it will be here. And it was assisted by American Government through Millennium Challenge Corporation program. So we’re immensely proud and all of you are invited to the opening in September. (Laughter.)

Anyway, now you’re invited (inaudible). (Laughter.)

Yes. I’m not running the press conference (inaudible). (Laughter.)

MODERATOR: Natia Gogsadze Rustavi

SECRETARY CLINTON: Wait, wait, wait, wait.

MODERATOR: Would like to ask in Georgian.

QUESTION: (Via interpreter) Natia Gogsadze’s Rustavi 2. Madam Secretary of State, very soon we will have parliamentary elections in Georgia. And on the other hand, as we know, Russian Federation tries to organize its military exercise, military training will be coinciding with our elections. On the other hand, Mr. Putin made a statement and he said that Russia is interested in the results of the Georgian election. Therefore, there is certain kind of concern in our country about external intervention. To what extent is this threat possible? What is your take? What is your opinion about it?

SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, I believe that the 2012 parliamentary elections and the 2013 presidential elections are really in the hands of the Georgian people. I believe that they will be a crucial indicator of the progress Georgia has made on its democratic path, and the president and I, as I discussed also earlier with the prime minister, have expressed our hopes that this will be a model election that will provide a competitive electoral environment.

Now, I think the single best thing Georgia can do to advance your security, your prosperity, your democracy, your international reputation, is to hold free and fair elections that result in a fully democratic transition. And we praise Georgia’s initiative to open its early electoral process to a range of international observers, because monitoring is a key to ensuring fairness and transparency.

So yes, there will be military maneuvers, but the really important event of the fall will occur inside Georgia as the people of Georgia cast their votes. I cannot think of a stronger message that could be sent to anyone anywhere in the world than that. And so we will clearly continue to consult closely with the Georgian Government to ensure that we are standing with you, but the most critical event is not another country’s military’s exercises – it is Georgia’s elections. And that will speak louder than any military exercise could ever do about what Georgians stand for, your resilience, your strength, your commitment to democracy.

MODERATOR: Thank you. Reuters wanted to ask question, right? Yes, please.

QUESTION: President Saakashvili, can you categorically rule out the possibility that you might seek the prime ministership? And Secretary Clinton, do you believe that President Putin’s leaving the presidency to become prime minister and then returning to the Kremlin as president has set a bad precedent?

PRESIDENT SAAKASHVILI: Well, first of all, I have to say Madam Secretary also was talking about this. The democratic transfer of power is a normal part of any democracy. And by the way, Georgia – it has already been happening for those of you who have been watching, because we moved part of the central government’s power, the presidential powers, to the directly elected mayor of Tbilisi, to elected city councils all around the country. We are continuing towards decentralization of that process, remove parliamentary (inaudible) on the posture, and actually that also means that more power is to be shifting to the regions from the – and powers of the regions. And I think Georgia has developed a number of very important institutions like (inaudible) that make – that – which will raise focus on institutions rather than all of its individual personalities. In this future political process, it is hugely important what the institution will do.

And since they won, I was in the office, I was offered this brilliant opportunity to turn myself into lame duck voluntarily, especially considering what kind of reforms we have to achieve and complete by the end of my second term. I’m certainly not going to cede to this temptation to do it, even for such a wonderful agency as Reuters.

But as I said, the process is there. Georgian democracy is getting stronger. And ultimate that matters most of all to me and basically to my nation as well. Ultimately, people’s choice is the most respected one that – and I think that will be – ultimately it will make the whole difference, indeed. Today it made a difference; it will make difference in October; it will make difference next year and in the future.

SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, I’m not going to speculate on hypotheticals, and I’m not going to comment on the reality of another country’s leader right now. But let me just emphasize how important it is that the decisions that are made by Georgia’s leaders and citizens demonstrate a firm commitment to the building of democratic institutions. I think that’s what the president was just saying, that in any democracy, institutions have to be more important than people. Individual leaders should come and go, but institutions should be strengthened. And one of the ways of doing that is to have an election first for the parliament, then for the presidency, that are universally regarded as valid. That will speak volumes about where Georgia is on your path to a sustainable democracy.

MODERATOR: Thank you.

Please.

QUESTION: (Via interpreter) Lika Beraia, TV company Imedi —

SECRETARY CLINTON: Wait just one second. I’m sorry.

Okay.

QUESTION: (Via interpreter) Lika Beraia, TV company Imedi. I have a question to Madam Secretary of State. Following the Chicago summit, Russia expressed its negative position regarding intention of NATO, and in this context it’s (inaudible) negative, particularly with regard to Georgia. Some analysts say that Russia has the right to use so-called veto. Do you agree with this possibility?

SECRETARY CLINTON: As we stated at the Chicago NATO summit, the United States and all NATO allies support Georgia’s aspirations for NATO membership, and we reaffirmed the Bucharest decision and all subsequent decisions. We continue to work closely with Georgia both bilaterally and through the NATO-Georgia Commission to support the goals that Georgia has set for itself in its annual national program. And we remain committed to supporting Georgia’s sovereignty and territorial integrity, and we strongly support the principle that all countries, including Georgia, should be free to choose their own alliances, including their security alliances.

MODERATOR: One more question from Americans. Yes, please.

QUESTION: Madam Secretary, the leaders of China and Russia met today in Beijing and agreed to cooperate together more closely at the United Nations. President Hu said that this would enable them to put the global order on a more fair and more rational course.

What is your reaction to that? And is this a setback for your efforts to get a unified response to the crisis in Syria?

SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, I think it’s pretty clear that we all have to intensify our efforts to speed a political transition, and that has to be the main focus of our diplomacy and our work, both with each other, within the international community, at the United Nations, and other settings, even as we increase political and economic pressure on the Assad regime. And I think it’s clear to anyone, I think it’s hard to reach any other fair and reasonable conclusion that after what we have seen in the last 10 days, particularly the massacre in Houla, that peace and human dignity will not be possible in Syria without political change. So I will look forward to continuing to work with my colleagues tomorrow in Istanbul. I will then be seeing Joint Special Envoy Kofi Annan in Washington on Friday, and we believe there is a way forward and we’re going to continue to pursue that. And we invite the Russians and the Chinese to be part of the solution of what is happening in Syria.

MODERATOR: Thank you, all of you. Thank you for this opportunity. Thank you, Madam Secretary.

SECRETARY CLINTON: Thank you. Thank you.

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Ship Commissioning, posted with vodpod

Remarks at Coast Guard Ship Commissioning

Remarks

Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of State
Passenger Ship Terminal
Batumi, Georgia
June 5, 2012

Well, good afternoon, everyone. And I would like to express our appreciation to everyone from the Ministry of Internal Affairs, especially the Major General Zaza Gogava, and the deputy minister and all who have worked to make this day possible. I am pleased to be here with the prime minister, with the Governor of Adjara, with the deputy minister of defense, with the commander of the Georgian Coast Guard, with the representatives from Marine Technical Services and Allied Technology Group that worked on upgrading the coast guard equipment, and to all of you.

It is a pleasure to be back here in Georgia and to visit this beautiful city on the sea for the first time. I can see why so many tourists flock here. For centuries, this port has been a destination for merchants and traders, for fisherman and sailors, for visitors of all kinds, and I know that the best days are still ahead. These waters have always connected your people with the wider world and made Georgia a bridge between east and west. And today, Georgians are once again proudly sailing out into the Black Sea.

I want to recognize all the members of the Georgian Coast Guard who are here with us today, and thank you for your service. And I’m delighted to help formally commission this Pazisi patrol boat, which will soon help guard Georgia’s coastline. This ship, with its advanced technology and capabilities, is a testament to the partnership between our two countries. Georgians and Americans worked together to modernize it. And I am proud that since 2009, the United States has contributed $10 million to help the Georgian Coast Guard become a sustainable, self-sufficient service capable of patrolling and protecting its territorial waters.

In addition to the three patrol boats, we have supported the construction of a ship repair facility, installation of new communications and observation equipment, and a high-tech maritime information center. All this is part of our broader effort to help Georgia secure your borders and defend your sovereignty. New border police stations in remote areas, radiation monitors at all ports of entry, more equipment and training for border guards and military officers, expanding ties with NATO both here and through our shared mission in Afghanistan, the United States is committed to this partnership and will keep it growing.

A strong Georgian Coast Guard will contribute to maritime security on the Black Sea and broader regional stability. Along with more effective border security on land, it will help crack down on the illicit flow of narcotics, human trafficking, and potential weapons of mass destruction. That’s vitally important for Georgia, for the region, and the world. But that’s not all. This ship and its sister ships represent the resilience of Georgia’s national spirit and the endurance of your sovereignty. America stands with you. We will not waver in our support for Georgia and your territorial integrity.

So I thank the people of Batumi and Georgia for your hospitality today. And to the brave sailors who will sail on this ship, let us all say good luck and Godspeed. (Applause.)

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Strategic Partnership, posted with vodpod

Remarks at Omnibus Session of the Strategic Partnership Commission

Remarks

Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of State
Radisson Blu Hotel
Batumi, Georgia
June 5, 2012

Well, thank you very much, and it is a great pleasure being here on the 20th year anniversary of our diplomatic relations. And I appreciate greatly Georgia hosting this third meeting of the U.S.-Georgia Strategic Partnership Commission. I thank you, prime minister, foreign minister, our ambassadors, our assistant secretary, and the distinguished representatives from both Georgia and the United States who are here for this important gathering.

When I was here two years ago, I said my first trip to Georgia would not be my last. And I am very happy to have returned and to have a chance to be here to see Georgia’s beautiful Black Sea coast for the first time and to learn more about the continuing efforts for development, as evidenced around us here in Batumi.

The U.S. delegation present today represents the breadth of our partnership, because our nations cooperate across a range of issues that shape our people’s lives, from strengthening regional and global security to increasing trade and economic ties, to helping the people of Georgia fulfill your democratic aspirations. We share common goals and common interests, and our people share common values.

In 2009 we launched this Strategic Partnership Commission to take the U.S.-Georgia partnership to the next level. We wanted to have more results to show for our work together and to deliver more benefits to our citizens. Our gatherings since then have helped us identify key goals and what is needed to achieve them. Let me briefly review four priorities of this strategic partnership and the steps that lie ahead.

First, regarding Georgia’s work to strengthen your democracy, you have taken important steps since the Rose Revolution and your progress has been noted worldwide. Now it is up to Georgia to consolidate your democratic gains. That is the key to Georgia’s future, and it will bring Georgia closer to achieving your Euro-Atlantic aspirations. The parliamentary elections this fall and the presidential election next year are an opportunity for Georgia to deepen its democracy and strengthen the legitimacy of Georgia’s democratic institutions in the eyes of your public and of the world. We urge Georgia’s leaders to ensure that it will be a competitive campaign and that elections are free and fair both on election day and in the months running up to it. The recent creation of an interagency task force to handle election-related grievances is a good step.

I also want to applaud the parliament for creating incentives to get more women into politics. Georgia’s government and the country as a whole will be stronger when women have a greater voice and a greater role in helping to shape Georgia’s future. And I urge al the people of Georgia to remember, though you did make history with the Rose Revolution, the more difficult and ultimately the more important work may well be ahead, the work of building the habits and practices that sustain democracy over time. That means not only holding successful elections but also going beyond elections and strengthening the other key pillars of democracy, such as labor rights, judicial independence, media independence and access.

These reforms will have impacts well beyond the political realm, especially with regard to Georgia’s economy, because these reforms will also help foster economic growth. And that’s the second issue I want to mention. Georgia’s reforms, including your economic reforms, have won international praise and rising standings in global business rankings. As Georgia continues to strengthen accountability, transparency, and the rule of law, you will see even greater interest and investment in your economy. The United States is proud to have been Georgia’s partner in this critical period. Now we want to take our trade and investment relationship to the next level.

Last week in Washington, officials from our countries fulfilled our two presidents’ pledges from last January to launch a high-level dialogue to strengthen our trade relationship, including the possibility of a free trade agreement, an updated investment agreement, and other measures that could facilitate trade and investment. We want to help Georgia expand economic opportunity for all Georgians, especially for women, minorities, and others who are often left out of economic progress.

To that end, I was pleased to learn that the Regional Women’s Entrepreneurship Conference in Istanbul last year gave a push for the creation of an active women’s business network here in Georgia. That’s a smart way to foster sustainable growth, and we want to help Georgia find innovative ways to ensure that women and residents of minority regions can share inclusively in Georgia’s development.

The third issue is regional and global security. Georgia and the United States already have strong bilateral defense cooperation, and in their meeting in January, President Saakashvili and President Obama pledged to deepen that cooperation even further in three areas: furnishing comprehensive assistance to support Georgia’s continued defense reform and modernization; providing the training and equipment necessary for Georgian troops to effectively participate in ISAF operations in Afghanistan; and improving Georgia’s self-defense capabilities and NATO interoperability. And this afternoon I will be announcing steps the United States will take to support these three goals.

Georgia already helps protect regional and global security and together we can do more. As we said at the NATO summit in Chicago two weeks ago, we are grateful for Georgia’s contributions and sacrifices as the largest non-NATO contributor now to the ISAF mission in Afghanistan. And we agreed that Georgia continues to make important progress toward meeting NATO’s standards. We continue to strongly support Georgia’s Euro-Atlantic aspirations and stand by the Bucharest decision and all subsequent decisions on Georgia.

Fourth and finally, among our greatest sources of strength are the bonds between our people. We need to forge even more of them so our people will fully embrace and carry forward the world of building a strong Georgia-U.S. relationship. So the United States has taken steps to make it easier for Georgians from across the country to travel to America. Through our Embassy in Tbilisi, we help thousands of teachers and students learn English and study in the United States. And this afternoon I will be announcing steps to make it easier for the residents of the separatist regions to visit the United States.

We see this as a step toward achieving a peaceful and just resolution to the conflicts within Georgia, a goal that remains a priority for the United States. Constructive steps like this can reduce tensions, create trust, build trade links, and normalize contacts. And all of this can help transform the situation over time. And while we work to rebuild people-to-people connections frayed by the conflicts of the past, the United States remains steadfast in our support for Georgia’s sovereignty and territorial integrity. We reject Russia’s occupation and militarization of Georgian territory, and we call on Russia to fulfill its obligations under the 2008 ceasefire agreement, including withdrawal of its forces to pre-conflict positions and free access for humanitarian assistance.

So this year marking the 20th anniversary of our diplomatic relations permits us to look back on all that Georgia has achieved in these past years and all the progress our two countries have achieved together. We have many reasons to be optimistic about what the future holds. And let us remember who we are working for. We are working for the people of our countries and the generations that will follow, whose futures will be shaped by the security, prosperity, freedom, and peace that we work together to build today.

Thank you very much. (Applause.)

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Public Schedule for June 5, 2012

Public Schedule

Washington, DC
June 5, 2012

U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE
PUBLIC SCHEDULE
TUESDAY JUNE 5, 2012

SECRETARY HILLARY RODHAM CLINTON

Secretary Clinton is on foreign travel to Batumi, Georgia. The Secretary is accompanied by Assistant Secretary Gordon, Director Sullivan, VADM Harry B. Harris, Jr., JCS, and Special Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs and Senior Director for European Affairs Liz Sherwood Randall. Please click here for more information.

9:40 a.m. LOCAL Secretary Clinton meets with Georgian Prime Minister Gilauri, in Batumi, Georgia.
(CAMERA SPRAY PRECEDING MEETING)

10:00 a.m. LOCAL Secretary Clinton participates in the omnibus session of the Strategic Partnership Commission, in Batumi, Georgia.
(OPEN PRESS COVERAGE)

10:45 a.m. LOCAL Secretary Clinton meets with opposition leaders, in Batumi, Georgia.
(CAMERA SPRAY PRECEDING MEETING)

11:45 a.m. LOCAL Secretary Clinton participates in a Coast Guard ship commissioning with Georgian Prime Minister Gilauri, in Batumi, Georgia.
(OPEN PRESS COVERAGE)

3:50 p.m. LOCAL Secretary Clinton tours Public Service Hall, in Batumi, Georgia.
(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)

4:05 p.m. LOCAL Secretary Clinton meets with Georgian President Saakashvili, in Batumi, Georgia.
(CAMERA SPRAY)

5:05 p.m. LOCAL Secretary Clinton holds a joint press availability with Georgian President Saakashvili, in Batumi, Georgia.
(OPEN PRESS COVERAGE)

6:00 p.m. LOCAL Secretary Clinton attends a dinner with Georgian President Saakashvili, in Batumi, Georgia.
(CAMERA SPRAY PRECEDING DINNER)

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Mme. Secretary arrived safely this evening in Batumi, Georgia, and was met at the airport by Georgia’s Foreign Minister Grigol Vashadze,  U.S. Ambassador John Bass, and an official honor guard.

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Secretary Clinton To Travel to Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Armenia, Georgia, Azerbaijan and Turkey

Press Statement

Victoria Nuland
Department Spokesperson, Office of the Spokesperson
Washington, DC
May 25, 2012

Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton will travel to Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Armenia, Georgia, Azerbaijan and Turkey from May 31-June 7. In Copenhagen, Denmark, Secretary Clinton will hold bilateral meetings with senior Danish officials. She will also participate in the kick-off event for Green Partnerships for Growth, a bilateral initiative to promote green technology through public and private sector partnerships.

On June 1, Secretary Clinton will travel to Oslo, Norway, where she will meet with senior Norwegian officials and give keynote remarks at a global health conference hosted by the Norwegian government titled, “A World in Transition – Charting a New Path in Global Health.” On June 2, the Secretary will be in Tromso, north of the Arctic Circle and home of the Arctic Council Permanent Secretariat, for discussions of U.S.-Norwegian cooperation in the Arctic, including on climate change and the sustainable development of untapped resources.

On June 3, Secretary Clinton will travel to Stockholm, Sweden, for meetings with senior Swedish officials to discuss a range of issues, including green energy, Internet freedom, Afghanistan and the Middle East. In Stockholm she will also participate in a Climate and Clean Air Coalition event on short-lived climate pollutants.

The Secretary will travel to the Caucasus from June 4 to 7. In all these countries, she will discuss important issues of regional security, democracy, economic development and counterterrorism.

In Armenia on June 4, the Secretary will meet with President Sargsian and other senior Armenian officials. She will also meet with Armenian civil society leaders.

On June 5, the Secretary will open the U.S.-Georgia Strategic Partnership Commission plenary session in Batumi, Georgia. She will meet also with President Saakashvili and hold discussions with a broad range of political actors and civil society representatives.

The Secretary will travel on June 6 to Azerbaijan to meet with President Aliyev as well as Azerbaijani civil society leaders.

On June 7, the Secretary will co-chair the Global Counterterrorism Forum Ministerial in Istanbul, Turkey and consult with senior Turkish officials on a range of foreign policy challenges, including Syria and Iran.

On Wednesday of the past week, before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Secretary Clinton emphasized the urgency and importance of U.S. accession to the Law of the Sea Convention. The nature of her first stop in this itinerary underscores remarks she made at the time.  Yes, we do meet and negotiate with members on various oceanic councils, such as the Arctic Council, but our heft in these meetings is negatively affected by our absence at the convention table.  We would come from a position of additional strength were we to ratify the treaty and take our place among member states.

In anticipation to her visits to Georgia and Azerbaijan, the secretary released the following greetings to the people of those countries in celebration of their imminent national days.

Georgia Independence Day

Press Statement

Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of State
Washington, DC
May 25, 2012

On behalf of President Obama and the people of the United States, I am delighted to send best wishes to the people of Georgia as you celebrate your independence this May 26.

In a few days I will have the chance to visit Batumi to experience the warmth of the Georgian people and reaffirm our commitment to Georgia’s future. This year marks the twentieth anniversary of U.S.-Georgian bilateral relations. Since regaining its independence, Georgia has made impressive progress fighting corruption, developing modern state institutions, and enhancing global security.

The United States is committed to helping Georgia deepen Euro-Atlantic ties and strengthen the institutions of your democracy, and we remain steadfast in support of Georgia’s territorial integrity. We stood with the Georgian people 20 years ago at the dawn of your renewed independence, and we stand with you today.

As you celebrate this special day, we look forward to working with the Georgian government and people to build a more peaceful and prosperous world.

Republic of Azerbaijan’s National Day

Press Statement

Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of State
Washington, DC
May 25, 2012

On behalf of President Obama and the people of the United States, I am delighted to send best wishes to the people of Azerbaijan as you celebrate Republic Day this May 28th.

I am looking forward to my trip to Baku in a few days where I will have the chance to talk to civil society and government leaders about Azerbaijan’s challenges and opportunities, and how the United States can support a brighter future for both our people. We will discuss new ways to partner together to promote regional security and stability, enhance energy security, and strengthen economic and political reforms.

As you celebrate your national day, know that the United States stands with you. Congratulations and best wishes for a peaceful and prosperous year to come.

So as to exclude no one, I include the secretary’s greetings to the people of Ethiopia on their upcoming national day as well.  We have no information regarding upcoming plans for a visit there, however.

Ethiopia’s National Day

Press Statement

Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of State
Washington, DC
May 25, 2012

On behalf of President Obama and the people of the United States, I am delighted to send best wishes to the people of Ethiopia as you celebrate your national day this May 28th.

The United States and the people of Ethiopia share a strong history as friends and partners. Together, we are working to enhance food security, improve health services, strengthen education, promote trade, and expand development. The United States applauds Ethiopia’s dedication to maintaining security in the region, including through important and effective peacekeeping missions in Sudan and South Sudan. I hope the coming year will yield a more vibrant civil society and private sector to help shape a brighter future for Ethiopia.

The United States is committed to helping Ethiopia achieve a more peaceful and prosperous future for all its people, and we look forward to continuing to work together toward common goals in Africa and around the world. As you gather with family and friends to celebrate your national day, know that the United States stands with you.

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Bombing of Israeli Diplomatic Vehicle in India and Attempted Attack on Israeli Embassy Personnel in Georgia

Press Statement

Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of State
Washington, DC
February 13, 2012

 


2012/201

 

STATEMENT BY SECRETARY CLINTON

 

 

I condemn in the strongest possible terms the bombing of an Israeli diplomatic vehicle in India and the attempted attack on Israeli Embassy personnel in Georgia.  The scourge of terrorism is an affront to the entire international community.  The United States places a high priority on the safety and security of diplomatic personnel around the world and we stand ready to assist with any investigation of these cowardly actions.  Our thoughts and prayers are with the injured personnel in New Delhi and their loved ones.

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