Updated on
Says Trump has retreated from diplomacy, warns on Xi’s power
China could also fall victim to spread of fake news: Clinton
Hillary Clinton hit out at both U.S. President Donald Trump and Chinese leader Xi Jinping in remarks via video to a conference in Beijing.
Clinton, a former secretary of state, said the Trump administration had retreated from diplomacy. She called on both the U.S. and China to avoid “bluster” or “personal taunts” in dealing with North Korea, and said the six-party talks on denuclearization should resume.
“Beijing should remember that inaction is a choice as well,” Clinton said on Tuesday, referring to China’s approach toward North Korea.
Posts Tagged ‘North Korea’
At Caijing Conference, Hillary Clinton Warns on NK
Posted in Donald Trump, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, tagged China, Donald Trump, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, North Korea, Xi Jinping on November 28, 2017| 1 Comment »
Hillary Clinton’s National Security Session: In the Room Where It Happens
Posted in 2016 Election, Clinton/Kaine 2016, Democratic Party, Hillary 2016, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Clinton 2016, Hillary For America, Hillary for President, Hillary Rodham Clinton, safety & security, terrorism, Uncategorized, tagged 2016 election, Clinton/Kaine 2016, Hillary 2016, Hillary Clinton, Hillary For America, homeland security, North Korea, safety & security on September 9, 2016| 1 Comment »
Hillary Clinton convened a bipartisan panel of experts on national security at the New York Historical Society today. The group included those who have made policy and those who have implemented policies for a broad-based discussion of threats and how we deal with them.
After the meeting, Hillary held a press briefing.
I made sure to include a few pics of Hillary smiling for Reince Priebus. She was talking about deadly serious issues, but she is personable with the press.
The issue of the North Korean nuclear test arose in the press briefing after the meeting.
Statement From Hillary Clinton On North Korea’s Nuclear Test
Hillary Clinton released the following statement Friday on North Korea’s nuclear test:
“North Korea’s decision to conduct another nuclear test is outrageous and unacceptable. I strongly condemn this reckless action, which – coupled with its recent series of missile launches – makes clear Pyongyang’s determination to develop a deliverable nuclear weapon. This constitutes a direct threat to the United States, and we cannot and will never accept this.
I support President Obama’s call to both strengthen the sanctions passed earlier this year with the United Nations and to impose additional sanctions. At the same time, we must strengthen defense cooperation with our allies in the region; South Korea and Japan are critical to our missile defense system, which will protect us against a North Korean missile. China plays a critical role, too, and must meaningfully increase pressure on North Korea – and we must make sure they do.
This is another reminder that America must elect a President who can confront the threats we face with steadiness and strength. We need a Commander-in-Chief committed to a bipartisan foreign policy, who can bring together top experts with deep experience to solve the toughest challenges. And we need a President committed to reducing – not increasing – the number of nuclear weapons and nuclear states in the world. More countries with nuclear weapons in Northeast Asia would increase the chances of the unthinkable happening. We cannot take that risk.”
Hillary Clinton on the NK Nuclear Test
Posted in 2016 Election, Foreign Policy, Hillary 2016, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Clinton 2016, Hillary For America, Hillary for President, Hillary Rodham Clinton, policy/plans, statements, tagged 2016 election, Foreign Policy, Hillary 2016, Hillary Clinton, Hillary For America, Hillary for President, North Korea, nuclear test, statements on January 6, 2016| Leave a Comment »
Statements
Statement From Hillary Clinton on North Korea’s Apparent Nuclear Test
Hillary Clinton released the following statement Wednesday about North Korea’s apparent nuclear test:
“I strongly condemn North Korea’s apparent nuclear test. If verified, this is a provocative and dangerous act, and North Korea must have no doubt that we will take whatever steps are necessary to defend ourselves and our treaty allies, South Korea and Japan. North Korea’s goal is to blackmail the world into easing the pressure on its rogue regime. We can’t give in to or in any way encourage this kind of bullying. Instead, we should increase pressure and send Pyongyang an unmistakable message that its nuclear brinksmanship won’t succeed.
“The United States and our partners, including the UN Security Council, need to immediately impose additional sanctions against North Korea. The Chinese government, which wields influence with the North Koreans, must be more assertive in deterring the North’s irresponsible actions, and it should take actions to halt prohibited activities transpiring across its borders or its firms that participate in illicit trade or proliferation will have to face sanctions. We should also work with our allies to strengthen our missile defenses.
“As Secretary I championed the United States’ pivot to the Asia Pacific – including shifting additional military assets to the theater – in part to confront threats like North Korea and to support our allies. I worked to get not just our allies but also Russia and China on board for the strongest sanctions yet.
“North Korea’s nuclear and missile tests, its human rights record, the cyber hack of Sony this past December – highlight the continuing threat that North Korea poses.
“And threats like this are yet another reminder of what’s at stake in this election. We cannot afford reckless, imprudent publicity stunts that risk war. We need a Commander-in-Chief with the experience and judgement to deal with a dangerous North Korea on Day One.”
Hillary Clinton: Making Waves By Doing What Comes Naturally
Posted in 2016 Election, Chelsea Clinton, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Secretary of State, state department, Uncategorized, Women's Issues, tagged 2016 election, Chelsea Clinton, Clinton, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Istanbul, John Kerry, Maureen Dowd, New York Times, North Korea, Secretary of State, State Department, Vital Voices, Women in the World Summit, Women's Issues on April 7, 2013| 8 Comments »
It seems as if the media has lost its collective head over two public appearances this week by Hillary Clinton after a two-month absence from the public eye. It is interesting when you consider that around this time last year she was in Istanbul at a Friends of the Syrian People Conference that was covered so shoddily that one vice presidential candidate was ignorant of the group’s existence. Where was the media frenzy then? Might she have had something important to impart then? Click on the image to see the video and remarks you did not see then since apparently it wasn’t that important at the time. It was only Hillary doing her job.
If the media ever had covered Mme. Secretary’s tenure at the State Department as energetically as it has followed John Kerry’s from the start, there would never have been a need for this blog. But while our Hillary sacrificed her personal family life to do her job in her signature dedicated manner, the press, largely, stood aside . We did hear interviews and reports from regulars in the press room and on her Big Blue Plane. Most recently, Kim Ghattas published a book about these adventures. For the most part, however these forays and the speeches delivered were given little media coverage despite MSM spending bucks to send their correspondents along for the rides. Reports often consisted of a correspondent quoting her while showing silent, truncated video clips of Hillary.
So one has to wonder why all the media hype this week? What is new? What does it mean? What’s it all about? Here are the facts. Hillary Clinton appears at these two events every year. The sole exception was the Vital Voices event last year when she was on foreign travel, once again in Turkey. If you click on the image you can see what the media neglected to provide about that event.
Chelsea appeared at Vital Voices in her place and brought along a video from her mom. Hillary Clinton has routinely appeared at these annual events and had she not this year, that would or should have raised the antennae, not the other way around. Then the questions would/should have been, “Where is she?” “Why isn’t she here this year?”
Instead, apparently unaware of her history with these organizations and events, the press entered DEFCON 1 – maximum readiness – because she made two routine appearances at two events she tries never to miss. In contrast, our current DEFCON level with respect to North Korea’s threats is 4 – above normal readiness.
Here is the archive of Hillary Clinton’s past appearances at the events that shook the airwaves this week. None of these, in the past, received the coverage or were attributed the gravity her appearances at the same events received this past week. All she did this week was what was routine for her, what came naturally.
Secretary Clinton’s Remarks at the Ninth Annual Vital Voices Global Leadership Awards
March 11, 2010 by still4hill |
Hillary Rodham Clinton: Remarks At the Women In The World Summit
March 15, 2010 by still4hill
Video: Secretary Clinton Introducing the play “Seven” at the Women in the World Summit 03.12.2010
March 15, 2010 by still4hill
Secretary Clinton’s Remarks at the Women in the World Summit **Updated With Video**
March 11, 2011 by still4hill
Secretary Clinton’s Remarks at the 10th Annual Vital Voices Global Leadership Awards
April 12, 2011 by still4hill |
Video: Hillary Clinton at “Women in the World 2012″
March 10, 2012 by still4hill
Hillary Clinton’s Video Message to Vital Voices
June 8, 2012 by still4hill
So it is these two appearances that have the media all in a twirl and to which Maureen Dowd refers as “tornado activity.” Two things we knew Hillary Clinton would do after stepping down as Secretary of State were making speeches and writing a book. Over the past year or more Hillary has often said she would be speaking and writing. She never, to my knowledge, mentioned a spa, Maureen. Why the fact that she is doing what she said she would do should generate wide-eyed shock and speculation is as confounding as the reaction some of her supporters displayed in 2008 when, after suspending her campaign, she went on the road to campaign for Obama-Biden as she had said she would. Why is it lost on people that Hillary Clinton is a woman of her word?
Apparently Hillary Clinton is never so fascinating as when she does exactly what she has said she would do or is doing what she always has done while no one was paying attention. Dowd’s Op-Ed in today’s New York Times aggravates as much for what is omitted as for what is included. As a woman and a journalist, how is it possible that Dowd does not know of Hillary’s history of speaking at the above events? Of course she has known. Clearly she chose to ignore that history for the sake of sensation.
She sprinkled in some irritants: “commandress” in chief? Really? That {-ess} suffix eschewed by women of many professions is truly a stretch. A quick check found it primarily referring to a social event and secondarily to a wardrobe style. It is simply snarky from the keyboard of one whose career was never subjected to what linguists refer to as marking. Unlike a stage performer, Dowd has never been burdened with the {-ess} mark. She should not have applied it where it does not belong.
For four years as Secretary of State in every country she visited, Hillary Clinton declared making women full partners in society and the economy “the unfinished business of the 21st century.” Friday was not the first time she said it. It was more likely the thousandth, but since the media ignored all of those speeches, their readers and viewers might have the impression that this was the birth of a campaign slogan. In truth it encapsulated her signature issue as secretary of state throughout her tenure and was no red flag. It is her mantra.
It is arrogant of Dowd to question Hillary Clinton’s ability to learn, her learning style, and to pseudo-analyze her personal academic history in that respect. Worse, it is needlessly disruptive at this point to set up a false comparison between her style and Obama’s. Who says Obama gets an A cramming only the night before? Where are the polls that assign him an A?
Many in the media point long fingers back at 2007-2008 and declare her campaign a disaster. Certainly there are lessons to be learned there, but we should also remember that she did capture the popular vote and won primaries in landslides. It was a failure to prime the caucus states that did not guarantee her the nomination. If she does mount another campaign, certainly that metric will be recalculated.
Hillary Clinton’s approach to all things is to analyze and gain a thorough grounding before speaking out. That strategy would not be inappropriate for Dowd and the rest of the media to take in view of the short shrift Hillary’s work at the State Department was given. Had they adopted this technique they would not have found Hillary Clinton’s recent activities, from book deal to speeches, in any way surprising or even significant. All of that was simply Hillary being Hillary doing what she said she would do and doing what comes naturally to her.
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Edited to add: For all of the reasons stated above, Arianna Huffington has proven herself to be an envious ignoramus of monstrous proportions (as we have always known) given these remarks this morning.
Arianna Huffington: Hillary Clinton sending a bad message to women
During her appearance on ABC’s ‘This Week,’ liberal publisher Arianna Huffington was critical of Hillary Clinton for jumping back on the national stage so quickly.
“She’s obviously running,” Huffington said bluntly about Clinton’s future in the 2016 presidential race.
Huffington added that she was disappointed that Clinton didn’t take more time to rest.
No, Arianna, she was obviously fulfilling an annual commitment. Do not count on seeing her around much over the next few weeks, since she is not running. She will be writing and resting.
Hillary Clinton: The Passing of Kim Jong Il
Posted in Foreign Policy, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Secretary of State, state department, U.S. Department of State, tagged Foreign Policy, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Kim Jong Il, North Korea, Secretary of State, State Department, U.S. Department of State on December 20, 2011| 2 Comments »
The Passing of National Defense Commission Chairman Kim Jong Il
Press Statement
Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of StateWashington, DCDecember 19, 2011
With the passing of National Defense Commission Chairman Kim Jong Il, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea is now in a period of national mourning. We are deeply concerned with the well being of the North Korean people and our thoughts and prayers are with them during these difficult times. It is our hope that the new leadership of the DPRK will choose to guide their nation onto the path of peace by honoring North Korea’s commitments, improving relations with its neighbors, and respecting the rights of its people. The United States stands ready to help the North Korean people and urges the new leadership to work with the international community to usher in a new era of peace, prosperity and lasting security on the Korean Peninsula.
She has this look of “I’m not afraid of you, little boy! Bring it on!
Hillary Clinton in Asia Today: Pictures and Commentary
Posted in Foreign Policy, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Secretary of State, Secretary of State Travel, state department, U.S. Department of State, tagged Dai Bingguo, Foreign Policy, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Hong Kong, North Korea, Secretary of State, State Department, U.S. Department of State on July 25, 2011| 7 Comments »
To provide a glimpse into Mme. Secretary’s day today, I am including some remarks from today’s press briefing. The speech to which Ms. Nuland refers was posted previous to the public schedule.
Victoria Nuland
Spokesperson
Daily Press Briefing
Washington, DCJuly 25, 2011
MS. NULAND: Well, I think the Secretary spoke very clearly, obviously in Hong Kong, about the fact that she has great confidence, that we have confidence, that we’re going to get through this, and that you have democracy in action as the two parties on the Hill work towards an agreement and work with the President on this.There have been a lot of questions around the world, as people try to understand how our system works, how our democracy works, about where all of this is going, so that was one of the reasons why the Secretary felt it was important to make a strong statement about democracy in action and about the fact that we will come through this, and about the adjustments that our strong, democratic economy has been able to make over time whenever we faced these kinds of challenges.More broadly, though, I hope you caught the key themes of her speech, which were to ensure that not only in the East Asian region, but around the world, that we are working together on the basis of open, free, transparent, and fair market systems in which all countries can compete on the basis of a level playing field, whether they are developing nations, developed nations, and all businesses can compete, whether they’re big businesses or small businesses.>…
I think what we have are countries, leaders, businesses trying to grapple with how the American system works. They see us engaged in a democratic debate about what the right moves are going forward in the U.S. economy, but a lot of countries find our system hard to understand. So those are the kinds of questions we get – how long will this go on, are you confident that there’ll be an agreement? And I think it was important for the Secretary to make a strong statement of confidence that our system will produce a good result not only for the American people, but for the world economy as a whole.QUESTION: Can you tell us a little bit more the upcoming meeting in New York between U.S. and North Korea? Who’s leading the delegation and when it’s going to take place; what’s your expectation?
MS. NULAND: In terms of the timing, we’re looking at the end of the week. I don’t know whether the precise date – Thursday or Friday – in New York has been set. I think you know that the expected DPRK representative is Vice Foreign Minister Kim Kae-gwan, and I think you heard the Secretary speak to what we’re looking for in this meeting, that we see this as a preliminary session where we’re going to lay out very clearly our expectations for what will be necessary to not only resume Six-Party Talks, but to improve direct engagement between the U.S. and the DPRK.
…
QUESTION: Was there any outcome regarding those issues come out when she was meeting the State Councilor Dai Bingguo and the other officials on the North Korea issues?
MS. NULAND: They did talk about North Korea today. They met for more than four hours in Shenzhen. And it was very broad-ranging conversation about the U.S.-China relationship, about our shared interest in regional issues, but North Korea was certainly one of the subjects of the meeting.
More that four hours! Comes in a close second to that six-plus hour meeting with Bibi Netanyahu at the Waldorf last December. (I think it was the Waldorf.) I want to say here and now that for someone who took a pay cut from what she voted for as her predecessor’s salary (for Constitutional reasons), this Secretary of State certainly gives us more than our money’s worth. But, of course, she has never been in any of this for the money, or even for the credit. All she cares about is that the work gets done.
Hillary Rodham Clinton: IAEA Resolution on Syria
Posted in Foreign Policy, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Secretary of State, state department, U.S. Department of State, tagged Foreign Policy, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, IAEA, North Korea, Secretary of State, State Department, Syria, U.S. Department of State on June 9, 2011| 1 Comment »
IAEA Resolution on Syria
Press Statement
Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of StateWashington, DCJune 9, 2011
Today in Vienna, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Board of Governors adopted a resolution, co-sponsored by fourteen nations, finding Syria in noncompliance with its international nuclear obligations. This is an important step given the troubling findings in the IAEA’s latest report — including Syria’s demonstrated refusal to cooperate with the IAEA investigation and its attempts to construct a secret nuclear reactor with the assistance of North Korea. We fully welcome the IAEA’s actions today to address this issue with the seriousness it deserves.
The IAEA’s latest report outlining the very likely construction of a covert nuclear reactor makes clear that Syria was violating its nonproliferation obligations. The report is also a troubling update of Syria’s continued refusal to cooperate with the IAEA investigation and efforts to conceal the true purpose of the facility, which raise further serious concerns about Syria’s compliance with its international obligations. Syria must fully cooperate with the IAEA by providing necessary access to all sites, items, and information related to the Dair Alzour investigation and allow the IAEA to verify that Syria is fully complying with its safeguards agreement.
Syria is challenging the authority of the IAEA and the integrity of the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty regime. The only way Syria can demonstrate that it has come back into full compliance with the NPT is by cooperating with the IAEA and providing the necessary information and access.
Upcoming: On Hillary Clinton’s Agenda
Posted in Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Secretary of State, Secretary of State Travel, state department, U.S. Department of State, tagged China, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Japan, North Korea, Secretary of State, South Korea, State Department, Turkey, U.S. Department of State, Wikileaks on November 28, 2010| 10 Comments »
As already mentioned in an earlier post, Secretary Clinton spent a good deal of her weekend on the phone, first with Asian allies over the situation between North and South Korea, and later with allies all over the world in connection with with anticipated, now actual, Wikileaks release of embassy cables.
Among the reports, and I can no longer locate the story, was a proposed meeting of the Secretary of State and the Japanese, South Korean, and Chinese Foreign Ministers in DC this week. If that meeting is on I see no news of it, and, according to the press release below, it would have to occur on Monday since Mme. Secretary will be traveling again on Tuesday. She is, however, scheduled for a bilateral with Turkish Foreign Minister Davutoglu. That, we have to guess, will probably be scheduled for Monday for the same reason.
(AFP) –
ANKARA — Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu starts a four-day visit to the United States Saturday for talks on bilateral ties and regional issues, the foreign ministry said Friday.
Davutoglu was to meet with Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, national security advisor Tom Donilon and the head of the Senate foreign relations committee, Senator John Kerry, the statement said.
A press release this evening reports the following travel plans.
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to Travel to Kazakhstan, Kyrgyz Republic, Uzbekistan, and Bahrain
Philip J. Crowley
Assistant Secretary, Bureau of Public AffairsWashington, DCNovember 28, 2010
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton will travel to Kazakhstan, the Kyrgyz Republic, Uzbekistan, and Bahrain November 30 – December 3. In Kazakhstan, she will attend the Summit of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) as head of the U.S. delegation. Prior to the Summit, she will host an event for local and international non-governmental organizations, underscoring the importance of a vibrant civil society. She will also meet with Kazakhstan’s President Nazarbayev and Foreign Minister Saudabayev to discuss various aspects of the U.S.-Kazakhstan strategic partnership.
In the Kyrgyz Republic, Secretary Clinton will meet with President Otunbayeva and other government officials. She will review political developments in the wake of Kyrgyzstan’s historic election, and discuss a range of issues of mutual concern.
In Uzbekistan, Secretary Clinton will meet with President Karimov to discuss a wide range of matters in our bilateral relationship and in regional affairs.
In Bahrain, Secretary Clinton will deliver the keynote address on the role of the United States in regional security at The Manama Dialogue 2010, an annual forum hosted by the International Institute for Strategic Studies in cooperation with the Kingdom of Bahrain.
With her other hand, Mme. Secretary will be juggling the Wikileaks fallout, which, from what I have seen so far, is surprisingly bland. Angela Merkel not creative? To my knowledge, she has not claimed to be Martha Stewart. Putin an alpha dog? Yes, he has probably said that himself. Of course there is more. Much much more. The SOS will deal with it as she wings her way through this next tour.
God Bless you, Mme. Secretary. Godspeed. Have a safe trip!
Hillary Calling!
Posted in Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Secretary of State, state department, U.S. Department of State, tagged China, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Japan, North Korea, Secretary of State, South Korea, State Department, U.S. Department of State, Wikileaks on November 26, 2010| 40 Comments »
The State Department, via spokesman P.J. Crowley, promised updates over the weekend as stories were expected to develop. No updates have been forthcoming from State, but foreign ministries (presumably not in national turkey comas) have provided some insights into the kind of Thanksgiving weekend our lovely and hard-working Mme. Secretary is having.
South Korea says joint military drill to send message
SEOUL (Reuters) – South Korea’s foreign ministry said on Thursday a joint military exercise with the United States due later this month will send a clear message to North Korea.“Over telephone talks with Secretary (of State) Hillary Clinton, we agreed that through the drill, we will be able to …send a clear message to the North in relation to the recent situation,” a foreign ministry spokesman said.
South Korean, US and Japanese foreign ministers to meet
The Japanese and US top diplomats agreed Thursday to set up a meeting with their South Korean counterpart to coordinate their policies towards North Korea, news reports said. Japanese Foreign Minister Seiji Maehara and US Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton agreed to arrange the meeting for December in Washington, Japan’s Kyodo News reported. During their 15-minute phone conversation, Maehara and Clinton confirmed the need to enhance their cooperation in the wake of North Korea’s attack on a South Korean island Tuesday, and its uranium enrichment programme, the Japanese Foreign Ministry said.
China holds talks with Clinton on N.Korea: foreign ministry
BEIJING (AFP) – Beijing held phone talks with US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton on Friday on the tense situation following North Korea’s deadly bombardment of a South Korean island, the Chinese foreign ministry said.
Under the surface there is an unrelated story that was probably the one Crowley was expecting to break over the weekend when he spoke to the press on Wednesday. My opinion is that these leaks are dangerous, violate national and international security, and should be stopped. Assange should be in prison for doing this. These are not old, expired communications. They are recent, sensitive, and protected. His actions are criminal. Your freedom of speech ends where it endangers the safety of others. Wikileaks is dangerous.
US rushes to contain new WikiLeaks damage
WASHINGTON (AFP) – The United States raced Friday to contain the fallout from the looming release of millions of sensitive diplomatic cables by the WikiLeaks, warning governments around the world of embarrassing disclosures.
US diplomats headed to foreign ministries in hopes of staving off anger if the whistleblower website puts out the leaked cables, which are internal messages that lack the niceties that diplomats generally voice in public.
The documents, the third tranche since WikiLeaks published 77,000 classified US files on the Afghan conflict in July, could affect some of the most sensitive US relationships including with Russia, Israel and Turkey.
So it appears that Mme. Secretary’s holiday weekend is not free of work or concerns. She is spending portions of it on the phone, but we hope that she is making the calls from the comfort of home and otherwise enjoying some downtime with her family.
Happy Thanksgiving, Madame Secretary!
Posted in Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Secretary of State, state department, U.S. Department of State, tagged Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, North Korea, Secretary of State, South Korea, State Department, Thanksgiving, U.S. Department of State on November 24, 2010| 16 Comments »
Dear Madame Secretary,
I wish you a warm, peaceful, restful, and Happy Thanksgiving with your loving family. We are lucky to have you at the helm of State, and that is something for which I am thankful every day of the year. Your hard work is much appreciated. That you go about your business with such humility and good cheer sets a wonderful example for all Americans as well as for people the world over.
Your admirers are equally grateful to your family for so generously sharing you with us and with the world. Your mother has given us an American treasure.
I say this every year, and I shall once again: I am grateful that I have the chance to be on earth at the same time as you are. The accident of birth can separate us by centuries from people in history that we might have wanted to know. That I have the chance to watch you making history in real time is a privilege. Thank you for all you do and have a wonderful holiday.
Best,
Still4Hill
Readers might like to have a glimpse into some of Mme. Secretary’s activities for the next few days. This comes, not from some social calendar, though. It is from P.J. Crowley’s press briefing today.
Philip J. CrowleyAssistant Secretary
Daily Press BriefingWashington, DCNovember 24, 2010MR. CROWLEY: First of all, happy Wednesday and, one day early, Happy Thanksgiving to everyone. Just to kind of set expectations, under current thinking, we will not brief on Friday. We will, through the next four days, keep you updated through various forums, including Twitter. We would expect the Secretary to have a series of calls in the coming days with her counterparts, expect, for the most part, with counterparts discussing the situation in North Korea. I think Mark flagged for you yesterday that we have calls pending with her counterparts from Japan and Korea. I wouldn’t rule out other discussions as well.
We’re mindful that Friday is the anniversary of the attack in Mumbai. I would expect that we’ll have a statement to put out. Maybe we’ll try to put that out sometime tomorrow so that it can be reported for Friday in India. But – not that there’s anything coming up this weekend, but we will be available to you during the weekend as we anticipate an emerging story, shall we say.