Posts Tagged ‘Robert Gates’
Video: Press Briefing on New Nuclear Posture
Posted in Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Secretary of State, U. S. Department of Defense, U.S. Department of State, Uncategorized, tagged Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Mike Mullen, Robert Gates, Secretary of State, State Department, U. S. Department of Defense, U.S. Department of State on April 6, 2010| Leave a Comment »
Upcoming: On Hillary Clinton’s Agenda
Posted in Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Secretary of State, U.S. Department of State, tagged AIPAC, Espinosa, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Israel, Middle East, Napolitano, Pakistan, Qureshi, Robert Gates, Secretary of State, State Department, U.S. Department of State on March 20, 2010| 3 Comments »
We all hope the Secretary of State is getting some rest after her very busy week past since she has another taxing week ahead of her! Piecing it together from a variety of press releases from the past week, here are a few events to look forward to over the coming week.
First thing Monday morning. (I used this picture because Bibi Netanyahu has not done much to make her smile lately. She looks beautiful, but firm).
Secretary Clinton to Deliver Remarks to AIPAC on Monday, March 22
Washington, DCMarch 19, 2010
Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton will deliver remarks to the American Israel Public Affairs Committee Annual Policy Conference Monday, March 22 at 9:10 a.m. at the Washington Convention Center.
AIPAC’s annual policy conference will bring approximately 7,000 of its supporters to Washington, D.C. March 21-23, 2010. For more information on the 2010 AIPAC Policy Conference, click here.
The Secretary’s remarks will be open to press coverage and live-streamed on www.aipac.org.
Rapidly followed by:
Secretary Clinton to Deliver Remarks on World Water Day on March 22, 2010
Washington, DC
March 19, 2010Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton will deliver remarks on World Water Day at the National Geographic Society, in Washington, D.C. at 10:00 a.m. Under Secretary for Democracy and Global Affairs Maria Otero will introduce Secretary Clinton. The event is co-hosted by National Geographic and Water Advocates.
One out of every six people lacks safe drinking water and two out of every five people lack adequate sanitation. By 2025, nearly two-thirds of the world’s population will be living under water stressed conditions and approximately one billion people will face absolute water scarcity. Implications are widespread ranging from health, gender equity, child survival and education to the environment, poverty and peace and security. World Water Day raises public consciousness of these challenges and seeks to ensure that safe, affordable and sustainable drinking water, sanitation and hygiene is accessible for all people around the world.
National Geographic Society
Grosvenor Auditorium
1600 M Street NW
Washington, DC 20036This event will be open to the press and live-streamed on http://www.state.gov
I found this little related tidbit in a news feed.
Netanyahu to meet Gates, possibly also Clinton
Published: 03.20.10, 20:14 / Israel News // Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will meet with US Defense Secretary Robert Gates on Monday, during his visit in Washington. It is also highly possible that the prime minister will meet with US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton during his US visit.Netanyahu sent a letter to the US administration detailing Israeli gestures to the US and the Palestinians. (Roni Sofer
Then it’s off to Mexico. The Secretary of State will lead a high-powered delegation of cabinet members to a conference south of the border.
Secretary Clinton Leads Cabinet-Level Delegation to Mexico
Philip J. Crowley
Assistant Secretary, Bureau of Public Affairs
Washington, DC
March 17, 2010Secretary of State Hillary Clinton will travel to Mexico City, Mexico for the Merida U.S.-Mexico High Level Consultative Group meeting on March 23, 2010. The Secretary will be joined by Secretary of Defense Robert M. Gates; Secretary of Homeland Security Janet A. Napolitano; Director of National Intelligence Dennis Blair; Assistant to the President for Homeland Security and Counterterrorism John O. Brennan; Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Admiral Michael G. Mullen; Immigration and Customs Enforcement Assistant Secretary for Homeland Security John Morton; Acting Deputy Attorney General Gary G. Grindler; Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) Director Adam Szubin; Office of National Drug Control Policy Acting Deputy Director of the Office of Supply Reduction Patrick Ward; and Drug Enforcement Administration Acting Administrator Michele M. Leonhart.
This is the second formal meeting of the High Level Consultative Group and has been in preparation for several months; the first was held in Washington in December 2008. Secretary Clinton and Mexican Foreign Secretary Patricia Espinosa will chair an interagency discussion on the evolution of the Merida Initiative that focuses on enhanced engagement in support of our shared goals of breaking the power of drug trafficking organizations; strengthening the rule of law, democratic institutions and respect for human rights; creating a 21st century border; and building strong and resilient communities.
But that will be only a day-long visit since she has a big day ahead on Wednesday.
The United States and Pakistan Strategic Dialogue
Office of the Spokesman
Washington, DC
March 17, 2010On March 24, the United States and Pakistan will hold their first Strategic Dialogue at the Ministerial level in Washington, DC. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and Foreign Minister Makhdoom Shah Mahmood Qureshi will co-chair the talks. Topics for discussion will include economic development, water and energy, education, communications and public diplomacy, agriculture, and security. High-level officials from both governments will come to the table to discuss issues of common concern and shared responsibility.
President Obama and Secretary Clinton have repeatedly stressed the breadth and depth of the U.S.-Pakistan relationship, a partnership that goes far beyond security. The Strategic Dialogue represents the shared commitment of both nations to a strengthening the bilateral relationship and building an even broader partnership based on mutual respect and mutual trust.
**UPDATED W/ TRANSCRIPTS**Secretaries Clinton and Gates on Meet the Press and This week.
Posted in Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Secretary of State, U. S. Department of Defense, U.S. Department of State, Uncategorized, tagged Afghanistan, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Robert Gates, Secretary of Defense, Secretary of State, State Department, U. S. Department of Defense, U.S. Department of State on December 6, 2009| 2 Comments »
Here is the MTP video.
Vodpod videos no longer available.more about “Secretaries Clinton and Gates on Meet…“, posted with vodpod
Interview With David Gregory of NBC’s Meet The Press
Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of State
Secretary of Defense Robert Gates
Washington, DC
December 5, 2009QUESTION: But first, here they are. Secretary of Defense Robert Gates, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, welcome both of you back to Meet The Press.
SECRETARY CLINTON: Thank you.
QUESTION: So much of the heat of this debate this week was not about the going in, but about the getting out. This is what the President said about the scope of this mission:
“These additional American and international troops will allow us to accelerate handing over responsibility to Afghan forces, and allow us to begin the transfer of our forces out of Afghanistan in July of 2001.”
QUESTION: Secretary Gates, is this a deadline?
SECRETARY GATES: It’s the beginning of a process. In July 2011, our generals are confident that they will know whether our strategy is working. The plan is to begin transferring areas of responsibility for security over to the Afghan security forces, with us remaining in a tactical and then strategic overwatch position, sort of the cavalry over the hill. But we will begin to thin our forces and begin to bring them home, but the pace of that, of bringing them home, and where we bring them home from, will depend on the circumstances on the ground, and those judgments will be made by our commanders in the field.
QUESTION: Regardless of the circumstances, though, what you’re saying is that withdrawal will take place at that point?
SECRETARY GATES: It will begin in July of 2011, but how quickly it goes will very much depend on the conditions on the ground. We will have a significant number of forces in there for some considerable period of time after that.
QUESTION: You both, of course, this week, have taken tough questions about this issue of a deadline and whether that’s a bad thing to signal up front. Three years ago, Secretary Gates, you were asked on Capitol Hill about another war, another debate, another timeline. That was about Iraq. And Secretary Clinton, you were asked as senator back in 2005 the same question about Iraq and timelines for withdrawal. This is what you both said back then:
SENATOR GRAHAM: Do you believe if we set timetables or a policy to withdraw at a date certain, it would be seen by the extremists as a sign of weakness, the moderates would be disheartened, and it would create a tremendous impediment to the moderate forces coming forward in Iraq?
SECRETARY GATES: I think a specific timetable would give – would essentially tell them how long they have to wait until we’re gone.
SENATOR CLINTON: We don’t want to send a signal to the insurgents, to the terrorists that we are going to be out of here at some date certain. I think that would be like a green light to go ahead and just bide your time.
QUESTION: That was about Iraq. Why are your views different when it comes to Afghanistan?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Because we’re not talking about an exit strategy or a drop-dead deadline. What we’re talking about is an assessment that, in January 2011, we can begin a transition, a transition to hand off responsibility to the Afghan forces. That is what eventually happened in Iraq.
We’re going to be out of Iraq. We have a firm deadline, because the Iraqis believe that they can assume and will assume responsibility for their own future. We want the Afghans to feel the same sense of urgency. We want them to actually make good on what President Karzai said in his inaugural speech, which is that by five years from now, they’ll have total control for their defense.
QUESTION: But this is a time certain. Secretary Gates, you just said that the withdrawal will begin, regardless of conditions. The pace of withdrawal could be affected. This is a date certain. And when it came to Iraq, you thought that was a bad idea.
SECRETARY GATES: I was opposed to a deadline in Iraq, and if you’d listen to what I said, that that was a date certain to have all of our forces out of Iraq. I am opposed to that in Afghanistan as well. But I believe that there is an important element here of balancing, sending a signal of resolve, but also giving the Afghan Government a sense of urgency that they need to get their young men recruited, trained, and into the field, partnering with our forces and then on their own. And so I think that the beginning of this process in July 2011 makes a lot of sense, because the other side of it is open.
QUESTION: What kind of casualties should Americans be prepared to suffer in Afghanistan with this new strategy?
SECRETARY GATES: Well, the tragedy is that the casualties will probably continue to grow, at least for the time being. This is what we saw in the surge in Iraq. But it’s because they’re going into places where the Taliban essentially have controlled the territory and upsetting the apple cart, if you will. And what happened in Iraq is what we anticipate will happen here. We’ll have an increase in casualties at the front end of this process, but over time, it will actually lead to fewer casualties.
QUESTION: Secretary Clinton, what happens if the strategy isn’t working in 18 months time?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, first, David, we obviously believe that it will work. We have spent a lot of time testing all the assumptions. Our commanders have a lot of confidence that it will work. But the President has said, and we agree, that we will take stock of where we are every month. We’re not going to wait. We’re going to be looking to see what’s happening.
Now, we’ve had the Marines that were sent in. Remember, this President inherited a situation where we had basically lost ground to the Taliban. The war in Afghanistan, unfortunately, was lost in the fog of the war in Iraq. And the President put in troops when he first got there, and then said, “But let’s make sure we know where we’re headed, and how to get there.”
And so we’re going to continue to evaluate as we go. But the Marines went into Helmand Province last July, and Bob can tell you that the reports are that they’re making real headway. So we have confidence in this strategy.
QUESTION: The issue of what was inherited came up this week. The President very pointedly said, Secretary Gates, that reinforcements that were requested of the Bush Administration on your watch were not provided, and that he provided them when he came into office. Is that true?
SECRETARY GATES: There was, throughout my time as Secretary of Defense under President Bush, an outstanding request from General McKiernan. And as Admiral Mullen, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, testified repeatedly, we just, because of the commitment of forces in Iraq, we did not have the ability to meet the resource needs in Afghanistan.
QUESTION: So you don’t have any problem with that statement?
SECRETARY GATES: No. There was an outstanding troop request, and on my watch.
QUESTION: Let’s talk about the mission, and I want to chart a little bit of the evolution of the President’s public statements about this.
Going back to July of 2008, during the campaign, when he talked about America’s commitment to Afghanistan, watch this:
“The Afghan people must know that our commitment to their future is enduring, because the security of Afghanistan and the United States is shared.”
QUESTION: And yet Tuesday, when he spoke to the country, he seemed to dismiss the notion of what he called an open-ended commitment or an enduring commitment to Afghanistan, saying this:
“Some call for a more dramatic and open-ended escalation of our war effort. I reject this course because it sets goals that are beyond what can be achieved at a reasonable cost, and what we need to achieve to secure our interests.”
QUESTION: Secretary Clinton, has the President concluded, as President now, that in Afghanistan, the war on terrorism needs to be downsized?
SECRETARY CLINTON: No. And I think, David, there is no contradiction between the two statements you just played. We will have an enduring commitment to Afghanistan. We’re going to be putting in combat troops. We are going to be joined by 42 partners. We just got a commitment of an additional 7,000 troops from our NATO ISAF allies. And we will most likely be continuing, once our combat responsibilities have ended, in whatever support for the Afghan security forces in terms of training, logistics, intelligence, that will enable them to do what they need to do.
At the same time, we will have an ongoing civilian commitment to Afghanistan. So, yes, we don’t have an open-ended combat commitment. We think we have a strategy that will create the space and time for the Afghans to stand up their own security forces and take responsibility. But we’re not going to be walking away from Afghanistan again. We did that before. It didn’t turn out very well.
So we will stay involved, we will stay supportive, and I think that’s exactly the right approach.
QUESTION: But if you have a situation where you’re going to begin the withdrawal of troops, regardless of conditions on the ground, some critics see that as weakness, and a bad sign to the enemy.
One of your former colleagues, the former Vice President Dick Cheney, said this to POLITICO this week about the President’s speech. Cheney said the average Afghan citizen “sees talk about exit strategies and how soon we can get out, instead of talk about how we win. Those folks begin to look for ways to accommodate their enemies,” Cheney said. “They’re worried the United States isn’t going to be there much longer and the bad guys are.”
And if you look at some of the response from Pakistan, the very country we need to get to the baddest of the guys who are over in their country with al-Qaida, there is this, as reported by the New York Times: “Washington’s assertion that American troops could begin leaving in 18 months provoked anxiety in Afghanistan, and rekindled longstanding fears in Pakistan that America would abruptly withdraw, leaving Pakistan to fend for itself. Both countries face intertwined Taliban insurgencies regarding the new policy of President Obama, we’re studying that policy,” Pakistani Prime Minister Yousuf Gilani said. “We need more clarity on it, and when we get more clarity on it, we can see what we can implement on that plan.”
Is what former Vice President Cheney is worrying about, is that already starting to take place in terms of the attitude in Pakistan?
SECRETARY GATES: Well, first of all, we’re not talking about an abrupt withdrawal. We’re talking about something that will take place over a period of time.
We – our commanders think that these additional forces – and one of the reasons for the President’s decision to try and accelerate their deployment is the view that this extended surge has the opportunity to make significant gains in terms of reversing the momentum of the Taliban, denying them control of Afghan territory, and degrading their capabilities. Our military thinks we have a real opportunity to do that.
And it’s not just in the next 18 months, because we will have a significant – we will have a hundred thousand forces – troops there. And they are not leaving in July of 2011. Some handful or some small number, or whatever the conditions permit, will begin to withdraw at that time.
The piece of this that people need to keep in mind that’s different from Iraq is our need to communicate a sense of urgency to the Afghans of their need to begin to accept responsibility. The Iraqis, after it was clear that the surge was working, clearly wanted us out of the country as fast as possible. In the case of the Afghans, there are those – not everybody, and not a lot of the people, but there are those who would love to have the United States Army stay there in this very rough neighborhood indefinitely. And we want to communicate the message we will not provide for their security forever. They have to step up to that responsibility.
QUESTION: There seems to be an important point. Beyond July of 2011, there is going to be a significant amount of U.S. troops there. There’s going to be about a hundred thousand once this surge is finished. How many more years should Americans expect to have a significant force presence in Afghanistan?
SECRETARY GATES: Well, I think that – again, I don’t want to put a deadline on it, okay? But I think that just picking up on President Karzai’s statements in his inaugural address, he talked about taking over security control in three years of important areas of Afghanistan, and all of Afghanistan in five years. I think that we’re in that neighborhood, two to three to four years.
But again, during that period, we will be, just as we did in Iraq, turning over provinces to Afghan security forces, and that will allow us to bring the number of our forces down in a steady, but conditions-based circumstance.
QUESTION: We are also, in a more covert way that’s not very well kept as a secret, at war in Pakistan as well. The real al-Qaida figures – Usama bin Ladin, Mullah Omar, the Hakani network, the baddest of the bad – are in Pakistan and not Afghanistan. What are the Pakistanis prepared to do to destroy them?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, David, I think what we’ve seen over the course of this year is a sea change in attitude by the Pakistanis. If we had been sitting here a year ago and you had asked what they were going to do, there wouldn’t be much of an answer. Now we can say they’re beginning to go after the terrorists who are threatening their very existence as a sovereign nation. They’ve had two military campaigns in the space of the last eight months, and they are making real progress.
What we are discussing and consulting with them over is how all of these groups are now a threat to them. There is a syndicate of terrorism, with al-Qaida at the head of it. So we’re doing everything we can to support them in what is a, really, life-or-death struggle. I mean, they just blew up – the terrorists just blew up a mosque in Rawalpindi filled with military officers. These terrorists, with al-Qaida’s funding, encouragement, training, equipping, is going right at the Pakistani Government.
QUESTION: Can a mission be accomplished without capturing Usama bin Ladin?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, I really believe it’s important to capture and/or kill Usama bin Ladin, Zawahiri, the others who are part of that leadership team. But certainly, you can make enormous progress absent that.
QUESTION: I want to talk a little bit about history, a history you know well, Secretary Gates, in your work in this region, going back decades. This was the editorial in The New York Times days after the Soviet invasion in 1979. I’ll put it up on the screen.
“Moscow’s Backyard Quagmire. By intervening so strongly on behalf of a wobbly Afghan client, the Soviet Union appears to be sinking deeper into a backyard quagmire.”
A lot of questions about the Afghan client today. You have said, and along this process, you were worried about putting more troops in. You said the Soviets had 110,000 committed there and they couldn’t win. Why is it different now? Isn’t this mission impossible?
SECRETARY GATES: It’s pretty straightforward. First of all, the Soviets were trying to impose an alien culture and political system on Afghanistan. But more importantly, they were there terrorizing the Afghans. They killed a million Afghans. They made refugees out of 5 million Afghans. They were isolated internationally.
All of those factors are different for us, completely different. We have the sanction of the UN, we have the sanction of NATO, we have the invitation of the Afghan Government itself, we have 42 military partners in Afghanistan, we are supporting and protecting the Afghan people.
One of the central themes of General McChrystal’s strategy is to reduce and keep civilian casualties low. And so it’s a very different situation. And what General McChrystal persuaded me of was that the size of the footprint matters a lot less than what they’re doing there. And the new strategy that he’s put in place in terms of how we deal with the Afghans and how we behave, I think, will make a big difference.
QUESTION: I want to bring it back home and ask you a very important political question, Secretary Clinton. You have heard the reaction from the Democratic Party, liberals using terms like “echoes of Vietnam,” that this is risky, that this is a gamble. Vietnam War protester Tom Hayden talked about the immorality of fighting for a regime like – that is currently in place in Afghanistan.
You’ve been on the campaign trail running for president. You’re a former senator. You know the politics of your party well. What is the message of this President to those Democrats who are not on board? And can you effectively prosecute this war without the base of the party behind it?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, David, I think it’s clear to anyone who has followed this that President Obama has done what he thinks is right for the country. He is well aware of the political concerns raised that you have just described. I think he deserves a lot of credit for not only delving into this and asking the hard questions, but coming to a decision that has both political and economic costs, but which he has concluded is in our vital national security interest.
I think that we have to look more broadly at what has gone on in Afghanistan. Yes – are there problems with the current government? Of course there are, as there are with any government. We deal with a lot of governments that are hardly poster children for good governance.
But look at what has happened. When President Karzai came into office, there were about a million kids in school, and they were all boys. There are now 7 million, and they’re 40 percent girls. There is, all of a sudden, a wheat harvest because of better seeds and fertilizer that is giving people, once again, income from their land. There are so many positive examples of what has changed.
Of course, there is a lot of work to be done. I mean, good grief, this country was devastated by three decades of the most brutal kind of war. It’s recovering. And as Bob has said, they really do want a different future.
QUESTION: But is – but the politics of this, the cost of this, will there have to be a war tax? What will you do to keep the Democrats in line on this?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, the President has said he will make sure that the cost of the war is accounted for in the budget. It is an additional expense. Everybody knows that. And we have so many important demands here at home.
We would not be pursuing this strategy if we did not believe it was directly connected to the safety of our people, our interests, our allies around the world. And I just hope that a lot of my friends who are raising questions – Bob and I heard them when we were up there testifying – will really pay attention to the rationale behind the President doing this.
QUESTION: Secretary Gates, you are a hard-nosed realist about this region and about this struggle going back decades. Is failure an option in Afghanistan?
SECRETARY GATES: No, I don’t think it can be given the nature of the terror network that Secretary Clinton referred to. But we will be monitoring our progress, and be willing to adjust our strategy if there are issues. We are not just going to plunge blindly ahead if it becomes clear that what we’re doing isn’t working.
I mean, there are some other alternatives. We frankly didn’t think that the outcome of the long discussions that we had was that those outcomes were probably less likely to work than what we have chosen. We think and recommended to the President a strategy that he has decided on that we believe – all of us, including the uniformed military and our commanders in the field – offers the very best chance for our success. And we’re – and that’s what we’re going to count on.
QUESTION: Well, you say failure is not an option. The President has said we will fight this fight and fight it hard, only up to a certain point.
SECRETARY GATES: And then we begin to transfer the responsibility to the Afghans. And a lot can happen in 18 months.
QUESTION: You said when you were last on this program back in March that you considered it a challenge, the notion that you might stay on for the entire first term as Secretary of Defense. What do you say now?
SECRETARY GATES: I’d say that’s a challenge. (Laughter.)
QUESTION: Will you see this war through, the withdrawal of troops through?
SECRETARY GATES: I think that’s probably up to the President.
QUESTION: All right. Thank you both very much.
SECRETARY CLINTON: Thank you, David.
ABC does not provide an embed code. Here is the transcript of This Week with George Stephanopoulos, and here is the link to the video.

Interview With George Stephanopoulos of ABC’s “This Week With George Stephanopoulos”
Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of State
Secretary of Defense Robert Gates
Washington, DC
December 5, 2009QUESTION: And we begin with the cornerstones of President Obama’s national security cabinet, the Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, Secretary of Defense Robert Gates. Welcome to you both. This is the first time you’re here together on This Week. Thanks for doing it.
SECRETARY CLINTON: (Laughter.) The first time we’ve been called cornerstones.
QUESTION: (Laughter.) Secretary Gates, let me begin with you, because there’s been so much focus since the President’s speech on this call to begin an exit strategy in July 2011, and I want to show you what Senator McCain said earlier this week.
SENATOR MCCAIN: When conditions on the ground have decisively begun to change for the better, that is when our troops should start to return home with honor – not one minute longer, not one minute sooner, and certainly not on some arbitrary date in July 2011.
QUESTION: Just two months ago, you seemed to agree with that sentiment. You called the notion of timelines and exit strategies a strategic mistake. What changed?
SECRETARY GATES: Well, first of all, I don’t consider this an exit strategy, and I try to avoid using that term. I think —
QUESTION: Why not?
SECRETARY GATES: — this is a transition. This is a transition that’s going to take place, and it’s not an arbitrary date. It will be two years since the Marines went into southern Helmand, and that – two years that our military leaders believe would give us time to know that our strategy is working. They believe that in that time, General McChrystal will have the opportunity to demonstrate decisively in certain areas of Afghanistan that the approach we’re taking is working. Obviously, the transition will begin in the less contested areas of the country, but it will be the same kind of gradual, conditions-based transition – province by province, district by district – that we saw in Iraq.
QUESTION: We’ve heard that phrase a lot.
SECRETARY GATES: It begins – but it begins in July, not 2011.
QUESTION: No – and I understand that, but you talk about this conditions-based decision making and I guess that’s – it’s a fairly vague term. So if the strategy is working, do the troops stay? If it’s not working, do they leave? How is the decision-making process going to go?
SECRETARY GATES: Well, from my standpoint, the decision in terms of when a district or a cluster of districts or a province is ready to be turned over to the Afghan security forces is a judgment that will be made by our commanders on the ground, not here in Washington. And we will do the same thing we did in Iraq. When we transition to Afghan security responsibility, we will withdraw in – first into tactical overwatch, and then a strategic overwatch – if you will, the cavalry over the hill – in case they run into trouble.
QUESTION: And this certainly increases the leverage on President Karzai and his government, Secretary Clinton, which brings up questions similar to questions that were raised by a lot of Democrats during – after the Iraq surge, including President Obama when he was a senator. He asked Secretary Rice, basically, what happens if the Maliki government doesn’t live up to its promises.
SENATOR OBAMA: Are there any circumstances that you can articulate in which we would say to the Maliki government that enough is enough and we are no longer committing our troops?
QUESTION: A lot of people asking the same exact question today about President Karzai. At what point do we say enough is enough; we’re no longer going to commit troops?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, George, I understand the desire to ask these questions which are all thrown into the future. They’re obviously matters of concern about how we have a good partner as we move forward in Afghanistan. But I think you have to look at what President Karzai said in his inaugural speech, where he said that Afghan security forces would begin to take responsibility for important parts of the country within three years, and that they would be responsible for everything within five years.
And from our perspective, we think we have a strategy that is a good, integrated approach. It’s civilian and military. It’s been extremely, thoroughly analyzed. But we have to begin to implement it with the kind of commitment that we all feel toward it. I can’t predict everything that’s going to happen with President Karzai. I came away from my meeting with him around the inauguration heartened by a lot of what he was saying, but the proof is in the pudding. We’re going to have to wait to see how it unfolds.
QUESTION: But if you’re really going to have maximum leverage, doesn’t he have to know that if he doesn’t live up to the commitment, we’re going to go?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, I think he knows that we have a commitment to trying to protect our national security. That’s why we’re there. We do want to assist the people of Afghanistan and to try to improve the capacity of the Afghan Government. But I think it’s important to stress that this decision was based on what we believe is best for the United States, and we have to have a realistic view of who we’re working with in Afghanistan, and it’s not only President Karzai. It’s ministers of various agencies that – some of which are doing quite well and producing good results. It’s provincial and local leaders. So it’s a much more complicated set of players than just one person.
QUESTION: There’s also the question of Pakistan, the neighbor, and whether they’re living up to their commitments. You got in a little hot water in Pakistan when you suggested that they hadn’t been doing enough in the past to go after the Taliban.
And Secretary Gates, let me turn the question about this to you. It’s connected to a report that Senator Kerry, the chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, released this week about Usama bin Ladin. He suggested that the failure to block his exit from Tora Bora has made the situation there much worse. In his report, he actually wrote that the decisions that opened the door for his escape to Pakistan allowed bin Ladin to emerge as a potent symbolic figure who continues to attract a steady flow of money and inspire fanatics worldwide.
The Pakistani prime minister sort of shrugged off any concerns about that this week about whether or not he had gone – done enough to go after Usama bin Ladin. He said he doesn’t believe Usama is in Pakistan. Is he right? And do you think the Pakistanis have done enough to get him?
SECRETARY GATES: Well, we don’t know for a fact where Usama bin Ladin is. If we did, we’d go get him. But —
QUESTION: When was the last time we had any good intelligence on (inaudible)?
SECRETARY GATES: I think it’s been years.
QUESTION: Years?
SECRETARY GATES: I think so.
QUESTION: So these reports that came out just this week about a detainee saying he might have seen him in Afghanistan earlier this year —
SECRETARY GATES: No, no, that’s —
QUESTION: We can’t confirm that?
SECRETARY GATES: No.
QUESTION: So do you believe that one of the reasons we haven’t had good enough intelligence is because the Pakistani Government has not been cooperating enough?
SECRETARY GATES: No. I think it’s because if, as we suspect, he is in North Waziristan, it is an area that the Pakistani Government has not had a presence in, in quite some time. The truth of the matter is that we have been very impressed by the Pakistanis’ army – the Pakistani army’s willingness to go into places like Swat and South Waziristan. If one had asked any of us a year or more ago if the Pakistani army would be doing that, we would have said no chance. And so they are bringing pressure to bear on the Taliban in Pakistan, and particularly those that are attacking the Pakistani Government. But frankly, any pressure on the Taliban, whether it’s in Pakistan or in Afghanistan, is helpful to us, because al-Qaida is working with both of them.
QUESTION: You mentioned the actions the Pakistani Government has taken. Is Baluchistan next? Is that where they have to go next to take out the Taliban?
SECRETARY GATES: Well, I think that the Pakistani Government – we sometimes tend to forget that Pakistan, like Afghanistan, is a sovereign country. And Pakistani – the Pakistani army will go where the Pakistani army thinks the threat is. And if they think that threat’s in Baluchistan, that’s where they’ll go. If they think it’s in North Waziristan, they may go up there. Or they may just winter in where they are right now. But these are calls that the Pakstanis make. We are sharing information with them. We have had a steadily developing, better relationship between our militaries. And we will help them in any way we possibly can. But that’s their call.
QUESTION: Back to Afghanistan, Secretary Clinton. Some have suggested that your – one of your envoys, the President’s envoy Richard Holbrooke should begin negotiations with those elements of the Taliban who are willing to talk to him. Do you agree with that?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, George, we have said, and the President made it clear in his speech at West Point, that there are two different approaches here. One is what could be called reintegration, and that is really looking at the lower-level members of the Taliban who are there through intimidation and coercion, or frankly, because it’s a better living that they can make anyway – anywhere else. We think there’s a real opportunity for a number of those to be persuaded to leave the battlefield.
Now, the problem, of course – once they leave and we have a lot of evidence of this, they’ll get killed if they’re not protected. And that’s one of the reasons why we’re trying to get these secure zones.
QUESTION: Because they don’t believe we’ll stay?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, and also just – we need to secure the population. It’s one of General McChrystal’s principal objectives. Then the upper levels of the Taliban – look, they have to renounce al-Qaida, renounce violence. They have to be willing to abide by the constitution of Afghanistan and live peacefully. We have no firm information whether any of those leaders would be at all interested in following that kind of a path. In fact, I’m highly skeptical that any of them would. So we’re going to be consulting with our Afghan partners. It’s going to be a multiply run operation to see who might come off of the battlefield and who might possibly give up their allegiance to the Taliban and their connection with al-Qaida.
QUESTION: But high-level negotiations are possible?
SECRETARY CLINTON: We don’t know yet. And again, I think that we asked Mullah Omar to give up bin Ladin before we went into Afghanistan after 9/11. He wouldn’t do it. I don’t know why we think he would have changed by now.
SECRETARY GATES: Let me just add I think that the likelihood of the leadership of the Taliban or senior leaders being willing to accept the conditions Secretary Clinton just talked about depends, in the first instance, on reversing their momentum right now and putting them in a position where they suddenly begin to realize that they’re likely to lose.
QUESTION: How is this offense in Helmand Province going?
SECRETARY GATES: It’s actually going very well, and the Marines have already had – I think one of the reasons that our military leaders are pretty confident is that they have already begun to see changes where the Marines are present in southern Helmand.
QUESTION: Let me talk about a question of cost, which has been raised by our next guest. Senator Russ Feingold, as you know, is against the escalation announced by the President, but he’s also gone on and wrote a letter to the President where he raises – where he says “We request that you not send any additional troops to Afghanistan until Congress has enacted appropriations to pay for the cost of such an increase, and that you propose reductions in spending to pay for the cost of any military operations in Afghanistan, a concern shared by many of the American people.”
Secretary Clinton, shouldn’t this war, if we’re going to fight it, be paid for?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, the President has said that the costs are going to be accounted for, that the Office of Management and Budget, the Defense Department, the State Department are going to be working to make sure that we give the best projections of costs we can. I think that we’re going to have to address our deficit situation across the board; there’s no doubt about that, and I certainly support that. But I think we have to look at the entire budget and we have to be very clear about what the costs are.
As Secretary Gates has said a couple of times in our testimony together, we are drawing down from Iraq. There will be savings over the next two to three years coming from there. And the addition of these troops is going to put a burden on us, no doubt about it. It is manageable, but we have to look at all of our fiscal situation and begin to address it.
QUESTION: There’s also the question of the cost-benefit analysis, and a lot of people look at our own U.S. Government intelligence estimates, saying there are fewer than a hundred active al-Qaida in Afghanistan and say, why is that worth putting $30 billion more this year into Afghanistan?
SECRETARY GATES: It is because in that border area – Afghan-Pakistani border – that is the epicenter of extremist Jihad. And al-Qaida has close relationships with the Taliban in Afghanistan, and they have very close relationships with the Taliban in Pakistan. The Taliban in Pakistan have been attacking Pakistani civilians, Pakistani Government officials, military officials, trying to destabilize the Government of Pakistan. Any success by the Taliban in either Afghanistan or Pakistan benefits al-Qaida, and any safe haven on either side of the border creates opportunities for them to recruit, get new funds, and do operational planning.
And what’s more, the Taliban revival in the safe havens in western Pakistan is a lesson to al-Qaida that they can come back if they are provided the kind of safe haven that the Taliban were. This is the place where the Jihadists defeated the Soviet Union, one superpower. And they believe – their narrative is that it helped create the collapse of the Soviet Union. If – they believe that if they can defeat us in Afghanistan, that they then have the opportunity to defeat a second superpower —
QUESTION: But if you look at that —
SECRETARY GATES: — and it creates huge opportunities for them in that area as well as around the world.
QUESTION: You were the deputy director of the CIA back in 1985 when Gorbachev made the decision to expand. Eighteen months later, he was pulling out. What’s to prevent that from happening again?
SECRETARY GATES: Well, what he did was agree with his generals to make one last push. But the parallel just doesn’t work. The reality is the Soviet Union invaded Afghanistan. They killed a million Afghans, they made 5 million refugees out of Afghanis, they were isolated in the world in terms of what they were doing there. We are part of an alliance that – of 42 countries with us, in addition to us, that are contributing troops. We have a UN mandate. We have a mandate from NATO. So you have broad international support for what’s going on in Afghanistan, and the situation is just completely different than was the case with the Soviet Union.
QUESTION: We’re just about out of time. Secretary Clinton, I want to ask you about the case of Amanda Knox, the American college student who was convicted of murder in Italy just on Friday. Senator Cantwell of Washington has expressed a lot of concerns about this conviction. She said she wants to talk to you about it.
Here is what she said: “I have serious questions about the Italian justice system and whether anti-Americanism tainted this trial. The prosecution did not present enough evidence for an impartial jury to conclude beyond a reasonable doubt that Ms. Knox was guilty. Italian jurors were not sequestered and were allowed to view highly negative news coverage about Ms. Knox.”
She goes on to lay out several of the concerns she had with the trial. She did say, as I said, she’s going to be in contact with you so you can express the concerns to the Italian Government. Do you share her concerns about this trial?
SECRETARY CLINTON: George, I honestly haven’t had time to even examine that. I have been immersed in what we’re doing in Afghanistan. Of course, I’ll meet with Senator Cantwell or anyone who has a concern, but I can’t offer any opinion about that at this time.
QUESTION: So you have not expressed any concerns to the Italian Government?
SECRETARY CLINTON: I have not, no.
QUESTION: Secretary Clinton, Secretary Gates, thank you both very much.
**UPDATED W/ TRANSCRIPT**Secretaries Clinton and Gates Face the Nation
Posted in Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Secretary of State, U. S. Department of Defense, U.S. Department of State, tagged Afghanistan, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Robert Gates, Secretary of Defense, Secretary of State, State Department, U. S. Department of Defense, U.S. Department of State on December 6, 2009| Leave a Comment »
Well, I hope everybody managed to see all three Sunday morning appearances. Here is Face the Nation.
Vodpod videos no longer available.
Interview With Bob Schieffer of CBS’s Face the Nation
Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of State
Secretary of Defense Robert Gates
Washington, DC
December 5, 2009QUESTION: And joining us now in the studio, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Defense Secretary Robert Gates. I believe this is the first time we’ve ever had two cabinet officers in the studio at the same time, so thank you both for coming, but let’s get right to it. Tuesday night, the President made it pretty clear he is dispatching another 30,000 troops to Afghanistan, but for a limited time. Here is the way he put it:
“These additional American and international troops will allow us to accelerate handing over responsibility to Afghan forces and allow us to begin the transfer of our forces out of Afghanistan in July of 2011.”
But since he has said that, Mr. Secretary, you have said what the President has announced is the beginning of a process, not the end of a process. You have said this will be a gradual process and based on conditions on the ground, so there is no deadline for the withdrawal of American forces in Afghanistan. So what’s going on here?
SECRETARY GATES: Well, I think what we have – what the President has done here is a balance as signaling our commitment, and now, thanks to Secretary Clinton’s and others’ good work, NATO’s commitment to reenergize our efforts and to reverse the momentum —
QUESTION: But Mr. Secretary, is there a deadline or is there not?
SECRETARY GATES: There is not a deadline. There is – what we have is a specific date on which we will begin transferring responsibility for security, district by district, province by province, in Afghanistan to the Afghans. The process of that and the subsequent thinning of our forces will take place over a period of time and will happen – and will be done based on the conditions on the ground, and the decision on that will be made by our commanders in the field.
QUESTION: But does that mean, Madame Secretary, that American forces will still be there as we start beginning – that they’re not going to start bringing the troops home, we’re just going to begin handing over responsibility?
SECRETARY CLINTON: No, it means that as we assess the conditions on the ground, we will be transferring responsibility to the Afghans. And depending on the assessment at the time, that means some of our troops can begin coming home. I think that —
QUESTION: Can begin coming home?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Absolutely, can begin coming home.
QUESTION: But not will begin coming home?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, Bob, I really believe that the President was very clear in his speech. He said that we want to evidence both resolve and urgency at the same time. This is a very big commitment. The President engaged in a deliberative process that led to this decision, and he is resolved to do what he can with these new troops to break the momentum of the Taliban, to begin taking back territory, to stand up the Afghan security forces in an effective way, on a faster timetable, and that we believe, based on everything that’s going on, that Marines that are in southern Helmand Province got there in July of this year, they will have been there for two years. As Secretary Gates can tell you, they are making progress.
So it’s not an arbitrary time. It is an assessment based on what we see happening that, yes, we will be able to transfer responsibility and that will very likely mean some troops can come home.
QUESTION: But it’s – in other words, there’s not a deadline; is that what you’re saying? That we will look at what things – what’s going on on the ground, and then we’ll decide where to go from there?
SECRETARY GATES: Let’s be clear that the date in July 2011 to begin transferring security responsibility and thinning our troops and bringing them home is firm. What is conditions-based is the pacing at which our troops will come home and the pace at which we will turn over responsibility to the Afghans. And that will be based on conditions on the ground.
QUESTION: So we get to the month, the magic month, and he might decide to bring six troops home or something like that, and that would mean – that’s what he’s talking?
SECRETARY GATES: Or 6,000.
QUESTION: Or 6,000?
SECRETARY GATES: About —
QUESTION: But it might be six?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, Bob, I think it’s very hard for any of us to be armchair generals. (Laughter.)
QUESTION: Precisely. It’s —
SECRETARY CLINTON: What we have done and what the President’s direction to the commanders on the ground is, very clearly, we want this to move, we want it to move quickly, we want to show urgency about our aims here, and we do expect to start this transition in July 2011. And I think everybody is very clear about that. All of the generals are, we certainly are. But it’s hard to sit here today in Washington and predict exactly what that pace will be.
QUESTION: Well, that’s why I wondered why he put out this deadline.
SECRETARY GATES: I’ll tell you why. Because —
QUESTION: Because if there’s one thing we know – that you can’t predict what’s going to happen in a war.
SECRETARY GATES: The reason that he did, and I started to make this point earlier, is he was balancing a demonstration of resolve with also communicating a sense of urgency to the Afghan Government that they must step up to the plate in terms of recruiting their soldiers, training their soldiers, and getting their soldiers into the field, first to partner with us and our ISAF partners, and then on their own.
So it’s an effort to try and let the Afghans know that while we intend to have a relationship and support them for a long time, the nature of that relationship is going to begin to change in July of 2011. And as the security component comes down, the economic, development, and the political relationship will become a bigger part of the relationship. We are not going to abandon Afghanistan like we did in 1989, but the nature of the relationship will change.
QUESTION: Well —
SECRETARY CLINTON: And that also, Bob, is in keeping with what President Karzai said at his inauguration, because he said that he wanted to see Afghan troops taking responsibility for important parts of the country within three years and to have the total responsibility within five.
QUESTION: Well, let me just ask you this: What if there’s total chaos in 18 months, and what if the government has fallen in? Does that mean that we will still begin this process? I mean, what would we turn it over to?
SECRETARY GATES: Well, I think the key here is – first of all, it’s clearly a hypothetical, and if we thought that was going to be the case, I think we would have perhaps come to a different set of conclusions and the President would have made different decisions. Our military commanders are confident that they will have clear understanding by that time of whether the strategy is working or not. And if it’s not, then we obviously will have to reconsider the whole approach. But our commanders have the confidence and bought into this date as a realistic date in terms of when they will be able to make a judgment and begin this process of handing over security responsibility.
QUESTION: Let me ask you this: Former Vice President Cheney says anytime you start talking about leaving, that just emboldens the enemy; it causes the Afghans to begin to accommodate the enemy, because they get the idea that the bad guys are still going to be there, but we’re going to leave.
SECRETARY GATES: No. The reality is the Taliban read the newspapers, okay? They know what popular opinion is in Europe. They know what popular opinion is in the United States – you announce a date or not. They can tell as easily from reading the news media about political support for these kinds of undertakings themselves, and they always believe that they can outlast us.
The reality is, though, what are they going to do? Are they going to get more aggressive than they already are? We don’t think they can. If they lie low, that’s great news to us because it gives us some huge opportunities in Afghanistan. We think that we have the opportunity to engage these guys with the additional force we’re sending in, make a significant difference in 18 months, get enough additional Afghan troops and police trained that we can begin this gradual process of transitioning security.
QUESTION: Madame Secretary, let me ask you about one thing the President said. In his entire speech, he talked about handing over authority to the Afghans, but he never included the words “win” or “victory,” as far as I know in that speech. He just talked about avoiding an open-ended commitment. Have we given up trying to win? Do we think that’s no longer possible? Is victory no longer possible?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, Bob, I think he talked about success, and that’s what —
QUESTION: Yes.
SECRETARY CLINTON: — we’re looking toward. We do believe we can be successful.
QUESTION: Well, what is success?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, success is doing what we have set forth as our primary goal, which is to disrupt, dismantle, and defeat al-Qaida. It is also being able to stand up an Afghan security force so that they can defend themselves, and partnering with the Afghan Government and people so that they will not once again become a safe haven for terrorists.
And I think part of our very careful deliberation over the last months was to ask ourselves really hard questions like, okay, who is the enemy? Is it every young boy who is coerced into joining the Taliban or who decides he can make more money being a fighting member of the Taliban than he can being a member of the Afghan security army? We thought hard about that, and no, we don’t think so. We think those are people that actually, if we reverse and break the momentum of the Taliban, which we think can very well happen with the strategy that we’re pursuing, that a lot of these people are going to come back over. They don’t want to see the return of the Taliban. There is absolutely no evidence that Afghans are in any way supportive of that.
QUESTION: Will there be a civilian surge as well as a military surge?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Yes, there will be. In fact, there has been. We’ve tripled the number of civilians in Afghanistan. When this Administration came into office, there were about 320 civilians. They were on, most of them, six-month rotations. There was, in my view, not the kind of serious effort that needs to be demonstrated to the civilian aspect of our strategy. And we’ve changed that and we’re going to keep building it.
QUESTION: The President made it clear that we expect the Karzai government to improve its performance and clean up corruption. How will we know, and what will we do if he doesn’t?
SECRETARY GATES: Secretary Clinton made this point pretty clearly in our hearings this week. The reality is that the Karzai government has been painted with too broad a brush. The reality is we have several ministries – interior, defense, agriculture, education, some others – where you have very competent, honest ministers that are doing a darn good job. We also have governors in important provinces that are making a big difference, that are honest and —
QUESTION: But what if he appoints a crook to one of those province —
SECRETARY GATES: Well, we —
QUESTION: — governors jobs? Do we then cut off the aid to that province, or what do we do?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, Bob, we’ve said very clearly that our aid is going to be based on a certification of accountability and transparency, so there are certain ministries we will not – American money will not be going to. We’ve looked at every civilian assistance program and contract, and we’ve said, look, we’re not going to just aid and abet bad behavior. So we will be putting the money where, as Bob said, we think we’ve got people who are doing a good job. And they are. And so part of the challenge here is to begin to make the more difficult, complicated assessments that were not made before.
SECRETARY GATES: I would just like to add one other point, and that is we – one of the refinements in this strategy is that we are not doing full-scale nation building. What we are going to do is focus on the ministries that matter to our success and that contribute to the success of our strategy, both with respect to al-Qaida and stabilizing the security situation.
QUESTION: Let’s just take a break right here and we’ll come back and continue this. We want to talk about NATO, because you’re just back from NATO. Back in a minute.
(Break.)
QUESTION: And we’re back now with Secretary Clinton and Secretary Gates. You are just back from Europe. NATO has pledged 7,000 troops.
SECRETARY CLINTON: Right.
QUESTION: Let me ask you, Madame Secretary, what will these troops be able to do? Are these going to be fighting troops, are they trainers? What are they?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, they’re everything we need. They are combat troops, they’re trainers, they’re support and logistical troops. I think what we saw at NATO —
QUESTION: How many are combat troops?
SECRETARY CLINTON: You know what? It’s a little hard to give you that number because combat troops are also training troops. I mean, that’s one of the distinctions we want —
QUESTION: I mean, how many are combat and trainers, then? Because —
SECRETARY CLINTON: The majority of them are. The majority of them, yes.
QUESTION: So a lot of the troops that have gone to Afghanistan have been basically there to hold our hats while we do the hard work?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, but a lot of them have really fought and they’ve sacrificed and they’ve lost people too. We’ve had some extraordinary partnerships with a number of our allies, and what was significant about these new contributions is the vote of confidence that it displayed in this strategy. We know that this is not politically popular in our country or any country, but for the leaders of our NATO allies and our other partners in the International Security Force, ISAF, to say we really believe this is the right thing to do, we do see it as affecting our national security, and we want to be in – we started this fight together, we want to continue it and finish it together – was a reflection of the work that we’ve done all year to rebuild these relationships. The President has made that —
QUESTION: Is there (inaudible) more coming?
SECRETARY CLINTON: — a clear priority. I do. I do think there will be more coming.
SECRETARY GATES: And the fact is with this pledge of 7,000, that will be 50,000 non-U.S. troops in Afghanistan. That is not a trivial matter.
QUESTION: Let me just ask you this. I want to go on to talk about Pakistan. But it’s my understanding now that we have a ratio of one combat troop in Afghanistan to one civilian contractor. Is that ratio going to continue?
SECRETARY GATES: That’s not quite right. But there are a lot of contractors.
QUESTION: It’s pretty close to that?
SECRETARY GATES: But most of the contractors are, in fact, Afghans.
SECRETARY CLINTON: Yeah, that’s a very important point.
SECRETARY GATES: And so these are people that we are paying who have a real job that, frankly, become our allies rather than potential recruits for the bad guys.
QUESTION: So let’s talk about Pakistan. There are repeated assertions by U.S. officials that senior leaders in the Afghan Taliban, including Mullah Omar, generally thought to be the main leader, have taken up residence in Pakistan near the town of Quetta. They are even calling them the Quetta shura. Have you raised this with the Pakistani Government? What are they going to do about these people?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, we have raised it with the Pakistani Government, and I said when I was there that despite the fact that the top leaders of the Pakistani Government say they don’t really know that, because a lot of these areas, including the one you just referred to, are in parts of the country that are largely ungoverned by the Pakistani Government – that’s one of the problems they have, which is why they’re going after the Pakistan Taliban, because they ceded territory that they’re now trying to get back.
But I think that this will be a continuing issue in our ongoing discussions. If you had told us a year ago that the Pakistani army would be going after Pakistani Taliban, I think a lot of people would have said no, that couldn’t ever happen, that’s not the way it works. But they saw the threat to their sovereignty, and look at what they did. They just blew up a mosque in Rawalpindi, which is frequented by members of the military. They’re going right at the real core institutions of their state. So we’ve seen a lot of change in the last year.
QUESTION: So what about that? Would we ever go after those people?
SECRETARY GATES: The Pakistani Government is – Pakistan is a sovereign government. We are in a partnership with them. I think at this point, it’s up to the Pakistani military to deal with this problem.
QUESTION: But as long – Mr. Secretary, as long as they have a safe haven there, we – it doesn’t make much difference what we do in Afghanistan.
SECRETARY GATES: But if there is pressure being brought to bear on the Pakistani side of the government against the Taliban, then that is helpful to us.
QUESTION: How safe are the nuclear weapons that Pakistan has?
SECRETARY GATES: We are comfortable with the security of their weapons.
SECRETARY CLINTON: Yes.
QUESTION: And I’ve asked this question before to other officials, including you, I think – how do you know that?
SECRETARY GATES: Well, we have a good relationship with them. We’ve actually given them assistance in improving some of their security arrangements over the past number of years. This is not a new relationship. And I think, just based on the information available to us, that gives us the comfort.
QUESTION: But I am told that we don’t know where all of the weapons are, so how can we be comfortable in saying we think they’re safe?
SECRETARY GATES: Well, I think I’ll just leave it that based on the information available to us, we’re comfortable.
QUESTION: Talk about the relationship – there’s been this historic relationship between the Taliban and the Pakistani intelligence services. It’s well documented. Do you believe that relationship still exists?
SECRETARY CLINTON: I think there’s been a sea change in the attitude of the Pakistani Government, both the civilian leadership as well as the military and the intelligence service, as they have seen the growing threat to their sovereignty from these groups.
Because now, Bob, it’s not discrete groups operating for specific missions that might or might not be ones we would approve of. It is now a syndicate of terrorism with al-Qaida at the head. I think that that’s a change. There has been such a, as Bob has said, symbiotic relationship grow up between al-Qaida and all these various terrorist groups in Pakistan. So our argument has been consistently that as the Pakistanis go after those who are directly assaulting them, they have to keep in mind that they are part of a larger threat that exists.
QUESTION: Mr. Secretary, are you optimistic that this will work? And we have about 30 seconds.
SECRETARY GATES: I think that based on my conversations with our military leaders and the team of – that we have in Kabul – Ambassador Eikenberry and General McChrystal, I am optimistic.
QUESTION: And you?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Absolutely, yes.
QUESTION: All right. Thanks to both of you. We really appreciate it, and be back with some final thoughts in a minute.
Memo: Don’t forget Hillary on Sunday morning TV!
Posted in Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Secretary of State, U. S. Department of Defense, U.S. Department of State, tagged Afghanistan, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Robert Gates, Secretary of Defense, Secretary of State, State Department, U.S. Department of State on December 5, 2009| Leave a Comment »
Eric Kleefeld | December 4, 2009, 4:01PM
Here are the line-ups for the Sunday talk shows this weekend:
• ABC, This Week: Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, Secretary of Defense Robert Gates, Sen. Russ Feingold (D-WI).
• CBS, Face The Nation: Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, Secretary of Defense Robert Gates.
• CNN, State Of The Union: National Security Adviser Gen. James Jones, Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-CA), Senate Minority Whip Jon Kyl (R-AZ), former Gov. Mitt Romney (R-MA).
• Fox News Sunday: Gen. David Petraeus, Senate Majority Whip Dick Durbin (D-IL), Sen. John Cornyn (R-TX).
• NBC, Meet The Press: Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, Secretary of Defense Robert Gates, Sen. John McCain (R-AZ).
Newsflash! Secretaries Clinton and Gates on Sunday Morning TV
Posted in Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Secretary of State, U. S. Department of Defense, U.S. Department of State, tagged Afghanistan, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Robert Gates, Secretary of Defense, Secretary of State, State Department, U. S. Department of Defense, U.S. Department of State on December 4, 2009| Leave a Comment »
This is from the Orlando Sentinel. Regarding tonight on PBS, if you are not in the Orlando area, check your local listings.
Sunday morning: Hillary Clinton, Robert Gates make the rounds
posted by halboedeker on Dec 4, 2009 10:46:40 AMSecretary of State Hillary Clinton and Secretary of Defense Robert Gates will be busy this Sunday morning. They will discuss President Barack Obama’s plan to send 30,000 additional troops to Afghanistan.
Gates and Clinton have lined up appearances on NBC’s “Meet the Press,” CBS’ “Face the Nation” and ABC’s “This Week.” (Clinton also will be a guest on PBS’ “NewsHour With Jim Lehrer” at 7 tonight on WMFE-Channel 24.)
Read the rest of the Sunday morning listings here.
Secretary Clinton’s Remarks at Luncheon Honoring Former Secretary of State George C. Marshall
Posted in Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Secretary of State, U. S. Department of Defense, U.S. Department of State, tagged Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Robert Gates, Secretary of Defense, Secretary of State, State Department, U. S. Department of Defense, U.S. Department of State on October 16, 2009| Leave a Comment »
Secretary Clinton evidently is very good at hitting the ground running. She landed back in the U.S.A. sometime overnight Wednesday into Thursday and went straight to a 9:15 meeting. Today again she has a full schedule. Mid-day she was at a luncheon honoring George C. Marshall who was Secretary of State AND Secretary of Defense (not at the same time) under Harry Truman. The Post-World War II European Recovery Plan was called “The Marshall Plan” because it was developed primarily in Marshall’s State Department. Here’s an interesting note: Marshall was strongly opposed to the creation of the state of Israel.
Here are her remarks.
Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of State
Benjamin Franklin Room
Washington, DC
October 16, 2009SECRETARY CLINTON: Thank you all very much. Thank you. Well, thank you so much to Ambassador Kennedy who well deserves the introduction and accolade that Brian presented in calling him to the podium. I am delighted to welcome all of you to the Benjamin Franklin Room here on the 8th floor of the State Department. And it is a special privilege that we are engaged in not only honoring the legacy of George C. Marshall, but honoring the service of a present-day patriot, someone who carries on the ideals of a great leader of the past.
With all of its challenges, the world today is looking to our predecessors for instruction and inspiration. And more often than not, many of us find ourselves turning to George C. Marshall for both. General Marshall knew that our national interests are inseparable from the interests of people everywhere – that we best bolster our security by advancing our values and that we best protect ourselves by looking beyond ourselves.
When General Marshall first described the outlines of what would become the Marshall Plan in a speech at Harvard in 1947, he urged Americans to embrace a policy directed not against any country or doctrine, but against hunger, poverty, desperation, and chaos. He knew how much he was asking of a nation scarred and exhausted by years of war. The aid we gave to Europe under the Marshall Plan would, as a percentage of national income, amount to more than $500 billion today. As he said in closing that day, with “a willingness on the part of our people to face up to the vast responsibility which history has clearly placed upon our country, the difficulties I have outlined can and will be overcome.”
Thanks to George Marshall’s leadership, those challenges were overcome in that time. The Marshall Plan was as bold and visionary a demonstration of American leadership as any in our history. And it is a model today as we face up to our own vast responsibility.
I often think about what would have happened in today’s world if General Marshall and President Truman had said to a nation that was ready to turn from war and immerse itself in the day-to-day activities of just ordinary life, “Well, we know how much you’ve given and how much you’ve sacrificed, but we’re going to ask you to continue to do what must be done to protect and preserve the peace that you have won.” Just imagine the talk show hosts and cable TV and all the others rising up and declaiming in great passion that this is unbelievable, how can we be asked to do this? I somehow have a feeling that George Marshall would have figured out a way through even that. There didn’t seem to be a challenge that he ever faced that he couldn’t determine a way forward.
Well, today, we are remembering that at the end of the Harvard speech, the university’s president compared General Marshall to another great soldier and statesman, George Washington, looking to our past and perhaps presaging the future of the need to continually regenerate the source of leadership, the examples that mean so much as we now look our way toward meeting the challenges of today.
Well, I think we have such a leader in the man we honor, namely, Secretary Bob Gates, a public servant par excellence. He has humility and an aptitude for quiet but strong leadership. He has a devotion to the men and women of the United States Military. And he is a public servant with a Marshall view of the world, a Secretary of Defense committed to a brand of American leadership that draws on all the sources of our strength, fostering cooperation and spreading prosperity while keeping our military strong and ready.
I personally am very grateful to have a voice like Secretary Gates’s at the Pentagon calling for more support for the State Department, for strengthening our capacity for development and diplomacy. Bob is a statesman who shares General Marshall’s judgment that the only way to truly win a war is to prevent it in the first place.
So I am delighted that the Marshall Foundation – which has done such great work to keep the lessons and the spirit of General Marshall’s leadership alive – has chosen to honor Secretary Gates with this prestigious award. As the United States faces up to the responsibility history has placed upon us once again, I could ask for no better partner and America could ask for no better leader.
I’m now honored to introduce our next speaker, another one of our nation’s most respected public servants. Brent Scowcroft has had a distinguished career, serving our nation in the Air Force and as a national security advisor to both President Ford and the first President Bush. He remains a source of advice and counsel to many of us in government today. He works with us on foreign policy and defense matters, for which we are very grateful. He has also studied export control reforms, and we look forward to drawing on his ideas emanating from a study that he has just chaired on this important issue. And this is a job, by the way, that he inherited from Bob Gates. So we know that we’ve got two great minds at work on it.
It is now my great pleasure, both personally and on behalf of the State Department, to welcome our friend Brent Scowcroft. (Applause.)

Hillary Clinton and Robert Gates: Power and Persuasion
Posted in Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Secretary of State, U.S. Department of State, tagged Defense Department, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Robert Gates, Secretary of Defense, Secretary of State, State Department, U. S. Department of Defense, U.S. Department of State on October 6, 2009| 2 Comments »
Yes, Persuasion! That’s our girl! Very persuasive, I think.
Town Hall with Secretary of Defense Gates on American Power and Persuasion
Remarks
Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of StateGeorge Washington UniversityWashington, DCOctober 5, 2009
MODERATOR: Ladies and gentlemen, please welcome the chairman of the George Washington University Board of Trustees, Russ Ramsey. (Applause.)MR. RAMSEY: Good evening, everyone. It is my honor and pleasure, on behalf of the entire Board of Trustees, to welcome all of you this evening. Tonight’s event highlights all that is right with our country: dynamic leaders; bright, engaged students; and a fantastic venue right here in the heart of the nation’s capital.
To all of you, thank you for being here, and thank you for giving us the opportunity to host a very important conversation, one that I’m sure we will all remember long into the future. I think our first president would be very proud of what he sees here tonight and what he sees at his university. And with that, it is my pleasure to introduce the 16th president of the George Washington University, Dr. Steven Knapp. (Applause.)
MR. KNAPP: Good evening. Distinguished members of the international community, Chairman Ramsey, university trustees, faculty, staff, alumni and students of the George Washington University, it’s a pleasure to welcome you to our historic Lisner Auditorium. Today, we are honored to host what promises to be an illuminating as well as unprecedented discussion. This is a unique opportunity for the George Washington community and for the world to hear firsthand from two sitting cabinet members, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and Secretary of Defense Robert Gates, two leaders who every day shape America’s diplomacy and presence in the world.
With our front row seat to history, the George Washington University is privileged to serve as a convener of important discussions like this one. Hosting such events is a key part of our public service mission as the largest university in the nation’s capital, and it provides a unique educational opportunity for our students, many of whom are with us here this evening.
I was impressed last week when walking to my office early one morning, I saw a large crowd of students lined up outside this auditorium. I understand the tickets to the event sold out in literally five minutes.
It’s now my pleasure to introduce the man who made this evening possible. Please join me in welcoming former CNN Washington Bureau Chief, Emmy Award-winning journalist, and the Director of the George Washington School of Media and Public Affairs, Frank Sesno. (Applause.)
MR. SESNO: Good evening, everybody, and welcome to Lisner Auditorium. Welcome to what will be an extraordinary event. You can only imagine the view from my office across the street when I looked down a few days ago and saw that line wrapped around this building for people eager to get tickets. For those of you who were on that line or slept out overnight, I hope you’ve caught up on your sleep, but I’m glad you got your tickets.
I want to thank President Knapp. I want to thank Dean Michael Brown of the Elliott School of International Affairs, and Dean Peg Barratt for also helping to sponsor this event and make this possible. Dean Barratt talks about our role at the university here to engage Washington and engage the world, and I can think of no better way and no better time to engage the world than with the discussion that we’re going to have here this evening. Our 67th Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, our 22nd Secretary of Defense Robert Gates, two people of extraordinary depth and talent, and who have served this country for a very, very long time.
We’re going to talk about some topical issues. We’ll talk about some very strategic and important issues. We’ll talk about smart power, what that means, and how they’re pursuing it. We’re also going to take some of your questions later in the evening.
We are going to take breaks. You’ll see us taking little mini-breaks here, because, as you can tell, we are going to be – and as you know, we are going to be broadcasting on CNN. This as an hour-long special will air tomorrow at 3 p.m. eastern time, not just in the United States but around the world. Christiane Amanpour has a new program, and I kind of think maybe it’s because she was here last year to be with the five former secretaries of state that now she has this new show. But we will be taking breaks periodically. We’re not stopping. We’re just helping CNN with their edit.
At this time, I would like to have you join me in welcoming my friend, my colleague, and one of the world’s greatest journalists, Christiane Amanpour. (Applause.) And if I didn’t tell you, Christiane’s show reaches 330 million households worldwide, so that gives some real heft and depth to this conversation. Welcome.
MS. AMANPOUR: Lovely to be here.
MR. SESNO: It’s now my great privilege and pleasure to welcome to our university Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, Secretary of Defense Robert Gates. (Applause.) Madame Secretary, we’re going to pose for one more set of pictures, I think, with President Knapp and Chairman Ramsey before we get started, if we can. Christiane, perhaps you want to go on that side, and then we’ll be flanked by our fearless leaders here. Here we go.
Well, let me welcome you both to the George Washington University. Thank you for being here. There will be no quizzes or exams after this, but we’ll try to have this as intriguing a conversation as we can. As I mentioned, Christiane’s got her program and we’re very much looking forward to seeing it there and around the world. I should also mention that America Abroad Media is turning this into a hour-long special. It will be distributed both domestically and internationally as an hour-long special on public radio and available to all other media, many of whom are here. So welcome.
SECRETARY CLINTON: Thank you.
MR. KNAPP: Christiane.
MS. AMANPOUR: So welcome. Welcome to you both. We’ve been sort of searching back in the annals of recent history and we can’t really find an example such as this where two sitting secretaries of state in charge of some of the most important briefs at the moment are sitting on stage in an interview such as this. So we just wanted to start by asking you how often do you speak together, what is it like working together? Do you pick up the phone and call each other whenever you like? How does it work?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, we actually spend a lot of time together, and it is mostly at the White House in the Situation Room, which is this room that is especially set up for secure conversations – a windowless domain that we spend a lot of time in – and we also talk outside of those formal meetings. But it’s been a real pleasure for me to work with Bob over the last nine months.
And a lot of the decisions and the reasons we end up in the Situation Room are pretty serious and challenging ones to tackle and try to come up with our best advice to the President, but Bob has a lot of experience, which I certainly appreciate, and also a good sense of humor, which makes everything a little bit better.
SECRETARY GATES: Most of my career, secretaries of state and defense weren’t speaking to one another. (Laughter.)
MS. AMANPOUR: Precisely why we are.
MR. SESNO: In fact, sometimes it was even worse than that.
SECRETARY GATES: And it could get pretty ugly, actually. And so, I mean, it’s terrific to have the kind of relationship where we can talk together, because the truth of the matter is if the bureaucracies realize that the principals get along and work together and are on the same page, it radiates downward. And when people discover it’s not career-enhancing to try and set your principal’s hair on fire because the other person is doing something horrible, it makes a huge difference, and not just at this level, but all through the bureaucracy and the interagency.
MR. SESNO: So what is it that by doing this and by sending this signal from the top that you are trying to change? You both talk a lot about taking the country in new directions and for the 21st century, but what are you trying to prove by this in terms of actual implementation?
SECRETARY GATES: Well, I don’t think we’re trying to prove anything. It’s just we get along, we work together well. I think it starts with, frankly, based on my experience, the Secretary of Defense being willing to acknowledge that the Secretary of State is the principal spokesperson for United States foreign policy. And once you get over that hurdle, the rest of it kind of falls into place. And I think it’s really just a matter of this is the way we work together. As I say, we’re not trying to prove anything. It’s just this is what works and this is how government ought to work.
SECRETARY CLINTON: Frank, I think that when Secretary Gates was given this responsibility in the last administration, he immediately began making clear that we had to have a coherent and unified foreign policy; the instruments of American power in defense, diplomacy, and development needed to be working together. And before he was a part of the Obama Administration, he had gone on record several times talking about the need for us to work more closely together between our civilian capacity and our military force.
So when President Obama asked Bob to stay on, I knew that he understood the kind of whole-of-government approach and was really dedicated to trying to make sure that we were doing the best we could for our country. His years, his decades of service to America, give him a perspective that is very useful. And I mentioned this before, but Henry Kissinger – following up on what Bob had said – said that it was the first time that he found that the State Department, the White House, and the Defense Department, mostly through Bob and me and General Jones, were all saying the same thing.
Now, that doesn’t mean we don’t have differences of opinion or see issues from slightly different perspectives. But we have an enormous amount of respect for each other, we listen to each other, and we work through, give our best advice to the President, and then support the President’s decisions.
MS. AMANPOUR: So given that you’re involved in a very difficult situation right now – the war in Afghanistan, a place where I’ve spent a long time – I want to start by asking you: Do you think you can win there? Both of you, I’d like to know whether you think you can win.
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, I think, Christiane, what we’re looking at as we meet to advise the President is what do we need to do in Afghanistan and Pakistan, because we see the region as the area of concern that will promote American interests and values, protect our country, as well as the allies and other interests that we have around the world. So I think it’s a very thoughtful analysis about what is it we need to do. And we’re trying to look at it from the ground up and make sure that we’re examining every assumption, because what’s important is that at the end of the day, the President makes a decision that he believes in, that he thinks is going to further our core objectives of protecting our country, preventing attacks on us, trying to protect our interests and our allies. And that’s what we’re attempting to do.
MS. AMANPOUR: Secretary Gates, the majority of the American people believe that America can win in Afghanistan. Do you think America can win in Afghanistan?
SECRETARY GATES: From the time I took this job, I have tried both in Iraq and Afghanistan to avoid terms like “winning” and “losing” because they become very loaded in our domestic debate, but they also become loaded around the world. I think the key thing is to establish what our objectives are, and can we achieve our objectives. And the answer to that question is absolutely.
MR. SESNO: Well, let me ask you about our objectives, because back in March, President Obama said several things. He said our clear and focused goal – that was his term – was to disrupt, dismantle, and defeat al-Qaida. He said for the American people, the Afghanistan-Pakistan border was the most dangerous place in the world, that Afghanistan was an international security issue of the highest order, and that if the Afghan Government were to fall to the Taliban, the country will, and I’m quoting him here, “be again a base for terrorists who want to kill as many of our people as they possibly can.”
Has any of that changed from then till now in this review?
SECRETARY CLINTON: No.
SECRETARY GATES: I don’t think so.
SECRETARY CLINTON: No.
MR. SESNO: So staying the course and having this government survive and not fall to the Taliban, and disrupting and dismantling al-Qaida is the objective, is the goal of this review that you’re going through?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, Frank, the goal remains as the President said last spring. What we are, I think rightfully, doing is examining the strategies and tactics to achieve our goal. And I happen to think that’s a good thing. It is difficult enough to deal with the challenges emanating from Afghanistan and Pakistan and the continuing threat from al-Qaida, but to do it when there is so much pressure to make a snap decision, never to ask the hard questions, is really counterproductive. And I admire the President for saying, as he did last spring, we’re going to reassess this. He appointed a new commander. That new commander was asked to assess it. He has a special representative based in the State Department with a whole-of-government team, constantly being asked, “Are we making progress?”
So I think what we’re going through in asking ourselves – okay, we know what the goal is, is what we’re doing most likely to achieve that goal? – is what a very decisive and intelligent commander-in-chief would do. So we’re going to come up with what we think is the best approach, but the goal remains the same.
SECRETARY GATES: I think it’s important to remember that as Secretary Clinton said, that the President indicated very explicitly at the end of March that we would revisit the strategy after the election in Afghanistan. Now, at least a couple of things have happened. One is the new commander has done an assessment and found the situation that – in Afghanistan that is more serious than we anticipated when the decisions were made in March. So that’s one thing to take into account.
The other is, clearly, a flawed election in Afghanistan that has complicated the picture for us. And so it seems to me under these circumstances, and particularly – I mean, let’s be honest, the President is being asked to make a very significant decision – and the notion of being willing to pause, reassess basic assumptions, reassess the analysis, and then make those decisions, seems to me, given the importance of these decisions, which I’ve said are probably among the most important he will make in his entire presidency, seems entirely appropriate.
MS. AMANPOUR: So you’ve both spoken just now very highly of General McChrystal. You’ve talked about the new commander, his important reassessment, and changes on the ground. There are obviously two basic choices that you have, either to go all in or to scale back. Some who are talking about scaling back talk about less nation building, talk about more predator strikes, perhaps more focus on Pakistan rather than in Afghanistan.
In a public speech in London, two military personnel – General McChrystal, when asked about that, flatly stated that it wouldn’t work. Can we just show you what he said:
GENERAL MCCHRYSTAL: No. And the first reason is I believe you have to navigate from where you are, not from where you wish you were. We are in Afghanistan and we’ve established relationships, expectations, both with the Afghan people, the Afghan Government, in the region. And I believe Afghanistan has its own value, its stability, now.
MS. AMANPOUR: So do you believe that by scaling back over the next 12 to 18 months, you can win in Afghanistan?
SECRETARY GATES: Well, first of all, I think as you know, we are not going to talk about where the President ought to go or the options in front of him. I mean, I think I just gave a speech this morning in which I said that the President deserves the candid advice of his senior advisors, both civilian and military, but that advice should be private.
All I will say is, first of all, I think Stan McChrystal is exactly the right person to be the commander in Afghanistan right now. He was my recommendation to the President to lead this effort, and I have every confidence that no matter what decision the President makes, Stan McChrystal will implement it as effectively as possible.
MS. AMANPOUR: Could I ask you about the nature of private advice? You’ve said it, others have said it, General Jones said it this weekend. You know that during the lead-up to the Gulf – to the second Iraq war in 2003, many of the one-star, two-star, other generals and military officials, didn’t stand up and challenge the premise that only a certain amount of troops were necessary, and that was deemed to have been a big mistake and deemed to have wasted a lot of time, for instance, in Iraq.
Do you not think that General McChrystal must give his honest assessment in public because of what happened when that honest assessment was not given?
SECRETARY GATES: I think the important thing is for the President to hear the advice of his commanders and to have the advantage of hearing that advice in private. In all the decisions that were made during the surge in Iraq, the President – I structured a process where the commander in the field, General Petraeus, the then-commander of Central Command, and the Joint Chiefs of Staff each had an opportunity to present their views privately to the President on what ought to be done. I think that’s the way the process ought to work. I think the President – this President has made it clear he is prepared to spend whatever time is needed in person, not only with the Joint Chiefs and the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, but with General McChrystal, to make sure they have had plenty of time to present their views directly to him. That’s a commitment he has made to me directly, and I intend to make sure that it’s exercised.
MS. AMANPOUR: Could I just ask Secretary Clinton what you think about the nature of the debate over the advice? Are not the American people entitled – is this not the premise of American democracy that the American people are entitled to hear the same advice and that members of the U.S. Congress who are going to have to weigh in on this as well should hear this advice?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, I think that there’s a timing to all of this, and I agree completely with Bob that in the process of trying to tee up these decisions for the President, it is very important that he get the most thoughtful, candid advice from everyone. And remember, he’s getting advice about what will work, not just from the military but from the civilian side as well. And I think that that is the way to begin any kind of decision-making process.
Now, there’s no doubt that as decisions get made, they will be fully available for the public and for the Hill. Consultations are going on with the Hill all the time. But I think it’s important to put this into perhaps some historic perspective. It is unusual for all advice about military matters to be in public for a president. Now, there is a lot of second-guessing that might go on and historical perspective, but this process that President Obama has put together is, I think, one of the most open, most thorough, that I’ve read about. And it is very much an invitation for everybody to come to the table, and that’s what we’re doing.
MS. AMANPOUR: We’ll be right back with more on this subject right after a break.
(Break.)
PRESIDENT OBAMA: To advance security, opportunity, and justice, not just in Kabul, but from the bottom up, in the provinces, we need agricultural specialists and educators, engineers and lawyers. That’s how we can help the Afghan Government serve its people and develop an economy that isn’t dominated by illicit drugs. And that’s why I’m ordering a substantial increase in our civilians on the ground. That’s also why we must seek civilian support from our partners and allies.
MR. SESNO: Secretary Clinton, you heard there President Obama speaking in March about the need to increase the number of civilians. The civilian surge, it’s called. But the civilian task has been – or civilian personnel has been way under-tasked: when you came into office, 300-some-odd civilians. You’re trying to move to a thousand by the end of the year, or just under it.
SECRETARY CLINTON: Right.
MR. SESNO: That’s a big increase.
SECRETARY CLINTON: Right.
MR. SESNO: But compared to the tens of thousands of the military, it’s just a drop in the bucket. Is that really going to change the dynamic? What should the balance be in a conflict zone like Afghanistan if you’re going to accomplish the goals that you’re out to accomplish?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, Frank, I think what we are attempting to achieve is remarkable in a short period of time. As you say, back when the President made those remarks in March, we had about 300 civilians – Americans – in Afghanistan. We will have close to a thousand in – by the end of this year. But it is a kind of chicken-and-egg issue. We want to focus on development, particularly agriculture, rule of law, good governance, economic development, women’s empowerment – those kinds of issues. But in order to operate in many of the places in Afghanistan, you have to have a level of security. So there has to be a commitment to make an area as secure as possible, because, remember, when an American goes in, that person will always be accompanied by NGOs, Afghans, so the numbers are much bigger than just the direct American hires because there are a lot of Americans working in Afghanistan who work for charities or nongovernmental organizations.
But our assessment was that we needed to focus on how to help the people of Afghanistan lift themselves up, have their own opportunities. And it goes hand-in-hand with our military effort.
MR. SESNO: Secretary Gates, you in many ways launched this conversation a couple of years ago with a speech where you talked – and you said that we will not kill or capture our way to victory in these places. What should our civilian diplomats be doing that the military is now doing?
SECRETARY GATES: Well, they are a lot of civilians out there and doing things that –
MR. SESNO: But not enough, right?
SECRETARY GATES: Well, let’s step back, first of all, to that point two years ago when I said – when I sort of gave my man-bites-dog speech of the Secretary of Defense saying there wasn’t enough money going to the Department of State. The reality is the Department of State and the Agency for International Development were starved for resources for decades. Now, just let me give you an example. Working for me are 2 million men and women in uniform. Secretary Clinton has, I think, somewhere south of 7,000 Foreign Service officers. If you took all the Foreign Service officers in the world, they would barely crew one aircraft carrier. So just to keep things in perspective.
MR. SESNO: You can trade a few people here, perhaps. (Laughter.)
SECRETARY GATES: Well, and we have partnered. And the reality is that the civilians who do end up in Iraq and Afghanistan in the Provincial Reconstruction Teams and in the other activities, rule of law, agriculture and so on, have a disproportionate impact to their numbers. And I talk to brigade commanders, and one or two civilians working with them have an enormous impact. And these are the colonels who are the brigade commanders who talk about this. So do we want more civilians? Absolutely. We will take all the civilians that we can get out there.
MR. SESNO: But my question was: What are the things that the military is now doing that should be handled and are better handled by our diplomats?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, Frank, let me just answer that because a lot of what happens when our military – and they’ve been doing an incredible job against a really ferocious enemy in Afghanistan, particularly along the south and along the border. Without civilians, it’s very hard to make the transition from the soldier or the Marine holding the automatic weapon who has been trying to rout out the Taliban, to going and trying to help a farmer get enough yield out of his wheat crop so that he doesn’t want to grow poppies. I mean, that’s an issue that is very difficult for the military to take on a sustained basis.
But in the last several years, in both Iraq and Afghanistan, it was young lieutenants, captains, majors – they were doing that. They were trying to do both jobs. And at a certain point, we need to support them, and I appreciate what Bob said about how, in effect, trained civilians are force multipliers; they can begin to do the civilian interaction with tribal elders and others that will help to make the environment more secure that our Marines and soldiers have helped to create.
MS. AMANPOUR: And part of what’s happening is that the Afghan people are not getting as much economic development, therefore not as much help and hope, as one might have thought when this started. So the question I have for you, sir – both of you, actually – is that there’s been some talk over the weekend about how the United States believes that perhaps al-Qaida has been diminished, the threat from the Taliban is not as great as one might have thought. So I want to know what you think about the momentum of the Taliban, their long-term prospects, given the fact that today 80 percent of Afghanistan has a permanent Taliban presence, compared to 72 percent a year ago, and 54 percent the year before that. They seem to be winning territory rather than losing.
SECRETARY GATES: I can’t improve on General McChrystal’s assessment that the situation in Afghanistan is serious and deteriorating, and there are a lot of reasons for it. You have to go back to 2003, 2004, in terms of the Taliban beginning to reconstitute themselves in Pakistan and so on. I mean, that’s a historian’s debate. We are where we are. And this – that kind of goes back to General McChrystal’s quote that you aired – you have to start where you are, not where you wish you were. And the reality is that because of our inability and the inability, frankly, of our allies to put enough troops into Afghanistan, the Taliban do have the momentum right now, it seems.
MS. AMANPOUR: And do you believe that should – not next week or next month, but should Afghanistan fall to the Taliban again, that it would again become a base for al-Qaida to have its operations there?
SECRETARY GATES: I think the thing to remember about Afghanistan is that that country, and particularly the Afghan-Pakistan border, is the modern epicenter of jihad. It is where the Mujaheddin defeated the other superpower. And their view is, in my opinion, that they now have the opportunity to defeat a second superpower, which, more than anything, would empower their message and the opportunity to recruit, to fundraise, and to plan operations.
So I think you have to see this area in a historical context in terms of what happened in the 1980s and the meaning of the victory over the Soviet Union in order to understand the importance of this symbiotic relationship between al-Qaida and the Taliban and the other extremists, frankly.
MS. AMANPOUR: So you think they would come back if Afghanistan fell?
SECRETARY GATES: I don’t know whether al-Qaida would sort of move their headquarters from the FATA to – back into Afghanistan. But there’s no question in my mind that if the Taliban took large – took control of significant portions of Afghanistan, that that would be added space for al-Qaida to strengthen itself and more recruitment, more fundraising.
But what’s more important than that, in my view, is the message that it sends that empowers al-Qaida. Al-Qaida, in many respects, is an ideology. And the notion that they have come back from this defeat, come back from 2002 to challenge not only the United States, but NATO, 42 nations, and so on, is a hugely empowering message should they be successful.
MS. AMANPOUR: We’ll come back with more from both secretaries right after a break. We’ll talk more about Pakistan and Iran.
(Break.)
MS. AMANPOUR: Welcome back. We’re going to continue our conversation with Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Secretary of Defense Robert Gates. We were just talking about Afghanistan and the Pakistan area, part of your joint solution, hopefully, to these regional problems that exist there.
The prime minister, the president, the foreign minister of Pakistan have all said – and have all been very worried – about short-termism, short-timerism from the United States. They are concerned that if you pull back, then they will have to bank not on the U.S. again, but on perhaps the Taliban like they did before 9/11. What do you say to the Pakistani leaders who are now doing precisely what you asked them to do – going after the Taliban, after various militants and terrorists in their own country?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, what we say is that we want to be supportive and provide assistance, and we want to ramp that up. Just this last week, a very important piece of legislation – the Kerry-Lugar-Berman bill that made a commitment to additional aid for Pakistan’s civilian government and to deliver services to the people of Pakistan – was passed unanimously, on its way to the President to be signed.
And you’re right; when we started this review, one of the innovative conclusions we reached was we had to look at both Afghanistan and Pakistan together. Obviously, we had a great commitment in Afghanistan and there had been military assistance and counterterrorism training provided to Pakistan, but there hadn’t yet been a commitment by the Pakistani military and the civilian government like we’re seeing now to go after the extremists that are threatening them as well as beyond their borders. So we are telling them that we think that this is an important commitment that they’ve made.
But again, I would just ask you to put this in some historic perspective. We live in the United States on such a fast pace that sometimes a month ago seems like a really long time ago. And in lots of the rest of the world, people remember. And as Bob said, when we partnered with Pakistan to supply the Mujaheddin with the weapons and training that they needed to defeat the Soviet Union in Afghanistan, once that was accomplished, we left. And Pakistan feels like we left them holding the bag because, all of a sudden, they were awash in weapons, they were awash in drugs, they had all of these jihadists who had been trained up in conjunction with us. And we know what happened. We saw that occurring in Afghanistan.
So I think it’s rightful of the Pakistanis to say: Well, how long will your commitment be, how much will you be by our side as we take on these threats to us and, by the way, also to you?
MR. SESNO: Well, how long is the commitment? Are you prepared to say this evening that the commitment of this country – and the two of you here – to Pakistan is an open-ended commitment; that despite this policy review that’s ongoing, that the commitment to the Afghanistan-Pakistan region is not going to be thwarted by short-timerism, or whatever you want to call it, and we’re there to – that the United States of America is there to stay?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, what we’re doing is defining our objectives, and we’re then trying to set forth the strategy and the tactics to achieve those objectives.
MR. SESNO: If I may, the foreign minister of Pakistan said the fact that this is being debated – meaning this whole policy review – whether to stay or not to stay, “What sort of signal is that sending?” he said. Isn’t this undermining the very Pakistanis whom you have pressured to lean on their own extremists and the Taliban and fight this fight?
SECRETARY GATES: Well, first of all, I think that there is absolutely no reason for the President not to consider very carefully the next steps in Afghanistan. I had lunch with the Pakistani ambassador last week, and I made absolutely clear to him we are not leaving Afghanistan. This discussion is about next steps forward, and the President has some momentous decisions to make. And while there may be some short-term uncertainly on the part of our allies in terms of those next steps, there should be no uncertainty in terms of our determination to remain in Afghanistan and to continue to build a relationship of partnership and trust with the Pakistanis. That’s long term. That’s a strategic objective of the United States for a number of reasons that Pakistan is a strategically important country. So I – if it makes them nervous that we’re talking about this for a couple of weeks, frankly, I think that’s a transitory problem.
MR. SESNO: I just want to button one thing up. You were talking earlier about your advice and your comments, your public comments to keep the advice to the President private and candid. Are you trying to muzzle McChrystal?
SECRETARY GATES: Absolutely not. I will tell –
MR. SESNO: Will we be hearing –
SECRETARY GATES: I was going to –
MR. SESNO: Will we be hearing him speak publicly again?
SECRETARY GATES: I was actually going to pile on to Hillary’s comments earlier before we went to the break. Look, when we did the surge in Iraq, there was no public discussion during that surge by the people involved in that debate. The President made his decisions. The Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and I then went to the Hill to testify, and General Petraeus then followed us. That is exactly what is going to happen in this instance. There will – I have told people on Capitol Hill, the minute the President makes his decisions, we will get General McChrystal back here as quickly as possible and up on to the Hill, because I will tell you, there is no one more knowledgeable and more persuasive on these issues than Stan McChrystal.
But it would put – I believe it would put General McChrystal in an impossible situation to go up in a hyper-partisan environment to the Hill, before the President made his decisions, and put the general on the spot. I just think that’s wrong. I think it’s wrong for General McChrystal, and I think it’s wrong for the President. And as far as I’m concerned in this job, I’ll do everything in my power to prevent that until the President has made his decisions.
MS. AMANPOUR: And we’re going to take another quick break. We are going to come back and talk – (laughter) – we’re going to take another quick break, and we’re going to come back and talk about Iran and the agreement that just took place in Geneva. We’re going to ask what exactly was agreed.
(Break.)
MS. AMANPOUR: Welcome back. We continue our conversation with the two secretaries sitting here. I want to know, if you can tell us, what precisely was agreed between the U.S., Iran, and the other powers sitting at that table in Geneva. Did they actually agree to ship out their low-enriched uranium?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, there were three agreements. One, that there would be inspections, and those inspections are going forward and they’re going forward quickly, of the undisclosed site that the President and Prime Minister Brown and President Sarkozy announced a little over a week ago in Pittsburgh. They agreed that, in principle, the Iranians would ship out their LEU for reprocessing to be returned for their research reactor. There will be a team of experts meeting to determine exactly how that will be carried out within 10 days. And they agreed that there will be another meeting, which means that this process doesn’t just drag on without any continuity.
So we think that on those three big issues, this was a worthwhile meeting. But as the President has said and I and others have also made clear, this is not by any means a stopping point. There is much more to be done. We expect much more. We know that the Iranians need to understand that they have run a nuclear program that has violated international rules and Security Council resolutions, which they have to bring into compliance, making it more transparent and accountable. So we have work ahead of us, but I think that on balance, what came out of the meeting in Geneva was positive.
MS. AMANPOUR: Just to follow up on the low-enriched uranium, you know one Iranian diplomat told the press that actually, no, there wasn’t that agreement. And I’m asking you whether there is some miscommunication. Are they just agreeing to buy enriched – further enriched uranium and not ship theirs out, or do you understand that they are going to ship the bulk of theirs out?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, nothing is finished until it’s finished. And there’s a meeting of technical experts – I believe it’s October 18th – to see how to put into action what we certainly believe was an agreement in principle. But there’s a lot to be done before that actually happens.
MR. SESNO: Do you think the Iranians actually want to resolve this?
SECRETARY CLINTON: We don’t know yet. We don’t know.
MR. SESNO: Do you think this is credible?
SECRETARY GATES: I agree with Hillary. I think the jury’s out. And what we have to do is keep them to tight enough deadlines and specific enough requirements that we have some indication of whether they’re serious or not.
MR. SESNO: I mean, there’s already – there’s already some substantial criticism of this from some who are saying that this is another way for the Iranians to play for time and that, in effect, they’re being rewarded for having flouted UN resolutions all these years if they can take the uranium that they shouldn’t have enriched to begin with and get it sent out and have it brought back, enhanced, and be able to use in a power plant.
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, but think about what we’re seeing here. And that is that the uranium that they have enriched would be used for a research reactor, which everybody knows they’ve been running – which they are entitled to run – but it would not be used for other purposes. So yes, does it buy time? It buys time. It buys time for us to consider carefully their response, the sincerity of their actions. And we’re moving simultaneously on the dual track. I mean, we always said we had a track of engagement, and we have begun that with this process. But we also said we would be working with likeminded nations and convincing others to stand ready with tougher sanctions were we not successful.
MS. AMANPOUR: Can I ask you, Secretary Gates, has your opinion, your intelligence, has anything changed regarding your assessment of whether they are trying to make a nuclear weapon?
SECRETARY GATES: My personal belief, all along, has been that they have the intention of developing nuclear weapons. Whether they have actually begun that program or not is hard to say, whether they’ve begun a weaponization program. But I think the question is can we, over time – or can we, in a limited period of time, bring the Iranians to a conclusion that Iran is better off without nuclear weapons than with them. And not just in the security sense, but economically and in terms of their isolation in the international community and so on.
And because – I mean, my view is the only long-term solution to this problem, at the end of the day, is the Iranians themselves deciding having nuclear weapons is not in their interest. And if we can’t convince them of that, then an array of other options are open. But our hope, my hope for – ever since I took this job has been that we could, through both carrots and sticks, persuade them of a smarter direction for Iran.
MS. AMANPOUR: Isn’t the – I mean, there are basically, I think, three policy options – an Iran with some kind of nuclear capability, a nuclear program but with very strict verification sanctions to try to get them not to enrich, which so far has not – have not worked – plenty of holes, plenty of black market, or the military option, which you yourself have cast out upon its efficacy.
Isn’t the real nub of the debate right now to figure out some kind of way of verifying and inspecting and being able to know if they plan to do something else with their uranium other than for peaceful purposes, as they claim?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, that is, of course, part of the change in calculation that Bob was referring to. We have a very clear objective of trying to persuade the Iranians that their calculation of their security interests and their economic interests should take into account the consequences of sanctions, for example, of increased defensive measures taken in Europe and in the Gulf region. We just worked through this missile defense decision, and clearly, our new adaptive approach toward missile defense is aimed at protecting our NATO allies and most of Europe from a short or medium-range Iranian missile. We have begun to talk with a lot of our other friends and allies about what they need to feel that they would be adequately protected.
Now, this is not in any way to concede what Iran should do going forward, because some people say when we talk defensive, that means that we’re conceding that they’re going to end up with a weapon – no, not at all. We are trying to influence the calculation and the decision as to whether or not they should move toward weaponization.
SECRETARY GATES: Some people have said, in so many words, that I’m kind of wooly-headed in believing that the Iranians would see not having nuclear weapons as more in their security interests than not. But the question is would the Iranians look at that that way if there were proliferation of nuclear weapons in the Middle East? If some of their neighbors in the Middle East beyond those that now have them would develop nuclear weapons, is that in their interest? Do they think that enhances their national security? I think that’s an argument to be made.
MS. AMANPOUR: We’re going to continue this line of questioning right after a short break.
(Break.)
MS. AMANPOUR: Welcome back as we continue our conversation. We were talking about Iran and some way of figuring out the way forward about Iran’s nuclear program. So just a quick one before Frank wants to ask you about smart power – I just want to know, is it good enough to have a strict verification protocol? For instance, the additional protocol under the NPT or indeed, you know, to have shipping out of the LEU? Is that good enough even if it’s not perfect?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, this is a question we’re not ready to answer because we don’t know what the options in front of us are. We don’t know what Iran would agree to. We don’t know what kind of pressure could be brought to bear in case they don’t agree. So our goal is as it always has been – to try to prevent Iran from obtaining nuclear weapons, which we think would be very destabilizing in the region and beyond, and that’s what we are aimed at achieving through this engagement.
SECRETARY GATES: And what nuclear sites might they be prepared to be transparent about that have not been declared at this point.
MR. SESNO: I want to ask about – both – one last question about Iran, and that relates to what the message is to the people of Iran who have been in the streets, who have opposed Ahmadinejad, who spoke out and in some cases have been arrested, wounded, or worse, standing up to what they see as a stolen election.
The United States has a long history of standing on the side of human rights and democratic reforms, and it speaks up for those who have been oppressed. Are you concerned – because some are – that there’s so much effort to negotiate with the government in Iran right now and resolve or at least make progress on this nuclear issue, that those in Iran who want real political change are going to be somehow forgotten or abandoned or will not be the focus of American comment and action?
SECRETARY CLINTON: No, because I think we’ve been very clear in supporting the legitimate aspirations of the Iranian people and in speaking out forcefully against the irregularities of their electoral process. But what we concluded is if you look at our dealings with the former Soviet Union, for example, during the Cold War, we always pressed them on human rights and we always talked with them about reducing our nuclear arsenals or trying to have some arms control.
These are not either-or. Human rights is at the core of who we are as Americans. We hope for all people the rights that we enjoy here, but at the same time, just as no American president walked away from summits with the Russian presidents working to try to achieve the goals that you could possibly find common ground on, that’s what we’re doing with the Iranians.
MS. AMANPOUR: So that was just what I was trying to press with you in terms of a verification, just as with the USSR, when there was a verification system in place where you could know whether there was any dirty dealing or cheating going on in time to respond.
SECRETARY CLINTON: But they are —
MS. AMANPOUR: You seem to be going that way.
SECRETARY CLINTON: But they got a weapon. I mean, they got a weapon and then they were a nuclear —
MS. AMANPOUR: You’re talking about —
SECRETARY CLINTON: The Soviet Union, yeah. They got a weapon, they were a nuclear weapons power, and then we did deterrents and containment and a lot of negotiation. What we’re trying to do in today’s world, where the information about nuclear technology is much more widely known, certainly than it was in the late ‘40s and early ’50s, we’re trying to convince Iran that this is not in their interest to do. And that is a different perspective than finding out – waking up and finding out the Soviet Union had the A-bomb and we had to deal with this.
MR. SESNO: Let’s talk about 21st century diplomacy and how it’s changed and what you’re doing, because you both addressed this – different terminology that’s often used. And one particular area, information, I want to talk a little bit for a moment here. I mean, you call it strategic communication, you call it public diplomacy, but it’s connecting with the rest of the world. It’s learning back from what others are saying. It’s influencing leaders and persuading publics and knocking down myths or propaganda, and maybe in some cases, propagandizing ourselves.
A lot of this is now done by the military. There’s no one person in charge of this. How should this very important information battle be waged, and who should be in command?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, let me give you two quick examples.
MR. SESNO: Our State Department?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Yeah. A battlefield conflict zone requires the military to respond to rumors, attacks. They have to have a strategic communications effort, but it must be part of a broader national public diplomacy outreach effort.
I’ll give you two quick examples. We were just talking about Iran. We learned that during the height of the demonstrations about the election, that Twitter was a major source of information for people who were protesting. And we thought that was a good vehicle, but we were told that Twitter just was going to have to shut down for 48 hours to do some upgrades to the software. So we called and said please don’t shut down because this is a major communications loop for people on the streets.
In Afghanistan, what we’ve learned since we got in there – and it’s these great young civilians who work for me in the State Department working with these great young military leaders, working in the – and our forces, they realize that we didn’t have a secure environment for cell phones to operate. So we began looking for places we could put up cell towers. We began looking for how we would incentivize businesses in Afghanistan to spread their cell phone coverage.
Why? Because the Taliban and their allies use cell phones to intimidate people. We found out that they were running FM – illegal FM stations literally off the back of motorcycles, and they were telling people “We’re going to behead this person,” and “We’re going to do that.” So we are competing in that space. And obviously, we have to work together, but we have the lead on it because it needs to stand for more than just our military might; it needs to represent all of our national interests and values.
MS. AMANPOUR: We’re going to take another break and we will be back in just a moment. (Applause.)
(Break.)
MR. SESNO: One of the concerns in the strategic communications field is that in the conflict situation, in too many cases, it’s the man or the woman in the uniform with the gun who is the – in a sense, the front line communicator and also the diplomat, at times. So though you say you want her and State and the diplomats, the civilians, to be in command of that – of necessity, our military, our men and women in uniform, are placed in that role. What should change?
SECRETARY GATES: Well, I think in the battlefield – on the battlefield, not much can change. And I think one of the most extraordinary things that we have seen both in Iraq and Afghanistan is the extraordinary innovativeness and sophistication of NCOs and junior officers in terms of interacting with the population, and in terms of trying to build trust.
I don’t think it can be any other way on the battlefield. Once security is established, then I think that’s the place where the civilians come in and take the lead in this. But I think one of the things Americans can be incredibly proud of is how well young men and women who are not professionals in the communications world and, frankly, who in many cases don’t have the language and haven’t studied the culture and so on establish personal relationships in these countries that matter a lot, and that create a tremendous foundation on which we can build.
We’re doing a lot in the Department in terms of language training, in terms of cultural education and so on for troops that are going out, so that they’re sensitive to the different cultures that they’re dealing with. But in terms of the first-line operators, they’re quite extraordinary.
MR. SESNO: You’ve both talked – in a few, I just want to —
SECRETARY GATES: Oh, yeah.
MR. SESNO: I just want to button this up because we are going to move to your questions in a moment, to the audience questions in a moment. But you’ve talked a lot as well about the under-resourcing of our nation’s diplomats. We heard you talk about that a moment ago. But also the need to retool how these – how this toolbox of diplomacy and information and military and economics are all brought to bear to have power and persuasion and influence in the world.
You’ve taken that on, sometimes unpopularly and controversially, in your own institution, which you believe needs to change in fundamental ways, whether it’s weapons systems, the F-22. You’ve spoken about how you have to take on retired generals and the military contractors and congressional members.
So what advice would you have to her if the tools of diplomacy and another bureaucracy called the State Department is to move to the 21st century? So go ahead and have a little moment here. (Laughter.)
SECRETARY GATES: Well, first of all, my view is the American toolbox should contain something other than hammers, okay? (Applause.) And I – my view is that the challenge that Secretary Clinton faces is not so much within the Department of State, but rather the willingness of the Congress to give her the resources that are needed to conduct these activities. And the truth of the matter is – and I’m really on thin ice here —
MR. SESNO: Oh, but keep going. (Laughter.)
SECRETARY GATES: The Congress is structured in such a way that our committees of a jurisdiction tend to look at things in stovepipes. So Hillary’s committees look at foreign policy in terms of diplomacy and so on, and AID. Ours look at it in terms of the military. The intelligence folks have their committees. And so except maybe at the very top level of the Congress, I think there are not people who have the same integrated view of the challenges facing our country and the opportunities we have to deal with them that we do sitting in the situation room.
And the question is how do you build a constituency in the Congress over a period of time not only to grow the civilian national security part of our government, meaning the non-DOD part, but to provide the tools that are necessary and that take years to build in terms of talent and capacity, to be able to conduct America’s relationships abroad? And I think that’s a challenge.
MR. SESNO: You haven’t answered that.
MS. AMANPOUR: No, go ahead.
MR. SESNO: No.
MS. AMANPOUR: Well, I was just struck by what the Secretary said about I think they should be perhaps less of the hammer. And I want to go back to Afghanistan because —
SECRETARY GATES: Well, I’m all for hammers. I just want something other than hammers, or in addition to. (Laughter.)
MR. SESNO: In Afghanistan, the notion of bombing from the air and going after militants from the air has caused a lot of civilian casualties and a huge drop-off for American public support amongst the people there. Do you think that it’s possible to continue using that as a primary weapon against militants just in terms of its effectiveness? And do you think that it’s moral to use that as a primary attack against the militants?
SECRETARY GATES: Well, I think one of the principal changes that General McChrystal has brought – and I will give General McKiernan credit, his predecessor, for beginning to move away from the use of air power, and particularly in offensive operations. And I think General McChrystal has underscored this, and a central element of his strategy in Afghanistan is to get away from the use of air power and the potential for mistakes that create the civilian casualties, and that every civilian casualty is a strategic defeat for the countries trying to help the Afghan Government and people.
And I would just say this: We will continue to use air power to defend our own troops. If they are in trouble, we will use air power to defend them. Where I think General McChrystal has drawn a line is in using air power in offensive operations.
MR. SESNO: So let us go now to your questions from the floor. We’re going to ask you to keep your question as – to identify yourself. We have two levels of participants – students from the School of Media and Public Affairs, and from the Elliott School. Give us your name, your school and a brief response – a brief answer, a brief response. We’ll get in as many as we can. Go ahead.
QUESTION: Okay. Hi. My name is Caitlin Elms (ph) and I’m a senior here in the School of Media and Public Affairs. I’m from Columbia, Maryland. And my question is for Secretary Clinton.
On your first two foreign trips as Secretary of State to the Middle East and Asia, you embedded local bloggers in your traveling press corps from each country that you visited. You also participated in webcasts, where you answered viewers’ questions. Your webcast in Beijing had over 10 million viewers where you discussed climate change. We were just discussing Twitter.
My question to you is: How do you see new media in the future of public diplomacy? And what types of strategies do you think would be most effective in the future that use new media?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, that’s a great question, because I think that new media is the reality. And part of what we’re trying to do is to bring that into public diplomacy and make it one of those tools in the toolbox, to try to not just have government-to-government contacts and official sorts of communication, but really try to reach out to the people in countries to have a better idea of who we are, what we stand for.
I think there has been a tremendous opportunity because of President Obama, where people really have opened up to America again. And we’re trying to fill that with content. We’re trying to make it as interactive as possible, give people around the world the idea that we really care what they think about. I mean, we may not always agree, but we’re back to listening, we’re back to engaging. Because in today’s world, there’s too many sources of information coming at people, and we need to be part of every possible approach that can be taken.
So I think it’s critical and we’ve got some great young people at the State Department who are designing this for us. And I feel very good about the start that we’ve made, but we have a long way to go.
MR. SESNO: And you’re hiring? (Laughter.)
SECRETARY CLINTON: We’re hiring. That’s right, we are actually hiring. We’re increasing – all things hopefully coming through in our budget, we’re increasing the numbers of Foreign Service and Civil Service personnel because the need is so great.
MR. SESNO: We have some very qualified people here. (Laughter.)
Next question, please.
QUESTION: Hi. My name is Carlos (ph). I am from Sao Paulo, Brazil, and I’m also in the Elliott School. My question is for Secretary Clinton.
Madame Secretary, what do you think of the political crisis in Honduras at the moment right now, and the apparently intensifying battle between left and right politics in Latin America? What does that mean for democracy in general in Latin America, and also for U.S. relations with Latin America? And do you think the current situation in Honduras could foreshadow similar events in other countries, specifically those led by leftist presidents in Latin America?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, I’m glad you asked that because very often we don’t talk enough about our nearest neighbors in this hemisphere. And we’ve spent a lot of time with this new Administration working with our friends and allies, because you’re right, there has been a pulling away from democracy, from human rights, from the kind of partnership that we would want with our neighbors. So in Honduras, we are standing for the principle of democratic and constitutional order. And we have done that, I think, much to the amazement of many of the very leaders you’re talking about who have become increasingly anti-American in their actions and their messages.
So I think it’s important that the United States do everything we can to prevent either the hijacking of democracy by people who get elected once and then decide there never should be a real election again, or by the return to military coups, where people are elected and even if you disagree with them, they should finish out their term in an orderly way. So we’re working very hard to reach a conclusion in Honduras that will permit the elections to go forward, that will follow what President Arias of Costa Rica did in the San Jose Accords to try to get Honduras back on the path to a more sustainable democracy.
The people in Honduras deserve that. They really have struggled hard to get to where they were before there was the disruption and the exiling of President Zelaya. And we hope that we can help them get back on the right path.
MR. SESNO: We have time for one last question. Go ahead.
QUESTION: Good evening. My name is Seth Hyman (ph). I am a junior in the Elliott School of International Affairs. I’m from Bay Ridge, Brooklyn. My question tonight is to you, Secretary Gates.
You both mentioned how you were pleased with the Pakistani Government in how they were combating the Taliban in Afghanistan. That being said, it is a known fact that the Pakistanis are always worried about the Indians and their – and their presence, especially being a nuclear power. I was wondering if you could talk about if you believe that the ISI and other members of the Pakistani military apparatus – if they are still supporting the Taliban as a counterweight to India?
SECRETARY GATES: Well, you know, I first started dealing with the ISI when we were partnered working against the Soviets and supporting the Mujaheddin in the early 1980s. And Pakistanis obviously established very close relationships with a variety of the Mujaheddin groups – Gilbuddin Hekmatyar and a number of others.
There obviously is the question of whether they have sustained those relationships and what the nature of those relationships might be. We talked to them about this. And I think that the clear path forward is for us to underscore to the Pakistanis that we are not going to turn our backs on them as we did in 1989 and 1990. We turned our backs on Afghanistan, we turned our backs on Pakistan. They were left to deal with the situation in Afghanistan on their own. Their worry is what happens in the future – will we be there, will we be a constant presence, will we be supportive of them over the long term?
I think in terms of the way they look at Afghanistan, the way they look at the region, depends on the degree of confidence that they have in us, that we will be a reliable partner of theirs going forward. I think that shapes the view of the Pakistani Government, and that includes the ISI.
MS. AMANPOUR: There is so much more to talk about. But thank you both very, very much for joining us. Thank you, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. (Applause.) Thank you, Secretary of Defense Robert Gates. Thank you to Frank Sesno and to all of George Washington University. Good night.
Reminder: Secretary Clinton and Secretary Gates to Participate in Discussion on American Power and Persuasion at George Washington University
Posted in Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Secretary of State, U.S. Department of State, Uncategorized, tagged Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Robert Gates, Secretary of Defense, Secretary of State, State Department, U. S. Department of Defense, U.S. Department of State on October 5, 2009| Leave a Comment »
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Office of the Spokesman
Washington, DC
October 1, 2009Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and Secretary of Defense Robert M. Gates will be jointly interviewed in front of the George Washington University community by GW School of Media and Public Affairs Director Frank Sesno and CNN Chief International Correspondent Christiane Amanpour. The interview, on the reach and limitations of American power, will take place at Lisner Auditorium at 7:00 p.m. on Monday, October 5, 2009. It will be broadcast as an hour-long special on CNN at 3:00 p.m. on Tuesday, October 6, 2009.
The event is co-sponsored by George Washington’s School of Media and Public Affairs and GW’s Elliott School of International Affairs, and in association with the University’s Institute of Public Diplomacy and Global Communication.
















































