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I could not close for the night without posting this.  Hillary gets it, Oxfam (I belong to this organization) gets it, and I sure hope the rest of the world does!

Oxfam’s Reaction to Secretary Clinton’s Copenhagen Announcement

WASHINGTON, Dec. 17 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ — Oxfam America President Raymond C. Offenheiser made the following statement in reaction to today’s announcement by Secretary Hillary Clinton that the US is prepared to work with other developed countries to mobilize $100 billion a year by 2020 to address the climate change needs of developing countries:

(Logo: http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20080221/DC14723LOGO )

“Secretary Clinton’s announcement could be one of the missing keys that unlock the international negotiations in Copenhagen. Her recognition that substantial resources are needed to help developing countries weather the negative impacts of climate change could truly move us closer to a fair and adequate global deal on climate change.

“Around the world, millions of people are facing the fact that the impacts of climate change are here to stay and due to get worse before they get better, no matter how quickly we cut emissions. From Benin to Bangladesh, the poorest people are hit first and worst by climate change, but are least responsible for causing it.

“This welcome development was bolstered by Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s impressive bipartisan congressional delegation to Copenhagen, which demonstrated that the Administration’s proposals have strong support in the US Congress.

“To ensure a strong path forward, we hope President Obama will build on Secretary Clinton’s announcement and the demonstrated Congressional support and firm up the US commitment to meet this goal with public funding that is new and additional to current development assistance. Hard-hit communities around the world must not face a trade-off between health clinics and early warning systems for disasters.”

Oxfam America is an international relief and development organization that creates lasting solutions to poverty, hunger and injustice. www.oxfamamerica.org.

SOURCE Oxfam America

YES!!!!!

Well, I posted her remarks earlier today, but when I did, these pictures were not yet available.  A day or two ago (I work all day, teach some nights, and blog all night. The days run together, and I lose track), I posted a link to a New York Times article calling Hillary’s (sudden, and apparently previously unplanned)  agenda in Copenhagen a “charm offensive.”  Well, we all know our Hillary can do that!  So here,  in photos,  is Hillary in action.  I happen to think her charm is irresistible!

Well, it is charm and a little bit more. From Foreign Policy Morning Brief: Clinton’s last-minute bid to save Copenhagen

Top story: In an 11th hour proposal to save the ailing UN Climate talks in Copenhagen and have some agreement on the table by the time U.S. President Barack Obama comes to town tomorrow, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton proposed that developed countries including the United States come up with $100 billion per year over the next decade to help poor countries fight climate change.

And from Sphere.com Clinton Offers Surprise Deal at Climate Conference

(Dec. 17) — With the clock winding down and the hosts of the Copenhagen climate conference reportedly abandoning hope of a deal, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton announced a possibly game-changing U.S. push to facilitate a $100 billion per year fund to help developing countries pay for measures to mitigate and adapt to global warning. Her remarks threw the spotlight on China and set exhausted negotiators back to work on salvaging a conference still teetering on the edge of failure.

“The U.S. is prepared to work with other countries to jointly mobilize $100 billion a year by 2020,” Clinton told a packed news conference at Copenhagen’s Bella Center. But her offer came with a major caveat: that the recipients of such funds agree to strict and open accounting of how they are spent. China in particular, the world’s largest emitter of greenhouse gases, has strongly resisted provisions for international review of its progress, and it has considerable support for that position among other developing countries.

Here is a video of Hillary Clinton with UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown today in Copenhagen. This was just after their bilateral.

Also in Copenhagen with the U.S. Delegation are Hillary’s old friend (and mine) Congressman Charlie Rangel,  Speaker of the House, Nancy Pelosi, and Senate Majority Leader, Steny Hoyer.

Well, no I have no idea WHY they are there, but there they are!

Remarks at the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change

Hillary Rodham Clinton

Secretary of State

Copenhagen, Denmark

December 17, 2009


SECRETARY CLINTON: Thank you all for coming this morning. I arrived in Copenhagen several hours ago. I’ve just had a briefing on the state of the negotiations. I’d like to give you a brief report on where we stand and then make an announcement.

First, let me thank Todd Stern and the terrific team representing the United States at this conference. Actually, they’ve been representing us ever since the beginning of the Obama Administration over this past year.

We appointed Todd Stern as our first-ever Special Envoy for Climate Change because we understood that this is one of the most urgent global challenges of our time, and it demands a global solution. Climate change threatens not only our environment, but our economy and our security — this is an undeniable and unforgiving fact.

So in addition to the robust actions that the Obama Administration has taken at home — from the historic investment in clean energy included in the Recovery Act to the new efficiency standards for cars, trucks, and appliances — we have pursued an unprecedented effort to engage partners around the world in the fight against climate change. And we produced real results.

President Obama launched the Major Economies Forum on Energy and Climate which brought together key developed and developing countries. He also spearheaded an agreement, first among the G20 and then the Asian-Pacific Economic Cooperation nations, to phase out fossil fuel subsidies.

And after a year of diplomacy, we have come to Copenhagen ready to take the steps necessary to achieve a comprehensive and operational new agreement that will provide a foundation for long-term, sustainable economic growth. Our U.S. delegation includes not just the President of the United States, but six members of his Cabinet.

We have now reached the critical juncture in these negotiations. I understand that the talks have been difficult. I know that our team, along with many others, are working hard and around the clock to forge a deal. And we will continue doing all that we can do. But the time is at hand for all countries to reach for common ground and take an historic step that we can all be proud of.

There is a way forward based on a number of core elements: decisive national actions, an operational accord that internationalizes those actions, assistance for nations that are the most vulnerable and least prepared to meet the effects of climate change, and standards of transparency that provide credibility to the entire process. The world community should accept no less.

And the United States is ready to embrace this path.

First, we have announced our intention to cut our emissions in the range of 17 percent below 2005 levels in 2020 and ultimately in line with final climate and energy legislation. In light of the President’s goals, the expected pathway in pending legislation would extend those cuts to 30 percent by 2025, 42 percent by 2030, and more than 80 percent by 2050.

Second, we also recognize that an agreement must provide generous financial and technological support for developing countries, particularly the poorest and most vulnerable, to help them reduce emissions and adapt to climate change. That’s why we joined an effort to mobilize fast-start funding that will ramp up to $10 billion in 2012 to support the adaptation and mitigation efforts of countries in need.

And today I’d like to announce that, in the context of a strong accord in which all major economies stand behind meaningful mitigation actions and provide full transparency as to their implementation, the United States is prepared to work with other countries toward a goal of jointly mobilizing $100 billion a year by 2020 to address the climate change needs of developing countries. We expect this funding will come from a wide variety of sources, public and private, bilateral and multilateral, including alternative sources of finance. This will include a significant focus on forestry and adaptation, particularly, again I repeat, for the poorest and most vulnerable among us.

So there should be no doubt about the commitment of the United States to reaching a successful agreement here in Copenhagen and meeting this great global challenge together.

But ultimately this must be a common effort. We all know there are real challenges that remain in the hours left to these negotiations. And it is no secret that we have lost precious time in these past days. In the time we have left here, it can no longer be about us versus them – this group of nations pitted against that group. We all face the same challenge together.

I have often quoted a Chinese proverb which says that when you are in a common boat, you have to cross the river peacefully together. Well, we are in a common boat. All of the major economies have an obligation to commit to meaningful mitigation actions and stand behind them in a transparent way. And all of us have an obligation to engage constructively and creatively toward a workable solution. We need to avoid negotiating approaches that undermine rather than advance progress toward our objective.

I am deeply concerned about the consequences for developing countries – from Bangladesh to the Maldives, from the Caribbean to West Africa and the Pacific Islands – if we cannot secure the kind of strong operational accord I’ve described today. We know what the consequences will be for the farmer in Bangladesh or the herder in Africa or the family being battered by hurricanes in Central America. Without that accord, there won’t be the kind of joint global action from all of the major economies we all want to see, and the effects in the developing world could be catastrophic. We know what will happen. Rising seas, lost farmland, drought and so much else. Without the accord, the opportunity to mobilize significant resources to assist developing countries with mitigation and adaptation will be lost.

Over the next two days, we will be discussing these issues further. This problem is not going away, even when we leave Copenhagen. But neither is our resolve. We must try to overcome the obstacles that remain. We must not only seize this moment, but raise our oars together and row in the same direction toward our common destination and destiny. And the United States is ready to do our part. Thank you.

MODERATOR: We’ll take a few questions. John Broder, from the New York Times.

QUESTION: The commitment toward a hundred billion dollar fund by 2020 is in line with, although at the lower end of, what Great Britain and the EU have proposed. You mentioned that it would include some alternative forms of finance. Could you spell that out a little bit? And do you seriously believe that a hundred billion dollars is going to be enough, and going to be enough to move this process to a conclusion tomorrow night?

SERETARY CLINTON: Well, a hundred billion dollars a year is a lot of money. That’s a commitment that is very real and can have tangible effects. There is a pipeline that both has to be filled and then the funds disbursed. So we actually think a hundred billion dollars is appropriate, usable and will be effective. There are a number of different ideas about how we can pursue the financing to achieve the annual one hundred billion dollars commitment. I don’t want to go into that here, because, you know, there are many different ideas. The important point for the next two days is not to talk about how we would fund money that we haven’t yet agreed to fund, but to make the agreement that that is what we’re going to do. Because I want to underscore what I said: in the absence of an operational agreement that meets the requirements that I outlined, there will not be that kind of financial commitment, at least from the United States.

QUESTION: (Inaudible), TV2 Denmark. Two questions. Number one, as you may have heard, there has been sort of a stalemate in the negotiations. Who will now drive the negotiations forward? And number two, there’s been rumors that President Obama may not come tomorrow. Will he come, actually?

SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, as to the first question, we all have to drive the negotiations forward. I’m here today, not only to make this announcement, which is a significant commitment from President Obama and the United States, but to underscore the importance of engaging in a very constructive and active way over the next hours. We’re running out of time. It’s unfortunate that there has been problems with the process, difficulties with certain parties being willing to come to the table, all kinds of discussions and disagreements, sometimes about the past rather than about the future. But the underlying reality is, we have to do everything we can to reach this agreement. Because in the absence of a new agreement that binds everyone to their relative commitments and responsibilities, where the developed countries take on these obligations and where the developing countries work on their own mitigation and adaptation measures, with a transparency mechanism, there will not be the kind of concerted, global action that we so desperately need.

The President is planning to come tomorrow. Obviously we hope that there will be something to come for.

QUESTION: Thank you. Margaret Ryan with Clean Skies News. Are you saying if China – we have reports this morning from Reuters, The Post and so on – where the Chinese officials are saying no, they will not commit to the kind of transparency, incorporating their commitments into an international treaty that the U.S. is asking. If they continue in that position, will the U.S. walk away from an agreement here?

SECRETARY CLINTON: We think this agreement has interlocking pieces, all of which must go together. And we have set those out continuously. There have been numerous instances in the past year where parties have agreed to the elements of the agreement that we are seeking – at L’Aquila, the G8, the Major Economies Forum, the bilateral meeting between President Obama and President Hu Jintao in their statement in Beijing. Time and time again leading up to these negotiations, all the parties have committed themselves to pursuing an agreement that met the various standards, including transparency. It would be hard to imagine, speaking for the United States, that there could be the level of financial commitment that I have just announced in the absence of transparency from the second biggest emitter – and now I guess the first biggest emitter, and now nearly, if not already, the second biggest economy.

QUESTION: Thank you Madam Secretary. David Corn, of Mother Jones Magazine and PoliticsDaily.com. Can you outline some of those requirements? You have just mentioned China a little bit. What would be the standards that you would expect China and other major developing nations to meet in order for there to be a deal in which you could go ahead with this financial commitment?

SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, we have presented and discussed numerous approaches to transparency with a number of countries and there are many ways to achieve transparency that would be credible and acceptable. But there has to be a willingness to move toward transparency in whatever form we finally determine is appropriate. So, if there is not even a commitment to pursue transparency, that’s kind of a dealbreaker for us. In the absence of transparency of some sort – and I am not going to prescribe from this podium exactly what it must be – but there has to be a commitment to transparency. We’ve said it consistently. As I just referenced, there have been occasions in this past year when all the major economies have committed to transparency. Now that we are trying to define what transparency means and how we would both implement it and observe it, there is a backing away from transparency. And, you know, that to us is something that undermines the whole effort that we’re engaged in.

MODERATOR: We have time for one more.

QUESTION: My name is (inaudible) from the Tokyo Chunichi newspapers. I was wondering about the fast start financing because the EU has committed about 10 billion dollars, Japan 15 billion. So what is the EU offering on that – sorry, the U.S. offering on that, obviously?

SECRETARY CLINTON: We are committed to the fast funding start, and we are going to do our proportion of it, right Todd?

TODD STERN: Yes.

MODERATOR: We’ll take one more.

QUESTION: I’m from the Norwegian Broadcast Corporation. I am just wondering, this “should” instead of “shall.” What does the word mean when you take it back to the U.S?

SECRETARY CLINTON: Well it depends upon what you’re referring to. If you’re referring to transparency, there shall be a transparency requirement. How it is defined and implemented is something we should leave up to the negotiations.

QUESTION: I was wondering, the change in the text that you – the U.S. asked for a change in the text that they wanted a conditional “should” instead of a “shall” in terms of reduction.

SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, that’s text negotiation that the negotiators are doing. You know that the advantage of being the Secretary of State is I’m up here at the large macro level, and they have to get down into the nitty gritty and determine exactly what verb and modifier needs to be used. But the point is that as we negotiate text, we should be negotiating over transparency. There should not be positions taken that transparency is off the table for certain countries, because that is unacceptable in the overall international agreement we are trying to forge. Will you just add a word?

TODD STERN: On that specific question; look, the effort that’s going on right now that Prime Minister Rasmussen has led, is to get an operational, political accord leading up to, hopefully next year, a politically binding agreement. “Shall” is a word that is typically used in legal agreements and not in non-legally binding agreements. So that’s maybe more than you want to know, but that’s the textual answer.

SECRETARY CLINTON: Thank you very much.

Hillary in Copenhagen

This just in from Dipnote:

Secretary Clinton is “wheels down” in #Copenhagen, Denmark to attend #COP15 events tomorrow. #hillarytravel

And here’s what she’s up against:

Posted:  12/16/2009 8:24 PM
U.N. climate negotiators looked Wednesday to the United States to bring fresh ideas – perhaps in the form of extra billions of dollars – to try to salvage a bare-bones political agreement by the end of the week on controlling global warming.The U.S. must find ways of meeting demands by a suspicious world on reducing greenhouse gas emissions without exceeding what Congress will allow. It must also find the cash in a tight budget.

“The United States is back and President Barack Obama is coming to Copenhagen to put America on the right side of history,” said Sen. John Kerry, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton was on her way to Copenhagen as negotiations over a draft agreement effectively came to a halt after an all-night session that broke up at dawn Wednesday with a confused text leaving most issues to be decided by ministers or heads of government.

Good luck, Madame Secretary! We know you can do it!

This is the end of a long nightmare for the Goldman family. Secretary Clinton has been personally involved with this case from the commencement of her service at the State Department. Excellent news! Thank you, Madame Secretary, for your hard work. And thank you, Appellate Court of Brazil!

U.S. Citizen To Be Returned From Brazil

Hillary Rodham Clinton

Secretary of State

Washington, DC

December 16, 2009

U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE

Office of the Spokesman

For Immediate Release December 17, 2009

STATEMENT BY SECRETARY CLINTON

I was pleased to hear that the Appellate Court in Rio de Janeiro has upheld the lower court’s decision that Sean Goldman, a young American boy wrongfully retained in Brazil for more than five years, should be reunited with his father David in New Jersey. We appreciate the assistance and cooperation of the Government of Brazil in upholding its obligations under the Hague Convention on International Child Abduction. And it is my hope that this long legal process is now complete and that the Goldman family will be reunited quickly. They will be in my thoughts and prayers today and throughout this holiday season.


Remarks At Ribbon Cutting Ceremony for SA-5

Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of State
Judith A. McHale
Under Secretary for Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs
Annex Building
Washington, DC
December 16, 2009

UNDER SECRETARY MCHALE: Good morning. I’m delighted to be here with all of you today to welcome our special guest, and I have to say it is so terrific to have you all so close just across the street in terms of working together. And to all our colleagues, it’s been really great having you here. I want to just take one quick minute to thank all the team who did such a great job of bringing everyone over here and getting you all moved in and settled in, but with that, I’m going to turn it over to our guest speaker.

And thank you very much, Secretary Clinton, for being with us here today, and over to you.

SECRETARY CLINTON: Thank you very much, Judith. Well, it’s great to be here. (Applause.) I have been watching this building from my window and I’ve watched the end of the construction and the final touches being put on it and the moving vans pulling up, and I said I wanted to come over when everybody was finally settled in to officially welcome you here to Foggy Bottom. And I don’t know where that came from, but every time I say it – (laughter) – I stop and think.

We are so pleased, and I want to thank both Under Secretary Judith McHale and Under Secretary Pat Kennedy. I want to thank also Thomas Menighan, who is the executive vice president and CEO for APhA, who is up on the top floor in case you haven’t discovered that, as well as Roger Browning and Ann Dubas, who are part of the APhA family. I want to thank also everyone who has helped to make this move possible. Maura Pally and Jeremy Curtin, thank you for your leadership in this transition. And we now have 900-plus combined staff from ECA, IIP, R, PPR, L, PD, GSEC. I must say that when I was working on my confirmation hearings and ran into all of these alphabetical descriptions, I was thrown for a loop. Now, what R has to do with public diplomacy is something that we’ve never figured out. (Laughter.)

But what I do know is that some of the most important work that we do here at the State Department and in our posts around the world on behalf of our values and our interests and our security is really in your hands. This is absolutely one of my highest priorities – to do a better job of integrating policymaking and public diplomacy. I think telling America’s story is something that we need to do every single day. We did it quite well during the Cold War and then we dropped off because we thought, well, Cold War is over, Soviet Union has dissolved, everybody should know that democracy and human rights and individual freedom and liberty is self-evidently the way of the future.

Well, we’ve learned that we cannot rest. We have to continue to make the case. And every time we engage a foreign audience about our values or we exemplify them, we learn from their feedback, and we become more creative and more persuasive in trying to make our case. So we need you and we need you in close partnership with everyone else in our Department in order to make this process work better.

We’re housing you here in this state of the art building. You should know there’s a lot of envy on the other side of the street – (laughter) – where there are still some difficulties with information platforms and light and lots of things that actually add to the work environment. But we need to have a constant flow of information among us, because the world of public diplomacy is changing so rapidly because of digital media. You need the tools to communicate constantly in an increasingly interconnected world with 24/7 news feeds, constantly updated blogs, and of course, viral video.

So this building, as you have discovered, is equipped with the latest audio-visual equipment, faster internet connections, production software and hardware, digital video conference capabilities. And it does all this and still supports our Greening Diplomacy Initiative by reducing our carbon footprint. And so I want to thank the American Pharmacists Association for not only being wonderful neighbors, but for being committed to environmental stewardship, which has earned this building a gold rating in Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design, a gold LEED rating, and that is absolutely terrific.

Now, I know this move hasn’t been easy for all of you. Some of you have found you have a longer commute. Others have traded offices with windows for desks in common areas. But we are asking each of you to share more resources as well as to make the most effective use of this space and to give us the feedback so we can keep trying to improve it. But you’ve risen to the challenge. I’ve talked to a number of people about how things are going over here. And I’m very pleased that there seems to be a terrific sense of teamwork. We’re moving forward with our tried and true exchange programs and cultural initiatives, and we’re building new vehicles for public diplomacy. So it is – it’s exciting and it’s really gratifying for me, by the end of this year, to see all the progress that we are making together.

Now, it’s my pleasure to cut this ribbon symbolizing the formal inauguration of State Department Annex 5. Now, we have to think of a different name. (Laughter.) That does not at all reflect the creativity and the energy and the contributions of the people in this building, so we’re going to put you to work on coming up with a new designation. Now, probably in some list somewhere, it’ll always be Annex 5, but that’s not how we want to refer to it and to you, because you are part of everything we do and instrumental in our success.

As Judith McHale can tell you, one of our early conclusions after looking at the situation in both Afghanistan and Pakistan is that we have really fallen down on the job. We were being outrun by the Taliban in getting a story out. They were using all kinds of platforms – FM radio stations on the back of motorcycles – they were getting their message out, and we weren’t. And here we are, this extraordinary, powerful society with all of the tools that are needed, and we had to do a better job. And so I think that’s just one example of why what you’re doing is literally critical to everything that the Obama Administration is attempting to accomplish.

So with that, I will take these rather giant scissors – (laughter) – and I think we’re going to be joined by some employees, perhaps, right? All right. Here we go. (Applause.)

(The ribbon was cut.)

UNDER SECRETARY MCHALE: Thank you all for being here today and thank you, again, Secretary Clinton, for cutting the ribbon. So thanks very much. (Applause.)

SECRETARY CLINTON: And let me wish you all a very, very happy holiday season. Come back rejuvenated for 2010, which will be even more exciting. Thank you all. (Applause.)

Here’s something to watch for tomorrow.

Secretary Clinton to Commemorate 15th Anniversary of International Conference on Population and Development

Washington, DC
December 15, 2009

Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton will deliver a speech commemorating the 15th anniversary of the International Conference on Population and Development (ICPD), on December 16, 2009 at 3:00 p.m. in the Benjamin Franklin Diplomatic Reception Room at the Department of State.

During the 1994 United Nations International Conference on Population and Development (ICPD) held in Cairo, 179 nations reached consensus on actions needed to achieve over the next 20 years universal access to education, especially for girls; reductions in infant, child and maternal mortality, and universal access to reproductive health.

At this event, Secretary Clinton will declare the U.S. Government’s renewed support for and dedication to reaching the ICPD and other related UN agreements, including the Millennium Development Goals, by 2015.

Well, this comes as a surprise!  From The Washington Post:


Hillary Clinton will head to Copenhagen

By Steven Mufson in our blog, Post Carbon:

Just in case there weren’t enough policy star power in Copenhagen, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton plans to attend the climate conference, according to sources with non-governmental organizations at the conference.

Clinton plans to travel on Wednesday and take part in negotiations on Thursday, a day before President Obama is due to arrive. She has booked a full day of meetings on Thursday and will join Obama once he arrives.

READ MORE>>>

Here’s another really interesting take on this surprise trip from the New York Times. Nations Play Hardball as Hillary Clinton Heads to Climate Summit

By DARREN SAMUELSOHN AND LISA FRIEDMAN of GreenwireCOPENHAGEN — The United States is putting on a charm offensive as U.N. climate negotiations enter the home stretch despite new battle lines between rich and poor countries over core features of a new emissions agreement.

Yesterday, President Obama worked the phones with leaders of some of the world’s most vulnerable countries, ahead of his scheduled trip to Denmark on Friday. Also, the State Department confirmed that Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton would arrive here Thursday for a day of meetings ahead of Obama’s arrival.

Hmmmmm!  A charm offensive!  The NYT is onto Hillary’s “smart power” secret.  Hillary’s charm is unbeatable!  The Hillary People ALWAYS knew that!

There is also this in the same article.

In an op-ed published today in the International Herald Tribune, Clinton stressed that international verification is key.

“A successful agreement depends upon a number of core elements, but two are shaping up to be essential: first, that all major economies set forth strong national actions and resolve to implement them; and second, that they agree to a system that enables full transparency and creates confidence that national actions are in fact being implemented,” Clinton wrote.

Clinton also stressed a critical component to the climate accord sought by key moderate Senate Democrats and Republicans in Washington. “Transparency, in particular, is what will ensure that this agreement becomes operational, not just aspirational,” she added. “We all need to take our share of responsibility, stand behind our commitments, and mean what we say in order for an international agreement to be credible.”

Clinton’s role is also increasingly growing in the closing hours before a critical deadline for the high-level environmental ministers who are trying to get as much accomplished as possible before their bosses arrive.

READ MORE>>>

Even MORE!

Remarks With Serbian Foreign Minister Vuk Jeremic Before Their Meeting
Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of State
Treaty Room
Washington, DC
December 15, 2009

SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, I’m very pleased to welcome the foreign minister of Serbia here. Vice President Biden had a very productive meeting last May in Belgrade. And we see continuing positive developments in our relationship with Serbia and we look forward to working with you and with your government on behalf of many matters of mutual concern.

FOREIGN MINISTER JEREMIC: Well, thank you very much, Madame Secretary. It’s a great pleasure to be back in Washington. We see our relation with Washington as the critical relations for peace and stability in the Balkans. The Serbian Government has a central strategic priority, and that is membership in the European Union. We are very grateful for the support that we have enjoyed so far and that we hope to enjoy in the future from the Government of the United States, and I look forward to working with Secretary Clinton and American officials in 2010.
SECRETARY CLINTON: Thank you. Nice to see you.
FOREIGN MINISTER JEREMIC: Nice to see you.
SECRETARY CLINTON: Thank you all very much.

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