Remarks at the TIME 100 Gala
Remarks
Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of State
Lincoln Center
New York, NY
April 24, 2012
Thank
you very much. Thank you all. Thank you and welcome to my announcement
to run for president of Malta. (Laughter.) I am so delighted to be here
in New York in the United States of America at this event, and I want to
thank Rick Stengel and everyone at TIME for bringing together this
remarkable group of people and for including me as well. Truth be told,
as Richard just mentioned, I did invite him to travel with me to all
those countries, including Libya, just after the revolution, and it was,
frankly, a transparent ploy to make the TIME 100 list. (Laughter.) So
if you ever want to make the list again, or for the first time, just
follow that example.
We’re here in the greatest city in the world, and I’m delighted that
TIME has included two of the newest residents: Jeremy Lin and Tim Tebow.
And for both of them, I’m sure they will have already discovered what a
welcoming, exciting place New York is. And if you want any advice, if
you need a little help getting your bearings, I’ve put together some
ideas for a Listening Tour – and if you just travel around, you’ll hear
all kinds of things from New Yorkers. And for me it was a great
experience representing this exciting state.
Now, there’s a lot to be done tonight, but there’s not really a lot
of room for more than one internet meme sensation, so I’m afraid that
Tim Tebow and Jeremy Lin really take the cake here. Speaking of New York
though, I was delighted to see that our wonderful Governor Andrew Cuomo
is on the TIME 100 list, along with others like Marco Rubio. And the
two of them and I have ended up on some other lists this past couple of
months. (Laughter.) And I assume it’s their keen interest in foreign
policy that brings us together. But for me, looking through this list
and looking at that exciting video depiction of everyone, I just want to
say how impressed and grateful I am.
TIME has honored so many national and global leaders; you couldn’t
possibly acknowledge every one. There’s many I haven’t had a chance to
meet yet – I was sort of hoping Kim Jong-un would show up. (Laughter.) I
don’t think he’s here but if you catch sight of him, let me know. We’re
still trying to figure out what he’s all about. (Laughter.)
But I do want to give a shout-out to Angela Merkel and Dilma Rousseff
and Portia Miller, Christine Lagarde, who are also on this list and
prove once again that you actually can run the world in heels and
pantsuits. (Applause.) Because the day is over when women leaders could
only aspire to a supporting role. And by the way, I think we may have
just found Kristen Wiig’s next movie. She can call it: “Bridesmaids No
Longer.” (Laughter.)
I am – just excited to have the chance to say a few semi-serious
words. Because aside from the dictators – and I am not talking about my
friend Harvey – (laughter) – this is a truly remarkable list with so
many distinguished leaders, artists, and activists, people who are on
the front lines across the globe, whether it’s fighting AIDS in India,
corruption in Russia, gender-based violence in Pakistan. And I am
personally pleased at how many courageous women are on the list this
year.
Now what does this actually mean, besides a fabulous evening in one
of the great spots of New York? You’ve been deemed as influential. And I
think it means that, at least according to TIME and the process they
went through, people are inspired by your grace and your grit, moved by
your refusal to give up even when the challenges appear insurmountable,
motivated by your focus on solving problems that actually matter in
people’s lives, showing us all what it means to work hard, to innovate,
to advance our common humanity, to lead.
And the challenges that so many of you and others who couldn’t be
with us tonight take on every day – conflict and persecution, corruption
and poverty, hunger and disease – go directly to the security and
prosperity of this country and all countries.
Today a flu in Canton can become an epidemic in Chicago. Or a protest
in Cairo can reverberate to Calcutta causing economic and political
shockwaves. And we know too well the destruction that an extremist cell
in Karachi or Kandahar can cause. The world has changed – technology and
globalization have made nearly every country and community
interdependent and interconnected; citizens and non-state actors like
NGOs, corporations, cartels are increasingly influencing international
affairs for good or for ill. And the challenges we face have become so
complex, so fast-moving, so cross-cutting that no one nation can hope to
solve them alone. So how we practice foreign policy needs to change as
well.
And when President Obama asked me to be Secretary of State, people
were asking, “Is America still up to the job of leading in this rapidly
changing world?” And we faced two wars, an economy in free-fall,
diplomacy had been deemphasized, our traditional alliances were fraying,
the international system the United States had helped to build and
defend looked increasingly obsolete.
So the President set a clear objective to secure and advance
America’s global leadership in the 21st Century. And to achieve that
goal, we could no longer rely primarily on military solutions or on a
go-it-alone approach. We needed to expand our thinking and our horizons,
to use every tool in the proverbial tool box, every asset, every
partner, in an integrated approach. And that meant breaking out of old
bureaucratic silos, engaging with emerging powers, and most importantly,
as Rick said, with people themselves, not just governments. It also
meant harnessing market forces to help solve strategic problems, finding
new partners in the private sector. In short, we needed to change the
way we did business from top to bottom. And we called this new approach:
“Smart Power.”
And it’s been more than three years now. By the time I finish next
January, I guess I’ll have traveled a million miles, visited more than
100 countries. And I know a couple of things. One, the world remains a
dangerous place, but I’m very proud of what we’ve accomplished. We have
integrated the three pillars of American foreign policy: diplomacy,
development, and defense. And we have worked hard to restore America’s
standing, especially by repairing alliances and deepening relationships,
and paying a lot of attention to the so-called rising powers. And also
putting together coalitions to do things like protect civilians in
Libya, or to try to, through pressure and sanctions, influence behavior
in Iran. Putting people at the center of our foreign policy, especially
those long pushed to the margins like women and young people, religious
and ethnic minorities, the LGBT community, civil society. That was
important because we want to make clear that America’s values of
inclusivity and democracy, of fairness and equality of opportunity
really were at the core of who we are and who we will be. So we
determined to make innovation and partnerships the foundation of what we
did.
And America’s global leadership is not a birthright. It has to be
earned by each successive generation. So putting the common good ahead
of narrow interests is what I think is not just a nice thing to do, but
essential. And that’s as true at home as it is abroad. To be innovative,
integrated, visionary, it’s all critical to the kind of future we want.
And there is no substitute for American leadership. I feel it
everywhere I travel, every time that big blue and white plane with the
words United States of America on the side touches down in another
country. And yes, I appreciate greatly our military and material might.
But at bottom it is our values and our commitment to fairness and
justice, freedom and democracy that has set us apart and hopefully,
God-willing, will always set us apart. It’s what makes American
leadership so exceptional.
So let me leave you with just one final thought. Because as much as
the world changes, this will always be true: Sometimes nations must be
willing to do what is right no matter the odds or the costs. We must be
prepared to act strongly and decisively, with every tool and, even
occasionally, weapon at our disposal.
Some of you might have seen that photograph from the White House
Situation Room on the day Usama bin Ladin was killed. And I’m often
asked: What was going through my mind during that very long, tense day?
And first, I remembered all the people here in New York who I had gotten
to know, who I was privileged to represent in the Senate, and how much
they, and we, deserved justice for our loved ones. And I thought about
America and how important it was to protect our country from another
attack. And I prayed for the safety of those brave men, those Navy SEALS
risking their lives on that moonless Pakistani night.
So America will not only continue to lead, we will do so because we
must. It’s who we are. It’s in our DNA. And I want to be sure that as I
finish off my term as Secretary of State, and eventually get to a point
where I can put my feet up and actually enjoy just being a citizen
again, there’s a lot of work still to be done. There’s not a moment to
lose.
And as I head off to another country and go on to all the meetings
that I’ll be having, I will have the privilege to meet people like those
we honor tonight. I will have the privilege to see firsthand what they
are doing to advance freedom and opportunity to stand up to injustice,
and I will know that America needs to be on their side. We need to
continue doing what America does best: solving problems, standing for
our values, and making it clear that the future will be just as
exciting, filled with potential, as we have enjoyed a past that has
given so many of us the opportunities that we sometimes take for
granted, but which we are privileged to have as we gather here tonight.
So we need your help to continue this mission, this human mission.
And next year when the editors of TIME begin putting together their
list, I hope that they, and we, will find a world perhaps a little more
peaceful, more prosperous, and more free.
And thanks to all of you for your contributions in making that so. Thank you all. Goodnight. (Applause.)