Forrestal Lecture at the Naval Academy
Remarks
Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of State
Annapolis, MD
April 10, 2012
SECRETARY CLINTON:
Thank you very much. Thanks for that warm introduction, Zach. Thank you
Jordan, who will be helping to moderate the questions at the end of my
remarks. Vice Admiral Miller and Captain Clark, thank you for the very
warm welcome that you have given me. I also want to recognize a
long-time friend, the governor of the great state of Maryland, Martin
O’Malley. And I understand that we have delegates from the Naval Academy
Foreign Affairs Conference, from schools literally around the world,
including some Fulbright scholars. So let me welcome all of you as well.
I just hope they don’t make you climb Herndon before you leave the
academy. (Laughter.)
And Midshipmen, thank you for taking this
time away from your studies. (Laughter.) You’ll take just any excuse.
(Laughter.) And Plebes, I’m sure you’d rather be sleeping. (Cheering and
applause.) And Youngsters, well, you’re still just glad you’re not
Plebes. (Cheering.) And Second Class, you’d rather, I’m sure, be
catching up on some homework. (Cheering.) And Firsties, you’re already
dreaming of throwing your cover in the air and putting all this in your
rearview mirror. (Cheers and applause.)
But to one and all, it is
such an honor for me to be here this evening. Now, I am fortunate to
know and work with quite a few graduates of this academy and to call
many of them my friends, including the former Chairman of the Joint
Chiefs Retired Admiral Mike Mullen, and Admiral Harry Harris, class of
1978, who travels the world with me and is here with me tonight. And as I
was signing the guestbook for the lectures, I know you recently heard
from my former colleague, Senator John McCain, who, by his own
admission, was nowhere near the top of his class, but that didn’t stop
him from becoming a genuine American hero and a great colleague and
travelling companion during my years in the Senate.
Now, I
received a note, an email, from another graduate I know, just in the
last day, who had heard that I would be coming here to the academy. And
he wanted me to understand how this academy prepares you not just for
military service, but for citizenship and life. Carlos came to Annapolis
after fleeing Cuba as a child with his parents, who both worked two
jobs to make a new life in America. The naval training he received
helped him eventually become the first commanding officer of a guided
missile destroyer, and his study of strategy and diplomacy landed him a
job as a White House fellow.
But that’s not all. He used what he
learned in, yes, electrical engineering classes – and I know how much
you all love those – to start his own small business that now employs 50
people. The academy’s emphasis on integrity and character led this
first-generation American to get involved in his own community and even
to make a run for local office. In his email to me, he said, “My life
would not be what it is today if it were not for the United States Naval
Academy. Annapolis taught me to always strive in my own small way to
make a positive difference in the lives of others because it is the
right thing to do.”
Now, that is not only a wonderful sentiment
for an individual’s life, but also for our country and our country’s
future. You see, we need you to become leaders who can use every tool
and every bit of training to make contributions across a wide range of
disciplines. The challenges of the 21st century are blurring
the lines between defense, diplomacy, and development, the three Ds of
foreign policy. So we need officers who can fight wars, negotiate
agreements, and provide emergency relief all at once. Call it the smart
power Navy. That’s what Annapolis is preparing you for, and that’s what
your country is counting on.
And as we consider this future, let
us also remember our past. This is the Forrestal lecture, named for the
first-ever Secretary of Defense, James Forrestal. He helped create the
modern military and reorganize the government for the Cold War. And
throughout his career, he championed the Navy as a pillar of America’s
global leadership.
Now, that was not always a popular position.
After World War II, many Americans would have been happy if we just
retreated behind our borders. But Secretary Forrestal was part of an
extraordinary generation of leaders who realized that Americans’
interests were inextricably linked to the fortunes of people everywhere.
In 1946, he noted in his diary that the Soviets believed that the
post-war world should be shaped by a handful of great powers acting
alone. But “the American point of view,” he wrote, “is that all nations
professing a desire for peace and democracy should participate.”
In
the years that followed, the United States and its partners constructed
a new international order – an architecture of institutions, norms, and
alliances that delivered peace and prosperity across what was then
called the Free World. We saw old rivals like France and Germany feeling
secure enough to reconcile and break their cycle of conflict. We
watched as increasing economic integration raised standards of living,
as fundamental freedoms became enshrined in international law, and
democracy took root and thrived.
Now, today, no totalitarian
empire threatens the world. But new actors are wielding increasing
influence in international affairs. And emerging regions, especially the
Asia Pacific, are becoming key drivers of global politics and
economics. As a result, the post-war architecture is in need of some
renovation. Still, amidst all this change, two constants remain. First, a
just, open, and sustainable international order is still required to
promote global peace and prosperity. And second, while the geometry of
global power may have changed, American leadership is as essential as
ever.
Now, I have said that the 21st century will be
America’s Pacific century, just like previous centuries have been. And
today, I want to describe briefly the diplomatic, economic and military
investments the United States is making in a strong network of
institutions and partnerships across the Asia Pacific. This vast region,
from the Indian Ocean to the western shores of the Americas, is home to
half the world’s population, several of our most trusted allies,
emerging economic powers like China, India, and Indonesia, and many of
the world’s most dynamic trade and energy routes.
Surging U.S.
exports to the region are helping drive our economic recovery here at
home. And future growth depends on reaching further into Asia’s growing
consumer base and expanding middle class. Indeed, the shape of the
global economy, the advance of democracy and human rights, and our hopes
for a 21st century less bloody than the 20th century all hinge to a large degree on what happens in the Asia Pacific.
Take
a look at this month’s headlines, and it shows the challenges and
opportunities that the region presents. As we meet here tonight, North
Korea is readying a long-range missile launch that will violate UN
Security Council resolutions and put its neighbors and region at risk.
Now this new threat comes only weeks after North Korea agreed to a
moratorium on nuclear and missile testing. The speed of the turnaround
raises questions about Pyongyang’s seriousness in saying that it desires
to improve relations with us and its neighbors. This launch will give
credence to the view that North Korean leaders see improved relations
with the outside world as a threat to the existence of their system. And
recent history strongly suggests that additional provocations may
follow.
So we are working around the clock with South Korea and
Japan to strengthen our alliances and sharpen our deterrent. As
President Obama said in Seoul last month after visiting the
demilitarized zone, the commitment of the United States to the people of
the Republic of South Korea is unshakable. We will also work with
Russia and with China. They both share a strong interest in the
stability of the Korean Peninsula and will join in sending a message to
the North Koreans that true security will only come from living up to
commitments and obligations first and foremost to their own people.
Yet
at the same time, Burma offers a meaningful opportunity for economic
and political progress. For decades, that Southeast Asian nation has
been locked behind an authoritarian curtain while many other countries
in the region made successful transitions to vibrant democracies and
open markets. The United States, supporting these transitions, has been
one of our defining efforts in the Asia Pacific from South Korea to the
Philippines to Thailand to Indonesia. In fact, I’m often a little
frustrated that people forget how hard it was for those four countries
to make their transitions. They went through all kinds of military
dictatorships and coups and instability. And so we have to continue to
have the patience and persistence to nurture the flickers of progress
that I saw when I visited Burma, the first visit by a Secretary of State
in 50 years. Of course, it is still too early to say how this story
will end. But just nine days ago, the long-imprisoned Nobel Peace Prize
winner, Aung San Suu Kyi was voted into parliament.
Much of the history of the 21st
century is being written before our eyes. And a quick glance at Burma
and North Korea shows that we have a deep stake in how that history
plays out. So from our first days in office, the Obama Administration
began directing America’s foreign policy to account for the Asia
Pacific’s growing importance. I broke with tradition and made my first
overseas trip there as Secretary. President Obama has traveled to the
Western Pacific four times. We stepped up our engagement with countries
and institutions in what I call forward deployed diplomacy. And we’re
not turning away from our old friends and interests in other parts of
the world. Our relationships with European and NATO allies who are,
after all, our partners of first resort, remain indispensable for our
work around the globe. And we need to deepen our engagement in the Asia
Pacific region in coordination with them.
So just as we are not
losing old friends, we are not seeking new enemies. Today’s China is not
the Soviet Union. We are not on the brink of a new Cold War in Asia.
Just look at the ever expanding trade between our economies, the
connections between our peoples, the ongoing consultations between our
governments. In less than 35 years, we’ve gone from being two nations
with hardly any ties to speak of to being thoroughly, inescapably
interdependent. That requires adjustments in thinking and approaches on
both sides. Geopolitics today cannot afford to be a zero-sum game. A
thriving China is good for America and a thriving America is good for
China, so long as we both thrive in a way that contributes to the
regional and global good. Let me go one step further. We will only
succeed in building a peaceful, prosperous Asia Pacific if we succeed in
building an effective U.S.-China relationship.
So our aim is to
build mature and effective institutions that can mobilize common action
and settle disputes peacefully, to work toward rules and norms that help
manage relations between peoples, markets, and nations, and establish
security arrangements that provide stability and build trust. I am well
aware that some in Asia fear that a robust American presence and our
talk of architecture and institutions and norms is really code for
protecting Western prerogatives and denying rising powers their fair
share of influence. The argument goes that we’re trying to draw them
into a rigged system that favors us. Well, that is just not the case. We
agree that regional and international architecture cannot remain
static. Rules and institutions designed for an earlier age may not be
suited to today.
So we need to work together to adapt and update
them and even to create new institutions where necessary. But there are
principles that are universal and that must be defended: fundamental
freedoms and human dignity; an open, free, transparent, and fair
economic system; the peaceful resolution of disputes; and respect for
the territorial integrity of states. These are norms that benefit
everyone and that help all people and nations live and trade in peace.
The international system based on these principles helped fuel, not
foil, the rise of China and other emerging powers such as India and
Indonesia. Those nations have benefited from the security it provides,
the markets it opens, and the trust it fosters. And as a consequence,
they have a real stake in the success of that system. And as their power
grows and their ability to contribute increases, the world’s
expectations of them will rise as well.
But some of today’s
emerging powers in Asia and elsewhere act as selective stakeholders,
picking and choosing when to participate constructively and when to
stand apart from the international system. And while that may suit their
interests in the short term, it will ultimately render the system that
has helped them get to where they are today unworkable. And that would
end up impoverishing everyone.
History shows us that a strong
regional architecture can bring to bear incentives for cooperation and
disincentives for provocation and problematic behaviors. But this kind
of architecture does not just spring up on its own, just as NATO and
other aspects of the post-World War II architecture didn’t just happen.
It takes consistent effort, strong partnerships, and crucially, American
leadership. And that is, at core, what our strategy in the Asia Pacific
is all about. All of our actions – diplomatic, economic, and military –
are designed to advance this goal. Let me offer three examples about
how it works.
First, President Obama’s attended something called
the East Asia Summit this past November. The East Asia Summit is a
gathering of the heads of state of all kinds of the nations in the
region to grapple with the biggest challenges and pursue comprehensive
solutions, whether it’s on nonproliferation, disaster response, or
maritime security. But no U.S. President had ever attended before. And
President Obama’s decision to participate capped three years of
intensive engagement with institutions like ASEAN, the Association of
South East Asian Nations, and APEC, the Asia Pacific Economic
Cooperation, and reflected our support for the East Asia Summit as the
region’s premier forum for discussing political and security issues.
Having
an institution like this can make a difference. Take the South China
Sea. It connects many of the region’s nations, some of whom have
competing claims on its waters and islands. Half the world’s merchant
tonnage flows through the South China Sea, so the stakes for maritime
security and freedom of navigation are very high. The United States has
no territorial claims there, and we do not take sides in territorial
disputes. But we have always been a seafaring nation, and we have an
abiding interest in protecting the seas and respecting international law
and promoting the peaceful resolution of disputes that arise out of
navigation.
Trying to settle complex disputes like this
bilaterally, one-on-one, was a recipe for confusion and even potentially
confrontation. There were too many overlapping claims and interests,
and the concerns of some countries were being elevated while others were
being diminished. But when President Obama joined his fellow leaders at
the East Asia Summit, they were able to support a region-wide effort to
protect unfettered access to the South China Sea, work toward
developing a code of conduct, and respect the legitimate interests of
all claimants to ensure that disputes were settled through a consensual
process based on established principles of international law.
Now,
it was a reminder that, for certain issues, there’s no substitute for
putting the relevant players in the same room and letting giving them a
chance to begin to exchange ideas and work towards sorting out problems.
In cases like this one, smaller countries then can be sure their voices
are heard. And larger countries, which have a significant stake in
broader regional stability and security, can pursue solutions to these
complex challenges. That’s what an effective architecture permits.
Here’s
a second example, which demonstrates how strong rules and norms matter
in people’s lives. As part of that same trip last November, the
President built momentum for a new far-reaching trade agreement called
the Trans-Pacific Partnership that we are negotiating with eight other
countries in the Asia Pacific region. This agreement is not just about
eliminating barriers to trade, although that is crucial for boosting
U.S. exports and creating jobs here at home. It’s also about agreeing on
the rules of the road for an integrated Pacific economy that is open,
free, transparent, and fair. It will put in place strong protections for
workers, the environment, intellectual property, and innovation – all
key American values. And it will cover emerging issues such as the
connectivity of regional supply chains, the competitive impact of
state-owned enterprises, and create trade opportunities for more
small-and-medium-sized businesses.
These kinds of rules help level
the playing field for all countries and companies. And when the
competition is fair and the rules are transparently known and there are
systems to enforce them, American businesses can out-compete and
out-innovate anyone in the world. Now of course, the rules only work if
they’re known and enforced, which is why this Administration continues
to bring suits against violators of trade norms and to speak up against
abuses.
And on the subject of norms and rules, let me add that the
United States is increasingly concerned about the growing threat to our
economic and national security posed by cyber intrusions, particularly
the theft of intellectual property and classified material via cyber
means. Because the United States and China are two of the largest global
cyber actors, establishing clear and acceptable practices in cyberspace
is critical. And I was delighted to hear from Admiral Miller that the
Naval Academy is introducing a cyber course that will be – begin to not
only educate you about the opportunities and challenges in cyberspace,
but help prepare you as part of what will certainly be an essentially
function of our defense.
Now we will continue to be very candid
about this and clear-eyed in addressing the harms and risks that have
evolved over the past few years. At the State Department, we are
attacked countless times every single day. Actually, our defenses aren’t
breached, but sometimes people, for whatever reason, decide they want
to dump national security material into the public domain. So we have to
think figure out how to deal with the human factor while we build up
our technical expertise.
My third example will be familiar to many
of you, because it deals with how strong alliances and partnerships –
especially our military cooperation with militaries around the world –
saves lives, builds trust, and advances our interests. For decades, the
United States military and our enduring alliances with Japan, South
Korea, Australia, the Philippines, and Thailand have underwritten
security and stability in the Asia Pacific. Every day, the Navy has some
50 ships, hundreds of aircraft, tens of thousands of sailors and
Marines in the Pacific at any given time. And the Navy’s role is
growing, as evidenced by President Obama’s new Defense Strategic
Guidance.
Each year, United States Navy ships and sailors and
Marines participate in more than 170 bilateral and multilateral
exercises and conduct more than 250 port visits in the region. One of my
favorite port visits was of the USS McCain to Vietnam. This
allows us to respond more quickly and efficiently when we need to work
together with partners, such as responding to natural disasters in one
of the most environmentally volatile and vulnerable areas in the world.
I hope you know and are proud of the Navy’s efforts after the earthquake, tsunami, and nuclear crisis in Japan last year. The 7th
Fleet had developed a close partnership with the Japan Maritime
Self-Defense Force over many decades, so we were able to work hand in
hand, delivering food and medical supplies, conducting search and rescue
missions, evacuating the injured, and so much more. After the operation
was over, I had the chance to visit with the crew of the destroyer USS Fitzgerald when we were both in Manila, and they told me how all that preparation and partnership had paid off.
To
maximize our ability to participate in these kinds of efforts all over
the Asia Pacific and to meet an increasingly diverse set of security
challenges, the United States is moving to a more geographically
distributed, operationally resilient, and politically sustainable force
posture in the region. We are sending Marines to Australia for joint
training – the first six-month rotational deployment arrived in Darwin
last week. We are deploying state-of-the art ships to Singapore. We are
modernizing our basing arrangements with allies in Northeast Asia.
We’re
also working hard to reduce the risk of miscalculation or miscues
between the American and Chinese militaries and to try to forge a
durable military-to-military relationship. Our navies already work
together to combat piracy off the Horn of Africa. But we can, we should,
and we must do more together. We also hope to strengthen the newly
established Strategic Security Dialogue, which brings American and
Chinese military and civilian leaders to the table to discuss sensitive
issues like maritime security and cyber security.
Here’s the
bottom line, which I think is worth remembering as you work, study, and
prepare for your futures in the Navy and the Marine Corps: The
extraordinary service and sacrifice of America’s men and women in
uniform makes a difference in the lives of people all over the world. In
this region, it made a difference in the lives of those people in the
Japanese community rescued from the floodwaters, or to the Singaporean
sea captain protected from pirates, or the Korean family shielded from
aggression. When it comes to ensuring stability and security in the Asia
Pacific and beyond, there is simply no substitute for American power.
Only the United States has the global reach, the resources and the
resolve to deter aggression, rally coalitions, and project stability
into diverse and dynamic areas of danger, threat, and opportunity.
Now
this is not 1912, when friction between a declining Britain and a
rising Germany set the stage for global conflict. It’s 2012, and a
strong America is welcoming new powers into an international system
designed to prevent global conflict.
We have come through a long
decade of war, terrorism, and recession. And these continue to be
difficult days for many of our fellow Americans. But America still has
the world’s largest economy with the most productive workers, the best
universities, the most innovative companies. Our military is the finest
in the history of the world, far outclassing any rival. There is no
other nation that boasts a global network of alliances and partnerships
that can project force on every continent and in every ocean.
And
just as importantly, no other nation can bring disparate countries and
people together around common goals. I see it when I travel across Asia
and the world: American leadership is respected and required. Now yes,
this is because of our military and our material might, but it’s more
about our values and our commitment to fairness, justice, freedom, and
democracy. Our record may not be perfect, but the United States
consistently over history seeks to advance not just our own good, but
the greater good. And this is part of what makes American leadership so
exceptional. There is no real precedent in history for the role we play
or the responsibility we have shouldered. And there is no alternative.
But
our global leadership is not a birthright. It has been earned by each
successive generation, staying true to our values and living up to the
best traditions of our nation. In the years ahead, it will be up to you
and your classmates to carry this important work forward.
One of
the enduring memories of my own childhood is listening to my father talk
about his service in the Navy during World War II. He was a chief petty
officer, responsible for training thousands of new recruits at Great
Lakes Naval Station outside of Chicago before they shipped out to sea,
mostly to the Pacific theater. He never forgot how it felt to watch
those young men get loaded onto troop trains heading for the West coast,
knowing that many would never return home. He never lost his sense of
duty or his belief in our exceptional country. And after he died, I
received letters and photographs from so many of the sailors who he had
trained and who had served with him. Even all those years later, they
shared a deep and abiding faith in our nation and the work we must do in
the world.
One day soon, you, too, will leave this place and
board ships, submarines, and aircraft bound for distant seas. Some of
you will sail the Atlantic, renewing old bonds and defending old
friends. Others will head to the Pacific to face the challenges of a new
time. Wherever you go, you will represent the pride and power of this
great nation we cherish. And you will embody our hopes for a freer, more
peaceful, and prosperous world.
But before you head out into that
world, I think you need to make some more memories here at home. So
with the approval of the superintendent and the commandant, I am pleased
to grant an uncharged overnight for plebes and an uncharged weekend for
upper class midshipmen. (Cheers and applause.)
Thank you. Thank you for your service to our country. Good luck and Godspeed. (Applause.)