Meets With Embassy Brasilia Staff and Their Families
Remarks
Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of State
Thomas A. Shannon, Jr.
Ambassador to Brazil
U.S. Embassy Brasilia
Brasilia, Brazil
April 16, 2012
AMBASSADOR SHANNON:
It’s a tremendous pleasure to have you all here today and to have with
us the Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton. Madam Secretary, I
would like to present to you the men, women, and children of the
American Embassy in Brasilia and their families. This is an incredible
group of people, Americans and Brazilians, committed to the relationship
between the United States and Brazil, in recognizing that we are
building a partnership for the 21st century. And as part of
that partnership, we are building an essential component and an
essential driver for making this partnership a reality.
So it’s
with enormous pleasure that I present to you, the men and women of – and
children of the American Embassy here in Brasilia, and Madam Secretary,
the stage is yours.
SECRETARY CLINTON: Thank you
so much, Tom. (Applause.) Well, it’s wonderful to see you all again,
many of whom were here when I last stood in this spot, I think, in 2009?
AMBASSADOR SHANNON: 2010.
SECRETARY CLINTON:
2010. So let me begin by expressing my delight to be able to come here
and thank you in person for everything you do on behalf of this
absolutely essential relationship. I think it’s fair to say that our
relationship has changed quite a bit since Ambassador Shannon served
here as a special assistant to Ambassador Melton in 1989. But clearly,
that experience was good training because Tom has become a great
ambassador and leader of an absolutely fabulous team consisting of all
of you.
I know that you have a bunch of Washington visitors
coming, and Secretary Salazar and I are here today, but I want to let
you know this is a time when our relationship is really poised to get to
the next level. The meeting between President Dilma Rousseff and
President Obama last Monday, just a week ago, was an extraordinarily
constructive one. And you have made a lot of progress in advancing our
relationship. We’re not only working on people-to-people ties and
economic ties, but we are becoming strategic and political partners.
Let
me just mention two quick examples. When President Rousseff announced a
program to send a hundred thousand Brazilian students overseas to study
science and technology, you leapt into action and made sure that the
United States was the first country to open our doors. So now we have
nearly 700 young Brazilian students already beginning their studies in
the United States. Hundreds more will join them in the fall, and I think
that other than the fact that they had to eat Tom Shannon’s and DCM
Chapman’s hamburgers at the – (laughter) – Burgers Without Borders
event, they’re still excited about – (laughter) – coming to our country.
And we couldn’t be doing this without your leadership.
And in the
past two years, you’ve expanded consular operations at lightning speed.
So as a result, you’ve already handled more visa applications so far
this fiscal year than you did in all of 2010. And that spike in travel
from Brazil has helped to create more than 8,000 new American jobs. It
also has helped a lot to forge personal ties. And I know a lot of the
changes are challenging for you – you’re bringing out a lot of new staff
members, I think you’ve had a bit of a parking problem here.
(Laughter.) But you’re making progress and it’s noticeable, certainly to
those of us in Washington.
And I’m so pleased to see family
members here, particularly the young ambassadors who are with us,
because they also are serving our country and representing the United
States in everything that they do. And a special word of thanks to our
locally employed staff for the backbone of this Embassy, especially as
the mission expands so quickly. I thank all of our locally employed
staff. You’ve been dedicated to this mission, some of you for many
years, and I know that a number of you have even volunteered for
assignments in Afghanistan and Iraq.
So please know that we in
Washington appreciate what you are doing here in Brasilia and across the
country in our consulates, that we value your work very much and we’re
seeing the results every single day because of a stronger, more dynamic
relationship between two such extraordinary democracies as the United
States and Brazil. Thank you all very much. (Applause.)