Hillary Clinton at the U.S.-Georgia Strategic Partnership Session **Video Added**
Remarks at Omnibus Session of the Strategic Partnership Commission
Remarks
Hillary Rodham Clinton Secretary of State
Radisson Blu Hotel
Batumi, Georgia
June 5, 2012
Well, thank you very much, and it is a great pleasure being here on the 20th
year anniversary of our diplomatic relations. And I appreciate greatly
Georgia hosting this third meeting of the U.S.-Georgia Strategic
Partnership Commission. I thank you, prime minister, foreign minister,
our ambassadors, our assistant secretary, and the distinguished
representatives from both Georgia and the United States who are here for
this important gathering.
When I was here two years ago, I said my first trip to Georgia would
not be my last. And I am very happy to have returned and to have a
chance to be here to see Georgia’s beautiful Black Sea coast for the
first time and to learn more about the continuing efforts for
development, as evidenced around us here in Batumi.
The U.S. delegation present today represents the breadth of our
partnership, because our nations cooperate across a range of issues that
shape our people’s lives, from strengthening regional and global
security to increasing trade and economic ties, to helping the people of
Georgia fulfill your democratic aspirations. We share common goals and
common interests, and our people share common values.
In 2009 we launched this Strategic Partnership Commission to take the
U.S.-Georgia partnership to the next level. We wanted to have more
results to show for our work together and to deliver more benefits to
our citizens. Our gatherings since then have helped us identify key
goals and what is needed to achieve them. Let me briefly review four
priorities of this strategic partnership and the steps that lie ahead.
First, regarding Georgia’s work to strengthen your democracy, you
have taken important steps since the Rose Revolution and your progress
has been noted worldwide. Now it is up to Georgia to consolidate your
democratic gains. That is the key to Georgia’s future, and it will bring
Georgia closer to achieving your Euro-Atlantic aspirations. The
parliamentary elections this fall and the presidential election next
year are an opportunity for Georgia to deepen its democracy and
strengthen the legitimacy of Georgia’s democratic institutions in the
eyes of your public and of the world. We urge Georgia’s leaders to
ensure that it will be a competitive campaign and that elections are
free and fair both on election day and in the months running up to it.
The recent creation of an interagency task force to handle
election-related grievances is a good step.
I also want to applaud the parliament for creating incentives to get
more women into politics. Georgia’s government and the country as a
whole will be stronger when women have a greater voice and a greater
role in helping to shape Georgia’s future. And I urge al the people of
Georgia to remember, though you did make history with the Rose
Revolution, the more difficult and ultimately the more important work
may well be ahead, the work of building the habits and practices that
sustain democracy over time. That means not only holding successful
elections but also going beyond elections and strengthening the other
key pillars of democracy, such as labor rights, judicial independence,
media independence and access.
These reforms will have impacts well beyond the political realm,
especially with regard to Georgia’s economy, because these reforms will
also help foster economic growth. And that’s the second issue I want to
mention. Georgia’s reforms, including your economic reforms, have won
international praise and rising standings in global business rankings.
As Georgia continues to strengthen accountability, transparency, and the
rule of law, you will see even greater interest and investment in your
economy. The United States is proud to have been Georgia’s partner in
this critical period. Now we want to take our trade and investment
relationship to the next level.
Last week in Washington, officials from our countries fulfilled our
two presidents’ pledges from last January to launch a high-level
dialogue to strengthen our trade relationship, including the possibility
of a free trade agreement, an updated investment agreement, and other
measures that could facilitate trade and investment. We want to help
Georgia expand economic opportunity for all Georgians, especially for
women, minorities, and others who are often left out of economic
progress.
To that end, I was pleased to learn that the Regional Women’s
Entrepreneurship Conference in Istanbul last year gave a push for the
creation of an active women’s business network here in Georgia. That’s a
smart way to foster sustainable growth, and we want to help Georgia
find innovative ways to ensure that women and residents of minority
regions can share inclusively in Georgia’s development.
The third issue is regional and global security. Georgia and the
United States already have strong bilateral defense cooperation, and in
their meeting in January, President Saakashvili and President Obama
pledged to deepen that cooperation even further in three areas:
furnishing comprehensive assistance to support Georgia’s continued
defense reform and modernization; providing the training and equipment
necessary for Georgian troops to effectively participate in ISAF
operations in Afghanistan; and improving Georgia’s self-defense
capabilities and NATO interoperability. And this afternoon I will be
announcing steps the United States will take to support these three
goals.
Georgia already helps protect regional and global security and
together we can do more. As we said at the NATO summit in Chicago two
weeks ago, we are grateful for Georgia’s contributions and sacrifices as
the largest non-NATO contributor now to the ISAF mission in
Afghanistan. And we agreed that Georgia continues to make important
progress toward meeting NATO’s standards. We continue to strongly
support Georgia’s Euro-Atlantic aspirations and stand by the Bucharest
decision and all subsequent decisions on Georgia.
Fourth and finally, among our greatest sources of strength are the
bonds between our people. We need to forge even more of them so our
people will fully embrace and carry forward the world of building a
strong Georgia-U.S. relationship. So the United States has taken steps
to make it easier for Georgians from across the country to travel to
America. Through our Embassy in Tbilisi, we help thousands of teachers
and students learn English and study in the United States. And this
afternoon I will be announcing steps to make it easier for the residents
of the separatist regions to visit the United States.
We see this as a step toward achieving a peaceful and just resolution
to the conflicts within Georgia, a goal that remains a priority for the
United States. Constructive steps like this can reduce tensions, create
trust, build trade links, and normalize contacts. And all of this can
help transform the situation over time. And while we work to rebuild
people-to-people connections frayed by the conflicts of the past, the
United States remains steadfast in our support for Georgia’s sovereignty
and territorial integrity. We reject Russia’s occupation and
militarization of Georgian territory, and we call on Russia to fulfill
its obligations under the 2008 ceasefire agreement, including withdrawal
of its forces to pre-conflict positions and free access for
humanitarian assistance.
So this year marking the 20th anniversary of our
diplomatic relations permits us to look back on all that Georgia has
achieved in these past years and all the progress our two countries have
achieved together. We have many reasons to be optimistic about what the
future holds. And let us remember who we are working for. We are
working for the people of our countries and the generations that will
follow, whose futures will be shaped by the security, prosperity,
freedom, and peace that we work together to build today.
Thank you very much. (Applause.)