Remarks With Armenian Foreign Minister Eduard Nalbandian
Remarks
Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of State
Presidential Palace
Yerevan, Armenia
June 4, 2012
FOREIGN MINISTER NALBANDIAN:
Dear Madam Secretary of State, dear Hillary, it’s a great pleasure for
me to welcome you again in Armenia. Your last visit to Yerevan coincided
with July the 4th, the national day of the United States of America. This visit coincides with the 20th
anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic relations between our
countries. The coincidence contains a positive symbolism. Less than two
years we have passed since your previous visit to Armenia, but during
this period we have had several opportunities to meet in Washington, in
different cities, in the frameworks of international conferences.
Independent of the months or the year or the place those meetings were
held, they were exclusively warm, meaningful, fruitful, containing
important and positive messages.
Your visit to Armenia, to the region, testifies to the United States
authority special attention to the South Caucasus. The meetings between
the Armenian and American leaderships – I would underscore the
Washington meeting between Presidents Sargsian and Obama in April 2010 –
reflects our strong will to deepen our relations. More than a
century-long friendship between our two nations in which the American
Armenian community has had a special role was naturally reflected in the
two-decades long interstate relations.
Madam Secretary, the mutual trust and understanding existing between
our two countries, thanks to our common efforts, thanks to your
personal, invaluable input, are the best pillars for expanding our
friendly partnership. The bilateral cooperation between the United
States and Armenia, which has reached the highest point in its history,
concerns such important domains as institutional reforms, deepening of
democracy, rule of law, modernization of economy.
We have also close interaction in the international arena, covering
regional and international security, nonproliferation of weapons of mass
destruction, fight against all forms of terrorism, peacekeeping
cooperations from Kosovo to Afghanistan, and other global challenges.
The United States, as a co-chair country of OSCE group, has provided its
permanent support to the process of the peaceful settlement of the
Nargorno-Karabakh conflict. This process has been under the constant
attention of the President and the State Secretary of the United States
of America. Together, with the two other co-chair countries, the United
States deployed intensive efforts and adopted several high-level
important joint statements on the settlement of that issue.
Dear State Secretary, more than once we have expressed our common
approach on the normalization of the Armenian-Turkish relations. That
position has been and remains the normalization of relations without
preconditions. You have made an exclusive contribution to this process.
Thank you very much. Unfortunately, the ball continues to remain in the
Turkish court.
Twenty years ago, Secretary James Baker noted that free, democratic,
independent Armenia and the United States of America shares the same
values: democracy, liberty, market economy, defense of human rights.
During those 20 years, the United States has strongly supported Armenia.
Today, humanitarian assistance is gradually turning into development
projects and mutually beneficial cooperation.
Dear Secretary, we express our gratitude to the President Obama’s
Administration and to you personally for your commitment and remarkable
contribution to strengthening of Armenian-American friendly partnership.
I hope that the celebration of the 20th anniversary of diplomatic relations will open new, wider horizons in bilateral relations.
I would like once again to welcome you, State Secretary, and your delegation to Armenia. The floor is yours.
SECRETARY CLINTON: Thank you very, very much, Minister
Nalbandian. I feel very pleased that I could be back here in Armenia
once again, and I am very grateful for the warm and gracious hospitality
offered by the president and yourself. And it is fitting that I would
be here as we celebrate 20 years of U.S.-Armenia relations.
Anniversaries like this provide an opportunity to look back on how far
we have come and also to look down the road toward what kind of future
we want of our relationship and Armenia’s position in the world 20 years
from now. The president, the foreign minister, and I discussed this at
length.
Regarding regional and global security, I thanked the president for
Armenia’s contributions to our shared mission in Afghanistan and to
peacekeeping operations in Kosovo. We also discussed ways to improve
Armenia’s ties with its neighbors and increase stability and security
throughout the region. To that end, we are committed to seeing Armenia
and Turkey normalize relations, because we think this is a path forward
to a better future for the citizens of both countries and we strongly
support ratification of the Turkey-Armenia protocols without
preconditions. We commend Armenia and President Sargsian for the
leadership they have shown on this issue.
Twenty years ago, Armenia had just begun its transition to democracy.
There have been positive steps, and now we need to take more. We know
from experience that democracy must be built over time. It isn’t about
just one campaign or even one election. It is an ongoing project. And we
are pleased to see Armenia continuing to work to strengthen your
democratic institutions to promote transparency, advance the rights of a
free press, root out corruption, respect universal rights and freedoms.
Earlier today, I met several Armenian human rights activists who are
working with courage and determination to help make reforms possible and
to promote the democratic aspirations of the Armenian people. And we
stand committed to working with Armenia as you continue the hard work of
democratization.
I am very – I was very pleased at the reports from international
monitors about Armenia’s parliamentary elections last month being
generally competitive and inclusive, where candidates were able to
campaign for the most part without interference. There were some
electoral problems that were identified, and we hope that Armenia will
work with the OSCE and others to ensure that the next election is even
better.
Private sector investors are looking for an open business climate
with predictable rules; an independent judiciary; transparent
regulations, taxes, and customs. And we are pleased at the progress
Armenia has made, and we encourage that even more progress occur this
year. I am convinced that unleashing the Armenian people’s
entrepreneurial energy can transform the economy, and we look forward to
being your partner in doing that.
Of course, the president and I had a serious discussion of
Nagorno-Karabakh, including the most recent incidents along the front
lines. While I had only just learned of these incidents, I am very
concerned about the danger of escalation of tensions and the senseless
deaths of young soldiers and innocent civilians. The use of force will
not resolve the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, and therefore force must not
be used. And we are calling on everyone to renounce force as well as
refraining from violence. I assured the president that I would make
these points in Baku when I am there the day after tomorrow.
Now, these incidents underscore the necessity to try to keep making
progress on the peace process. As a co-chair of the Minsk Group, the
United States is committed to working with all the parties to find a way
forward. And I am very committed that there has to be a way forward.
And it’s not only the actions of leaders; it must be the actions of
citizens as well to try to find a way to enable people of the region to
live together in peace and dignity.
So there is a lot of work ahead of us, but I am very pleased to have
this opportunity to have come to catch up with my friend and colleague,
Eduard, as well as to see the president again to review very broadly
regional and global matters as well as our bilateral relations. And I
think it’s important that we keep working together, because I believe
Armenia has a very positive and bright future ahead.
Thank you.
QUESTION: Secretary Clinton, you’re visiting three South
Caucasus nations at a time of great economic and political change as
well as great challenges: Armenia-Azerbaijan, Armenia-Turkey,
Azerbaijan-Iran, Georgia-Russia. What does the United States doing to
try to open up some of those relationships, especially here in Armenia
where there’s trade neither with Turkey nor Azerbaijan?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, our greatest interest is to see
Armenia and Turkey move together toward normalization. We strongly
support the efforts that have been made. We have urged the ratification
of the normalization protocols without preconditions. As I said when I
was here two years ago, the ball remains in Turkey’s court. And I am
encouraged that there is more public discussion in Turkey and Armenia
about these issues, because I think honest, open, constructive
conversations are important for both sides to move forward.
With respect to Armenia and Azerbaijan, there is no linkage between
the protocols process and the Nagorno-Karabakh negotiations. Those are
separate. But we are equally engaged and pushing hard to try to achieve a
peaceful resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh matter.
So on both of these issues in the region, the United States has been
and will remain very actively involved. We believe that these are
countries that should have open borders, should work together, should
trade, should have people-to-people exchanges, because we think that it
would be mutually beneficial to all concerned. And one of the reasons
for my visit today is to continue working on these two separate but very
important processes.
MODERATOR: (Inaudible.)
QUESTION: (In Armenian.)
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, as I said, I am very concerned by
these incidents and have called on all parties, all actors, to refrain
from the use or threat of force, because there is no military solution
to this conflict. It can only be resolved at the negotiating table. And
of course, there is a danger that it could escalate into a much broader
conflict that would be very tragic for everyone concerned.
And so the United States, along with the Minsk Group, is committed to
doing everything we can. And I discussed some specific ideas with the
president and the foreign minister today. I made it clear to the
president that the United States believes that a peace settlement must
be based upon Helsinki principles, the non-use of force or the threat of
force, territorial integrity, and the equal rights and
self-determination of peoples. And you can’t take one out. They have to
be an integrated whole in order to arrive at a sustainable solution.
So we will continue with our efforts. Later this month, the foreign
ministers will be meeting. And we’re going to be putting ideas forth,
because we think it’s in everyone’s interest to focus on achieving a
breakthrough solution and avoiding the escalation of violence.
FOREIGN MINISTER NALBANDIAN: (In Armenian.)
SECRETARY CLINTON: Thank you.