Meeting with ASEAN Secretary General Surin
Remarks
Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of State
ASEAN Secretariat
Jakarta, Indonesia, Indonesia
September 4, 2012
ASEAN SECRETARY GENERAL SURIN:
Secretary Hillary Rodham Clinton, chair of ASEAN program
representative, Excellencies, members of the CPR, it is a great
privilege for us to welcome the Secretary here for the second time in
her term. And I remember very well on the 18th of February you were
here. Your first trip to the world you came to Asia. You came to the
ASEAN Secretariat. You became the highest ranking ever official of the
United States Government to visit us. And ever since, this place has
been a routine destination for visiting dignitaries to ASEAN, to the
Republic of Indonesia.
At that time you promised many things. You
promised full engagement with ASEAN, with Southeast Asia. You promised
to accede to our Treaty of Amity and Cooperation. You have promised the
highest presidential engagement. You have promised to come to attend our
post-ministerial (inaudible) conference, ARF. And I am glad to say that
you have delivered it all. Thank you very, very much. Along the way we
were a bit skeptical and we asked you -- we challenged you we would
believe in the change when you delivered everything that you had
promised us. And you did. And we certainly feel very much honored to
welcome you here.
Now, let me just say that most of the diplomats
we work with, they are counterparts. And you have turned your
counterparts here in Southeast Asia, in ASEAN, into your friends. And
friendship is extremely important for the region and for the region's
diplomacy. We count you not as counterpart, but as a true friend. That
is why today is very special. And we hope that we will accomplish many
more things together into the future with the United States and ASEAN.
Madam, warmly welcome, please.
SECRETARY CLINTON:
Thank you so much, my friend. And let me express what a pleasure it is
to be back in Jakarta and to have this second opportunity to visit the
ASEAN Secretariat.
As Dr. Surin has said, I came here in February
of 2009 with the intention of deepening and broadening and elevating the
relationship between the United States and ASEAN. And we have worked to
do just that. I believe our relationship is stronger and more
effective. And that is all to the good, because the United States views
ASEAN as central to regional stability and economic progress in the
Asia-Pacific.
We did sign the Treaty of Amity and Cooperation, as I
said we would, and I visited back in February of 2009. We were the
first dialogue partner to open a mission to ASEAN. And I am pleased that
others are also doing that. We appointed our first resident U.S.
Ambassador, and Ambassador Carden holds regular meetings with his
counterparts in the ASEAN Committee of Permanent Representatives, whom
we soon will welcome on their first official visit to the United States.
We have engaged with ASEAN at the highest levels, with President Obama
attending three U.S.-ASEAN leaders meetings, as well as the East Asia
Summit, here in Indonesia last year.
Later this month, I will host
my ASEAN counterparts in a meeting on the margins of the UN General
Assembly. We have devoted resources to supporting ASEAN's goal of
economic and political integration through the Advance program to narrow
the development gap among ASEAN nations, and to promote and protect
human rights. We are increasing our People-to-People ties through the
ASEAN Youth Volunteers program and the U.S.-ASEAN Fulbright program,
which we are now launching.
In short, we are making a sustained,
all-out effort to build an enduring, multi-faceted relationship between
ASEAN and the United States. We want to do all we can to advance ASEAN's
goal of integration, because we have an interest in strengthening
ASEAN's ability to address regional challenges in an effective,
comprehensive way.
And we really invite and need ASEAN to lead in
crafting strong, regional responses to challenges like climate change
and trans-national crime, which require collective actions. And we need
ASEAN to lead in upholding a system of rules and responsibilities that
will protect regional stability and guide the region to greater
political and economic progress.
So, Dr. Surin, it is a great
honor for me now to have returned for a second visit to conduct, if you
will, a progress report among partners and friends, and to state once
again what I have said in other contexts. The United States believes in
ASEAN centrality, and ASEAN centrality is essential to ASEAN unity. So I
am looking forward to our exchange today and the dialogue among us,
looking forward to continuing to work on behalf of the U.S.-ASEAN
relationship.
ASEAN SECRETARY GENERAL SURIN: Thank you very much. (Applause.)
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