Hillary Clinton With League of Arab States Secretary General Nabil Elaraby
Remarks With League of Arab States Secretary General Nabil Elaraby at Memorandum of Understanding Signing
Remarks
Hillary Rodham Clinton Secretary of State
Waldorf Astoria Hotel
New York City
September 25, 2012
SECRETARY CLINTON:
Thank you very much, and Secretary General, this is a historic and
important event for the United States. Under your leadership at a time
of great challenge and change, the United States and the Arab League
have worked more closely together than ever before. Our work on Libya
broke new ground in U.S.-Arab League cooperation, and I appreciate your
strong leadership on Syria as we continue to work to address this
crisis.
We also consult on many shared challenges, from Yemen to Sudan and
beyond. Today, we broaden our partnership to take on new challenges
together. The MOU we signed today launches an annual U.S.-Arab League
dialogue. It outlines areas in which we hope to work together to bring
tangible improvements to people’s lives, including education and our
response to humanitarian emergencies.
As a start, I am pleased to announce a small professional and
cultural exchange program to bring Arab League officials together with
their American counterparts. I believe in the potential of multilateral
organizations, and as Secretary of State, I have made it a priority to
deepen our engagement with regional organizations that are playing a
growing role in world events, from the African Union to ASEAN to the
Arab League.
Now of course, that doesn’t mean we are always going to agree on
everything. That doesn’t happen with any two people, let alone two
organizations or countries. There will be times when we do differ on
principles and approaches. But our hope is that dialogues like this can
help us understand each other better, to narrow any areas of difference,
and to find as much common ground as possible.
Our hope is not only to strengthen ties between our institutions –
the Government of the United States and the Arab League – but between
our people, the people of the Arab world and the American people. Recent
events remind us we have a great deal of work to do, and we look to
partners in regional organizations to help us build mutual understanding
and work to uphold and defend principles such as nonviolence and
tolerance while we work in very constructive and practical ways to make a
difference in the lives of the people we serve.
So, Secretary General, thank you. SECRETARY GENERAL ELARABY: Madam Secretary, thank you very
much for this ceremony, and thank you very much for the effort that the
State Department has put with the – my colleagues in the League of Arab
States in finalizing the text that we have signed now.
Let me, first of all, say two preliminary comments. First of all, the
statement – the (inaudible) statement made today by President Obama was
very impressive, and I think it was timely, and thank him for that.
The second point of a general nature that I would like to make is to
convey personally my condolences for the tragic death of the Ambassador
in Benghazi. It touched us all. I called (inaudible) right away to
convey my condolences. She was not in. I (inaudible), and the League of
Arab States issued a statement.
On this point, let me just say that the League of Arab States, along
with the European Union, the African Union, the Organization of Islamic
Cooperation, who issued a statement, all of us, on this. And in this
statement, there is also a reference at the end that we all should work
on further measures to ensure that such events will never happen
(inaudible).
As a lawyer – and you are a lawyer – I think the first (inaudible)
should be an international treaty that would ensure that certain
matters, if happened – should not happen, and if happened, the
perpetrator would be punished and the rule of law would apply.
This Memorandum of Understanding is very important for us. The Arab
world has a lot of contacts, and historic contacts, with the United
States. And most of our, I would say, problems depend on what the United
States will do to resolve them. Just to refer to Palestine, we need the
United States participation. Now we have Syria; we need United States
participation, active participation.
So I think it was said that you are indispensible. But in the world
today – and we continue – we think that this Memorandum of Understanding
will open new avenues for further cooperation and understanding. And
you also – as you rightly pointed out, what is needed is not to start by
agreement, agreeing on something, but to, in all honesty, exchange
views and see how we can reach a common understanding of certain
matters. And I think this is a very good beginning.
We do have also a matter that I have to refer to, is that there is –
we have an office here in New York, we have an office in Geneva, and we
very much would like that this matter will be taken up and the
facilities needed to carry out their mission could be extended at the
right moment when we decide that (inaudible).
I’m indeed grateful for the program – the cultural program and the
exchange that you have referred to, and I’m sure that you will benefit
(inaudible). That’s very generous of you. I hope that this is a
beginning, and that there will be many other steps in the future to
strengthen ties between the United States of America and the League of
Arab States.
Thank you very, very much.