Hillary Clinton at the Launch of the Perth USAsia Centre
Remarks at the Launch of the Perth USAsia Centre
Remarks
Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of State
University of Western Australia
Perth, Australia
November 13, 2012
Thank
you very much, Minister Evans and thanks also to Premier Barnett,
hereafter known as Premier Sputnik – (laughter) – and Chancellor Chaney,
our excellent two ambassadors – your alumnus, Kim Beazley, who served
you so well in Washington, and our Ambassador, Jeff Bleich, who I think
knows more Australians than most Australians do at this point – and Dr.
Gill, thank you for your primary work at the U.S. Studies Centre.
This
is a wonderful opportunity for me to be here at the University of
Western Australia, a campus that looks remarkably like Stanford
University, where my daughter attended, and to be in this fabulous art
gallery that I will not get a chance perhaps to see, but which certainly
piques my interest, and to be part of helping to launch this center
that will shape strategic thinking in this dynamic region.
This is
my first visit to Perth, but I heard much about it, not least of all
from your ambassador, and Stephen Smith, your Defense Minister. And one
story in particular stands out because from the time I was a little
girl, Premier, I was fascinated by space exploration, and you and I are
of a vintage where we can actually remember Sputnik going over. And I
even wrote to NASA, our space administration, when I was about 13 and
asked what I needed to do to become an astronaut myself. I unfortunately
received an answer that said they weren’t taking women. Thankfully,
that has changed in the years since.
But I was riveted by the
space program, and certainly when my friend and a great American, John
Glenn, became the first American to orbit the earth in 1962, it was so
exciting to know that the people of Perth were literally with him and
cheering him on, because, as you know so well, when John’s capsule
passed overhead, every light in this city came on to signal support for
his mission. And I will tell you that he never forgot the gesture of
friendship from the city of light.
So for me to be here is a dream
come true, and I suppose if one were to go up into space today and look
down at Perth, you would see a city that is sitting on a very strategic
part of our planet, Australia’s gateway to the vibrant trade and energy
routes that connect the Indian Ocean to the Pacific, the oil, the
natural gas, the iron ore produced here that flows through those trade
routes to the entire world. It is no surprise that foreign investment is
soaring, including more than $100 billion from the United States,
because increasingly, these waters are at the heart of the global
economy and a key focus of America’s expanding engagement in the region,
what we sometimes call our pivot to Asia.
We never actually left
Asia; we’ve always been here and been a presence here. We consider
ourselves a Pacific power. But in the 21st century, it’s
important that we make absolutely clear we are here to stay. And how we
think about the Asia Pacific or the Indo Pacific region is going to be
critical to our future as well as yours. We’ve made it a strategic
priority to support India’s Look East policy and to encourage Delhi to
play a larger role in Asian institutions and affairs. And it’s exciting
to see the developments as the world’s largest democracy and a dynamic
emerging economy begin to contribute more broadly to the region.
It’s
also important to see the burgeoning relationship between Australia and
India. And we support a Look West policy here in Australia, and
certainly applaud the Australian Government’s strategic white paper on
Asian policy. We would welcome joint Australia-Indian naval vessel
exercises in the future, and we’re eager to work together in the Indian
Ocean Rim Association for Regional Cooperation which Australia will
chair in 2013 and which the United States has now joined as a dialogue
partner.
I’m here for what are called the AUSMIN meetings. These
are annual meetings that our Secretary of State and Secretary of Defense
hold with our counterparts, Stephen Smith and Bob Carr. We will be
reviewing implementation of the military agreements that Prime Minister
Gillard and President Obama reached last November, including the
rotational deployment of U.S. marines in Darwin and improving
interoperability between our two navies. These steps will help both
countries safeguard commerce and respond to natural disasters in the sea
lanes connecting the Indian and Pacific Oceans.
So here at the
University of Western Australia, you are at the leading edge of a
crucial strategic shift linking two great oceans and strengthening an
historic alliance. And I hope that the work that you do here will help
to light the way just as Perth did for John Glenn 50 years ago, because
when one stops to ponder it, our commercial, cultural, and personal
relationships are really at the core of how we see and hope the world
will develop in this century. Commercially, it’s already been set. We
have deep and growing ties. Culturally, we also share the values that
democracies share. We share the values of freedom and human rights, the
dignity of every person. And personally, the connections between us only
grow stronger.
So opening this center, and so well named the
Perth USAsia Centre, will give an additional impetus to exploring how we
can broaden and deepen our commercial, cultural, and personal
relationships. It shouldn’t be any surprise that the United States is
just as interested in Australia as you seem to be interested in us.
We’re constantly following your sports. You seem to have a flood of
entertainers who take the American market by storm. The kinds of
connections that we have between us are ones that we highly value.
Now
of course, we’re living in a region that is changing so quickly, and
there are other countries whose interests and profiles are equally
important for each of us. We look for ways to support the peaceful rise
of China, to support China becoming a responsible stakeholder in the
international community, and hope to see gradual but consistent opening
up of a Chinese society and political system that will more closely give
the Chinese people the opportunities that we in the United States and
Australia are lucky to take for granted.
We have great
relationships with our other friends and allies from Japan and South
Korea, Thailand, and the Philippines. Of course, we both enjoy close and
growing relations with Indonesia. So as we think about how this region
will change, it’s important that Australia and the United States work
together, look to see how we can contribute to the kind of region and
world we hope to see for both of us to give our young people the
opportunities that they so richly deserve.
So I thank you for your
steadfast commitment to the U.S.-Australia partnership. It is a
partnership that is of itself of importance to each of us, but is also a
partnership that must remain at the core of the kind of engagement we
have in the Asia Pacific, Indo Pacific regions for now and for the
future.
Thank you all. (Applause.)
# # #