Showing posts with label Margaret Brennan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Margaret Brennan. Show all posts

Sunday, December 2, 2012

Hillary Clinton Wheels Up for Prague

Margaret Brennan tweeted this about two hours ago.  Have a safe and successful trip, Mme. Secretary!
margaret brennan ‏@margbrennan
#SecClinton is about to be wheels up from Andrews Air Force base en route to Prague. 38th trip to Europe as #SecState
U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, en route to Brussels, waves goodbye in Brasilia

Tuesday, September 11, 2012

Hillary Clinton With Margaret Brennan of CBS


Interview With Margaret Brennan of CBS


Interview

Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of State
Vladivostok, Russia
September 9, 2012



QUESTION: Madam Secretary, thank you for making time at the end of a very long trip. Rebuilding the relationship with Russia has been a prime focus of the Obama Administration’s foreign policy. Russia continues to oppose sanctions on Iran, intervention in Syria, and they’ve armed Bashar al-Assad’s regime. What has this relationship achieved?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, a New START Treaty to reduce nuclear weapons and make the world safer; getting Russia into WTO, which provides an opportunity for Russia’s economy to function in accordance with a rules-based system, which is good for American business, good for American jobs; cooperating on Afghanistan, Russia opening its territory, both ground and air, to our troops and our supplies going in and out of Afghanistan through the Northern Distribution Network; working together on the Iran sanctions, which was not easy to do, but which they have been very supportive of; and working with us in the P-5+1.
So, I mean, I could go on and on. But the point, Margaret, is that if you ask me any country in the world, I can give you the pluses and the minuses. We don’t get everything we want with any country that we are involved with, even our very best friends. Countries have their own interests. They see the world in their own way. But I do believe that in the last three and a half plus years, we have helped to stabilize the relationship with Russia. And we have a very frank exchange of views in areas where we don’t agree, like Syria.
QUESTION: And on that point, it’s become a little politicized. Mitt Romney, in his acceptance speech, said he would show less flexibility and more backbone towards Russia. In your conversation with President Putin, did you see any room for movement on Syria?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, I had a very long conversation with Foreign Minister Lavrov. I had a shorter but a pointed conversation with President Putin. And we’re going to try again to see whether there is some way forward through the Security Council. They know our redlines, which is that we’re not going to vote for something that has no consequences; we’ve already done that. We’ve accepted Kofi Annan’s six-point plan, we’ve called for humanitarian aid. But we haven’t gotten to the main issue, which is putting some consequences on Assad and his regime that could begin to change his behavior and stop him from killing his own people. And that’s our condition, but we’re going to see whether we can come to some understanding with the Russians.
QUESTION: Three times, Russia has opposed those efforts of the Security Council to have any kind of resolution that has sanctions or real consequence. So what alternatives are open? When you talk about “bite,” what do you mean?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, the Russians have consistently said they did not want to open the door to military intervention. And my response has been, well, then, work with us to draft language that would make it clear this is not about military intervention; this is about very tough sanctions, this represents the opinion of the international community, so the message to Assad is abundantly clear he can’t hide behind you or anybody else.
And in my conversation with the Foreign Minister, I challenged him. I said, “You keep saying you don’t want to do Chapter 7, which the Arab League has called for, which the Europeans and we have called for, because you don’t want to open the door.” I said, “We are smart enough to figure out how to structure that, how to make it clear that we’re not talking about military intervention.” Because, to be fair, military intervention is still something that is viewed as contentious, even among the Syrian opposition. Many of them are on the record saying they don’t want any military intervention.
So we’re going to continue to try to pursue that with the Russians, the Chinese, and others. But at the same time, we’re not just standing idly by, waiting to see whether we can reach such an agreement. We are trying to shift the balance of power on the ground. We’re working with likeminded nations to support the opposition. We’re not providing arms, but we’re providing a lot of assistance that can enable them to be better organized to try to hasten the day when the violence finally ends. Because either Assad will stop, or there will be enough of a presence on the ground that he will be forced to stop.
QUESTION: While this diplomacy has been happening, a hundred thousand Syrians fled in August, 20,000 have died so far. So when you talk to some in the opposition, they say this is running out the clock while civilians are getting killed.
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well --
QUESTION: Is there a situation where you would support a coalition of the willing to create a no-fly zone?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, there’s nobody in that coalition, because everyone is worried that some kind of military action would cause more death and destruction. The first order of business in trying to deal with this terrible situation is first, do no harm. And in all of our very intense conversations with the neighbors in the region and others, this is a very difficult set of logistics, if you will; technical kinds of decisions. And nobody’s willing to say, okay, we’re going to come in with military force, try to do a no-fly zone, which means you’ve got to bomb a lot of sites. And the Syrians have proven that they are not only ruthless, but they are totally shameless in placing defensive materiel in places that are in civilian areas and the like.
So, look, I am as heartsick as anybody about what has happened in Syria. It just beggars the imagination that you would have a leader who is so willing to slaughter his own people without regard, drive them into refugee status, destroy ancient cities like Damascus and Aleppo. I mean, that’s just terrible. But at the same time, the international community does not want to make it worse. So we are doing what we think are the best options available to us right now.
QUESTION: So the conversation coming from Turkey, this proposal of a safe zone, you see that as a nonstarter?
SECRETARY CLINTON: No. We’re engaged in discussions with the Turks. When I was there about a month ago, we set up a mechanism for very intensive discussions because there’s a difference between calling for something rhetorically, and then sitting down with military planners and saying, “Okay, how do you actually implement something?” And again, it’s a lot harder than perhaps it sounds to some ears.
But we are having intensive discussions with the Turks, with the Jordanians, with others in the region and beyond. So this is something that we spend an enormous amount of time on every single day. In fact, we just had a team here consulting with the Russians because we’re looking for any way forward that helps the situation – not makes it worse, not causes more death and destruction, but brings about the end of the Assad regime, saves as many lives as possible, and begins a political transition.
QUESTION: Is Russia still sending arms to Bashar al-Assad?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, they had preexisting contracts, some of which they fulfilled, some of which they held back on. They will not commit to stopping sending arms, because they claim, “You have people in the region who are arming the opposition, so we’re not going to stop helping Assad.” That’s their rationale. But we follow this pretty closely, and we think it has slowed down. But Syria already had so many arms. I mean, it was the fourth largest army in the world for a country that size. So they have, unfortunately, a lot of military equipment that they had stockpiled.
We are especially concerned about their chemical weapons. We’ve made that as abundantly clear as we could.
QUESTION: Would Russia help to secure some of those stockpiles?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Russia is worried about the chemical weapons. They don’t think that they have yet been falling into the wrong hands, or being used. But we’ve made it clear, as has other governments around the world, including the Russians, to the Syrians that we will hold them accountable if these chemical weapons are used. But it’s not so much whether Syria uses them – because right now they claim they won’t, and we are watching it very closely – but we worry about them getting into the wrong hands, whether it’s some existing terrorist group or some new group that comes out of nowhere and gets a hold of them. So we’re very watchful about this, and working with other countries on it.
QUESTION: So there is a plan to secure those?
SECRETARY CLINTON: There is a lot of work going on.
QUESTION: You told us in July that you would be willing to speak with Bashar al-Assad. Does that offer still stand?
SECRETARY CLINTON: If he will step down, I’ll meet him anywhere outside of Syria. (Laughter.)
QUESTION: What would you say?
SECRETARY CLINTON: I would say – I don’t know. I have no idea. I’ve never met him. But I would hope that it would not be too late to end this, but I see no indication that he’s willing to.
QUESTION: Do you see any open path towards a negotiated exit for him?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, that is certainly an issue we have all discussed. And in the so-called Geneva communique that we worked on all day, which the Russians have gone back to in saying that it’s a good framework for moving toward a transition, as – and we’re in agreement as long as it has consequences if the parties – if the Assad regime doesn’t perform – that was left open. And we would certainly encourage he and his family to leave. It’s not likely that that will happen, from all of the information we have.
QUESTION: You think he’d come here, to Russia?
SECRETARY CLINTON: I don’t know. I don’t know. That was certainly an issue we discussed early on in this conflict. And the Russians kept saying they didn’t want him. And I said, “Well, you basically own him; you better take him.” But I don’t believe that he’s going to leave Syria. I think he’s of the mindset that this is an existential struggle for him, his regime, his family. And it’s just terrible; it’s a tragic, historic setback for Syria.
QUESTION: Madam Secretary, thank you very much for your time.
SECRETARY CLINTON: Thank you, Margaret. Good to see you again.

Thursday, July 19, 2012

Hillary Clinton's Interview With Margaret Brennan of CBS




Interview With Margaret Brennan of CBS


Interview
Hillary Rodham Clinton
Jerusalem
July 16, 2012


QUESTION: Madam Secretary, thank you for making time on a busy day. It seems Bashar al-Assad has the reserves to go on fighting. What is the end game?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, I think, Margaret, the end game is starting, because with the increasing pace of defections, both military and civilian, with the fighting moving into and around Damascus, with the violence increasing, with the pressure mounting on the Assad regime, it’s only a matter of time. I wish it were sooner instead of later, because every day that goes by more innocent people are killed. But there’s no doubt in my mind that this regime is at the beginning of what will be a painful end, unless they cooperate with the international community to assist in a managed transition that keeps the institutions of the Syrian state intact, which ceases the violence, saves lives, and moves to a transition that will lead to elections and a new future for the Syrian people.
QUESTION: Would you meet with Bashar al-Assad?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, certainly we are prepared to do anything to assist the transition, but we’re strongly supporting Kofi Annan, who, as you know, is the Joint Envoy of both the UN and the Arab League. He’s in Moscow today. So we’re giving him our full support. But I have attended every meeting that was held at my level to do as much as we could to move the international community and to send a clear, unmistakable message to Assad and to the opposition that we expect the opposition to put the interests of the Syrian people first and be prepared to participate in a transition.
QUESTION: Is there a group within the opposition that’s emerging that you would feel confident in taking over if Bashar exits?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, the real core of the opposition is not outside Syria, which are the people that we largely meet with, but the people inside Syria. So at this point, we cannot tell you with any certainty who the people inside Syria would select to be their representatives. But if it were to come such a moment, we’d be prepared to back those choices, assuming they truly represent the will of the Syrian people.
QUESTION: Well, how is the U.S. supplying the rebels at this point?
SECRETARY CLINTON: With nonlethal assistance, which is what we said we would do, communications, medical supplies, the kinds of things that were in such desperate short supply to help people organize and protect themselves from the onslaught of the government’s full barrage against them.
QUESTION: What would make you change the type of support?
SECRETARY CLINTON: At this point, nothing. We are focused on doing what we think is appropriate for us to do. We don’t want to further militarize the conflict. We don’t want to support, either directly or indirectly, the arming of people who could perhaps not use those weapons in a way we would prefer. They seem to be getting their hands on enough weapons. It’s not weapons, it’s will that we’re trying to engender between both the government and the opposition to cease the violence and work toward a transition that leads to a democratic future.
QUESTION: Now, you mentioned Kofi Annan is in Moscow. By his own admission, his plan thus far has not been successful in holding a ceasefire and really moving anything forward. At what point do you change strategy?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, I think he is very committed to pushing forward on this track for two reasons. First, the mission of observers that has been in Syria, which by all accounts has provided at least reliable reporting about what was happening in various of the conflict zones, is coming up for renewal on July 18th, and he’s looking to give his best advice to the Security Council.
Secondly, we do believe that we’ve moved the international consensus to the document that we produced out of Geneva under his leadership, calling for a transition governing body with full governing authority to manage the government and the transition to democracy. What we haven’t been able to do with the Russians and the Chinese is to get agreement on how exactly that would happen. That’s what he’s trying to do inside Moscow. We believe additional pressure through a Security Council resolution, a Chapter 7 resolution, imposing very tough sanctions on Assad and the people around him would give us more leverage to accomplish that.
QUESTION: When you leave office in January, if Assad is still in power, will you walk away believing that this was the right strategy, to stay the course with this?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, I don’t know what other strategy anybody is suggesting, because unless you have Security Council support for any other action, I don’t think any country believes that it should act unilaterally in such a complex, dangerous situation. Certainly the countries along the border of Syria that stand to be affected by any spillover of violence are extremely worried about any unilateral kind of action.
So I know people share my deep frustration and outrage at what’s going on inside Syria, but my job is not just to express outrage. My job is to try to figure out what can be done that would be effective. And sometimes a situation does not lend itself to an answer that is immediately satisfying. That’s just the way diplomacy and life happen to be. So I’m very confident we’ve done everything we can do and will continue to do everything possible to try to bring this terrible situation to as early an end as possible.
QUESTION: Can you give me a sense of what the effect of what’s going on in Syria has been on the surrounding countries? I mean, how much is it shaking stability here? And what is Iran’s role?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, Iran is playing a major role. We often talk about wanting to get Russia and China on board because they’re permanent members of the Security Council. But the real player supporting Syria is Iran and their proxy, Hezbollah. They’re the ones who are, day in and day out, providing cover, support, financing, weapons, military advice to Assad, to the army, to the regime. And it’s just another example of the malicious role that Iran plays in the world, promoting terrorism, destabilizing its neighbors, pursuing nuclear enrichment, with the likelihood that it could be moved to have a nuclear weapon unless they are stopped. So Iran plays a very malign role. There’s no doubt about that.
And that, of course, adds to the effects of the violence. We’ve seen Turkey have some difficult situations on their border. They have received thousands of refugees. Jordan has received tens of thousands of refugees. So has Lebanon. You look at the region and beyond, it could be quite destabilizing. So far, the effects have been somewhat contained, but it’s another reason why you don’t want to spread the violence and the conflict, because there’s no way to keep it contained within the borders of Syria.
QUESTION: And lastly, how did you feel when you were in Egypt and you saw the protests that were attacks in many ways on America, personal? What did you think?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, I’m pretty used to this by now. I’ve been in politics and around my own country and the world for many, many years. And protest is part of people expressing themselves. They had a point of view. I happen to think they were wrong in their assumptions and their conclusions, but they have a right to express themselves.
QUESTION: All right, Madam Secretary, thank you so much for your time.
SECRETARY CLINTON: Thank you, Margaret.
QUESTION: I appreciate it.