Meeting with Staff and Families of Embassy Tashkent
Remarks
Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of State
Embassy Tashkent
Tashkent, Uzbekistan
October 23, 2011
SECRETARY CLINTON:
Well, I am delighted to be here, and I want to thank all of you for
coming out on a Sunday morning and apologize that, as is often the case,
we got a little delayed, did some interviews and had some typical
challenges. But all is well, and I’m especially pleased to join you here
in this beautiful atrium.
As some of you might remember, when I came last December, you did not
have an ambassador, so I would like to welcome and thank your new
Ambassador for his service, and to thank all of you for the great
cooperation and partnership that you have together. George understands,
as he just said, the importance of Uzbekistan to the region and to our
national interest – not just because of its central role in the Northern
Distribution Network and our efforts in Afghanistan, but for growing
trade and economic opportunities and a great opportunity that we have to
try to help develop democracy here in Uzbekistan.
I’m delighted to be back for a third visit. When I was first lady, I
helped open the nation’s first public health clinic for women. I’ll go
back there today to see how they’re doing. And I’ve enjoyed the
opportunity to travel in the country, from Tashkent to Samarkand to
Bukhara and many places in between. I just finished an interesting,
productive meeting with four representative civil society activists. I
assured them that their messages and their concerns were being heard
here, and basically assigned the Ambassador and all of you to follow up
to make sure they know that.
I really want to also thank your DCM. Thank you so much for your
assistance in putting together our visit, also Chip Layton and the human
resources team and whole management section. I know that when somebody
like me shows up, there’s even more work than what you usually are faced
with, but as is the case, you have performed amazingly well.
I know too that this Embassy demonstrates what we call for in the
QDDR. It is a great interagency team. Our State and DOD officers have
shown real interagency teamwork as you strengthen the Northern
Distribution Network. I know our State and USAID officers, working with
local staff, have really taken on helping the Uzbek Government to tackle
trafficking-in-persons, and we are making real progress, and I thank
you for that. Others of you are helping to grow more food here, helping
young people get jobs and economic experience. And we, of course, are
very grateful to our Marine Guard detail.
So I thank all of you, and particularly the children who got up early
and got dressed up and brought in for this occasion. And I am
especially grateful to our local staff, our American and Uzbek alike.
You are part of this team. And the Uzbek staff is absolutely
instrumental in everything that we do. I know that this is not sometimes
an easy post, and all of you, American and Uzbek alike, work under some
difficult stresses, but you consistently operate at the highest levels.
So I wanted to come by personally, see this beautiful atrium, and to
thank you and let you know how much what you do is valued back in
Washington. And now, I’d like to say hello to as many people as I can,
and enjoy the rest of your Sunday. Thank you. (Applause.)