Remarks at the U.S.-Japan Council Annual Conference
Remarks
Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of State
Marriott Wardman Park
Washington, DC
October 7, 2011
Good
morning. Good morning, everyone, and I am very pleased to be with you
this morning, and I confess to being somewhat overwhelmed and deeply
honored by the introduction that my friend and a truly great American,
Dan Inouye, just provided. He is someone whom I do not need to tell this
audience has served his state, our country, and the world with such
great distinction, and he is always looking toward the future, what will
make a difference in the lives of the men and women and the boys and
girls that he serves, how to build stronger relationships between
countries, how to keep your eye on what will matter tomorrow, not just
what the argument of today might be. So it has been just the honor of a
lifetime to know him, to serve with him, and to continue to have the
great opportunity of working with him in my new capacity.
And of course, as good as he is, he was made even better by his
wonderful wife. (Laughter.) And as someone who has been the spouse of a
very famous man, I know that Irene brings more than half of what this
dynamic duo represents – (applause) – because she comes to the work she
does every day with such extraordinary intelligence and grace. Irene is
the kind of person who you might as well just say yes to right away –
(laughter) – because you eventually will. And so to both of these great
Americans, thank you for your friendship and your leadership.
Also, thank you to Mr. Iino for his leadership as well. I wish to
welcome Japan’s national policy minister, whom I believe you will hear
from later. And of course, our friend – friend to all of us, Ambassador
Fujisaki, thank you so much for what you do to really help our
relationship grow even stronger. And we celebrate this extraordinary
friendship, which, as Dan said, for many decades now has been such a
significant strategic relationship, but more than that, a cornerstone of
America’s involvement in the Pacific, a partner in so many common
endeavors to try to increase prosperity, pursue peace, and provide a
better future.
And so we’re celebrating this at a moment when America is in the
midst of a strategic pivot. The wars of the last decade are winding down
and transitioning; the world’s economic and strategic center of gravity
is shifting east; and the United States is committed to an even deeper
network of relationships across the Asia-Pacific region. But when you
set out to build something, you begin with the cornerstone, which is
why, as Secretary of State, I made my very first overseas visit and
several since then to Japan. And President Obama, Vice President Biden,
and many other American officials have made that same journey in the
last two and a half years.
But we know that governments alone cannot sustain the close ties that we
have and continue to seek. Our strongest relationships have not lived
only in the halls of power; they live in the hearts and minds of the
American and Japanese people, not just in some cold assessment of our
common interests, but in the warmth of common experiences, family ties,
friendships, and the common values that bind us together. This
relationship has been tested by time and tragedy, by rivalry, and by the
natural push and pull between two proud nations like ours. And each
time, it comes back even stronger. Each time, when it counts the most,
our two countries stand in solidarity with each other.
Ten years ago, as a senator from New York, I saw firsthand what our
friendship meant. When Japan sent firefighters from 7,000 miles away to
help with the aftermath of the 9/11 attacks, I was moved, but I wasn’t
surprised. That’s just the kind of friend that Japan is to America and
to many countries around the world. Wherever there is famine, disease,
poverty, wherever there is a young democracy struggling to take root,
from the frontlines to the forgotten corners, Japan is there, working
hand in hand with America to build a safer, more prosperous world.
The generosity that moved us after 9/11 we sought to repay after
3/11. After Japan’s earthquake and tsunami, our governments launched the
largest joint military operation in our history. More than 20,000
Americans from our military and other agencies took part in what we
called Operation Tomodachi. Now, this was more than just a search and
recovery mission; this was a demonstration of our deep ties, because as
you know so well, tomodachi means friend, and that’s what we want it to
be.
Americans who remembered the red and white flags on the jackets of
Japanese volunteers at ground zero flew to Japan to return the favor.
Across our country, in small towns and large cities, people raised
money. Springfield, Illinois, for example, raised $32,000 selling blue
jeans for their sister city in Japan. Nebraska corn growers donated
nearly 9,000 bushels of grain. Japan-America societies across this
country raised over $20 million for relief efforts in Japan. And the
ambassador is passing out these white wristbands, which I’m very proud
to wear. And as you might guess, he’s very persistent. So again, just
say yes when he approaches you. (Laughter.)
The joint public-private partnership for reconstruction, which our
governments launched in July during my visit with the U.S. Chamber of
Commerce and Keidanren is bringing together policy makers and business
leaders to galvanize Japan’s economic recovery. And just last month,
when Vice President Biden visited Japan, he made a very clear message to
the world that Japan is open for business. And I want particularly to
thank Irene and the U.S.-Japan Council for the work you’ve been doing
with our Embassy in Tokyo to create the Tomodachi initiative, which is
an outgrowth of both the operation and the partnership for
reconstruction. Tomodachi initiative will be focused on partnerships and
programs to empower Japan’s young leaders and entrepreneurs. Together,
we want to create a Tomodachi generation that is deeply committed to the
future of our relationship.
Now, relationships like ours and so many others in our lives show
their true colors in tragedy, but they are built over decades. And while
economic and security ties are vital to our alliance, ties between our
people give our friendship its full meaning. The wonder a Japanese
college student exudes when she first sets foot in L.A. or Chicago or
Boston, the warmth an American high schooler feels for his Japanese host
family, the technological marvels that Japanese and American corporate
partnerships unleash into our markets, the mind-bending discoveries of
our researchers cooperating at the cutting edge of science, these are
the experiences that underpin our shared success.
For all the fundamentals that are already in place, however, we
cannot rest. We have to keep building and looking for new opportunities.
And we do that issue by issue and person by person. And I must say that
for us in the State Department, few opportunities deliver the lifelong
impressions and friendships as sending our young people to each other’s
country to learn languages and cultures. And we are committed to
ensuring that even more young people have that opportunity. More than
35,000 people have participated in exchange programs sponsored by our
two governments, programs like the Fulbright and the Japan Exchange and
Teaching Program, known as JET. More than 750 officials have taken part
in government exchanges, and nearly 4,000 Japanese professionals have
taken part in the International Visitor Leadership Program, including
four prime ministers, a Nobel laureate, a best-selling author, and many
thousands more.
The simple truth is that these exchanges attract remarkable people
and give them a global perspective. Japan’s first-ever female defense
minister – you knew I’d have to get that in – is an alumnae of the U.S.
International Visitor Leadership Program, and no less than four Nobel
laureates from Japan are also Fulbright alums, and the CEO of Rakuten,
whom I just met, who will be speaking from this very podium today, is a
Harvard graduate.
So although these ties have already benefited both of our nations,
they are not self-sustaining. We have to continue to invest in them. And
I’m a little concerned, which is why I wanted to raise this with all of
you. As recently as 1997, Japan sent more students than any other
country in the world to study in America. Today, Japan ranks sixth. In
the last 14 years, the number of Japanese students studying in America
has dropped by almost 50 percent. And we are committed to doing whatever
it takes to try to reverse this trend. So we are redoubling our efforts
to connect Japanese youth with American universities. We’re
establishing new Educational USA Advising Centers throughout Japan to
explain to Japanese students how to win admission and financial
assistance. We are working to remind a new generation of Japanese
business leaders how valuable it is to have employees who know both of
our cultures. And we are mobilizing Americans in the JET network to
convince more students to study in America. And in a tough budget
environment, we are fighting to maintain the funding for our flagship
programs, including the Fulbright program, which will send 100 talented
Japanese and Americans to learn each other’s cultures in 2012. We are
providing scholarships to the American Field Service and other
organizations so that students from the prefectures hardest hit by the
tsunami can spend part of next summer in America. And we are encouraging
more Americans to study abroad in Japan, and we’re pleased that this
number rose to more than 5,700 this past year.
Now, we have seen how generations who study and live together give
life to our alliance. We have seen how foreign visitors and overseas
travel with all of its challenges in today’s world builds character and
perspective. And it is inspiring to see what happens when our cultures
do mix. Just last month, I met a group of Japanese little league
baseball and softball players at the State Department. They were here
through the U.S.-Japan Sport Visitor Exchange Program. It will not
surprise you to hear that our sports exchange programs are our most
popular exchange programs. And you should have seen the kids’ eyes light
up as they met Cal Ripken, Jr., who was four times the size of anyone
else in the room. (Laughter.) He hosted them in America and he will be
giving youth baseball clinics across Japan next month. All of the kids
who were there that day came from the areas hardest hit by the tsunami,
and it was just a pure emotional high to see them in our country, some
of whom who had lost family members, whose schools no longer existed,
but who were just resilient and resourceful and determined to move with
confidence into the future.
The American people are proud to count Japan among our closest
friends. I recently heard the story of an Alaskan named Monty Dickson
who taught English at Yonesaki Elementary School as part of the JET
program. While in Japan, Monty came to love Japanese poetry, and on the
morning of March 11th, he had translated a poem by Shiba
Ryotaro into English, and it read: “There’s nothing as beautiful as
dedicating one’s life for a cause.” And just a few hours after writing
those words, Monty Dickson was swept away in the tsunami. In fact, both
of the Americans who died that day, Monty and Taylor Anderson, were
teachers in the JET program. Their lives and their cause are part of the
fabric of the friendship that we now share. The Dicksons, the
Andersons, and the entire extended family of JET alumni have been
working to help the communities that both Monty and Taylor lived in and
grew to love.
So we believe that building this relationship is not only strategic,
not only economic, not only political; we believe it is a noble cause,
and it’s one that we are absolutely committed to. The U.S.-Japan
alliance is the cornerstone of a system in the Asia Pacific that has
underwritten peace, stability, and prosperity for decades. And the close
connections built by the Monty Dicksons and the Taylor Andersons and
the U.S.-Japan Councils, those are the foundations that not only keep
the cornerstones strong but keep building higher and higher.
I’m here to ask you for your help, Japanese and Americans alike.
Let’s keep this alliance and what it represents strong for as far as we
can see into the future. Let it be said about us as it can be said of
prior generations of American and Japanese leaders in business,
government, academia, civil society, that we understood why this
relationship was so vital, not only to each of us but to the world. And
let us teach our young people what our countries have meant, can mean,
and will mean to each other in the years ahead. And then we can give a
new generation the skills, the opportunities, and the dream to help
America and Japan thrive together in the century ahead.
Thank you all very much. (Applause.)