Order of Lakandula: Another Award for Hillary! **Video**
Seriously, we need to start a Museum/Library for her in Seneca Falls. She needs a place to park all of these awards where we can visit, and it has to be in Seneca Falls!
Presentation of the Order of Lakandula,
Signing of the Partnership for Growth and Joint Press Availability with
Philippines Foreign Secretary Albert Del Rosario
RemarksHillary Rodham ClintonSecretary of StateManila, PhilippinesNovember 16, 2011
MODERATOR: Please be seated. We will now proceed to the conferment
of the award. Be it known to all men by these (inaudible) that I,
Benigno S. Aquino III, president of the Republic of the Philippines, by
virtue of the powers vested in me by law, have caused to be inscribed in
the roster of the Order of Lakandula the name of Hillary Rodham
Clinton, Secretary of State, United States of America, with the rank of
Bayani, done in the City of Manila the 16th day of November in the year of our Lord 2011.
(The award was conferred.)
(Applause.) MODERATOR: We will now proceed to the signing of the Joint
Statement of Intent on the Partnership for Growth between the Government
of the Republic of the Philippines and the Government of the United
States of America.
The Partnership for Growth aligns both governments’ strategic efforts
towards inclusive Philippine economic growth. This partnership will
enhance the Philippine Government’s capability to: first, foster a more
competitive business environment; second, strengthen the rule of law and
increase efficiency in courts; and lastly, support fiscal stability.
This five-year program is a signature initiative of President Obama’s
Presidential Policy Directive on Global Development. Fifteen U.S.
agencies are actively engaged with the Philippine Government in this new
joint effort. The Partnership for Growth anticipates producing a
transformative impact on the Philippines and unleashing the country’s
potential for broad-based and sustained economic growth. (Applause.)
(The joint statement was signed.)
(Applause.) MODERATOR: Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes the signing
ceremony. We will now proceed to the press opportunity. Secretary
Clinton will now deliver her statement. SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, thank you very much, and let me begin
by expressing what a personal pleasure it is for me to be back here in
Manila. I want to thank President Aquino and Foreign Secretary Del
Rosario for extending such a warm welcome and also extend my
appreciation to all of the officials of the Government of the
Philippines. And I am grateful to all of you and to the people of the
Philippines for the Order of Lakandula. This is an honor that I will
always treasure.
And on behalf of the American people and President Obama, I bring
greetings and well wishes. For 60 years now, the alliance between the
Philippines and the United States has helped keep our nations secure.
And thanks to that security, both nations have made progress on many
fronts. We have strengthened our democracies, developed our economies,
and certainly built strong ties among our peoples. We have also helped
provide stability and security throughout the Asia Pacific.
And so we do have a lot to be grateful for and proud of during this
anniversary year. But it’s not about looking toward the past. This is
about how we face the future together. And we know that we can count on
the alliance to continue to keep us safe and growing stronger.
During the past year, our nations have embarked on a campaign of
increasingly active diplomacy. In January, we inaugurated the first
U.S.-Philippines Bilateral Strategic Dialogue here in Manila. In June, I
had the pleasure of welcoming the foreign secretary to Washington. And
Secretary Panetta and I are looking forward to welcoming Secretary Del
Rosario and Defense Secretary Gazmin to Washington early next year for a
joint meeting in the 2+2 format, making it the first time all four
secretaries will sit down together to take a comprehensive look at our
partnership. Our meeting in Washington in January will be quite a bit
cooler weather-wise, but I hope just as warm personally as the one here
in Manila.
My visit today is part of this reinvigorated diplomacy. Earlier on the deck of the USS Fitzgerald in
Manila Bay, the foreign secretary and I signed the Manila Declaration.
And just now, he and I officially launched the U.S.-Philippines
Partnership for Growth, a rigorous, results-oriented collaboration to
help the Philippines break into the ranks of the world’s high-performing
emerging economies and achieve sustainable, broad-based growth that
will benefit all of the people of this country. Leaders here have worked
hard to lay the groundwork for this kind of economic leap by making
reforms to improve transparency and tax collection and to create more
inclusive prosperity.
The United States wants to support these pro-growth reforms and help
unlock the Philippines vast economic potential to improve the lives of
your own people, to drive regional prosperity, and to create more
high-paying jobs so fewer Filipino citizens have to travel to distant
countries to support their families.
Through the Partnership for Growth, a team from across the United
States Government will work closely with partners in the Filipino
Government to create a more transparent and predictable business
environment, lower barriers to trade and strengthen the rule of law, as
well as fighting corruption. Together we hope to deliver an array of
benefits to the people, including more foreign investment to create new
jobs, a more streamlined court system that can deliver justice and
protect local businesses, better services, and more resources to fight
poverty. Over time, these steps will better position the Philippines to
join the Trans-Pacific Partnership, which we hope will dramatically
increase trade and investment among the peoples of the Pacific.
In addition to our bilateral partnership, we are working in several
regional forums. A few days ago we met in Hawaii for the APEC Leaders
Meeting, and in a few days we will meet again in Bali for the East Asia
Summit and the U.S.-ASEAN Leaders Meeting. Our goal is to show
demonstrably what we mean by a pivot to Asia, to strengthen the
architecture of cooperation among the nations of the Pacific to address
regional challenges, advance broad-based security, prosperity,
democratic progress, and peace.
The United States looks to the Philippines and sees a trusted ally, a
nation that shares our democratic values, and ancestral home for
millions of Filipino Americans, an important trade and development
partner, and may I add, a country with one of the highest Facebook
penetration rates in the world. The Filipino people, like the American
people, are eager to connect, to seize new opportunities, to have a
voice in their own country and in global debates. And so let us work
together to shape that shared future.
And I’ll end today with just a personal comment, some praise for a
native son of the Philippines who is making headlines across the world.
We know that the Pacman had another great victory. As I said in the last
time I was in Manila, I am a major Pacman fan, and in the spirit of his
sport and his success, let me say the United States will always be in
the corner of the Philippines. We will always stand and fight with you
to achieve the future we seek. (Applause.) Thank you all. MODERATOR: Thank you, Secretary Clinton. Secretary Del Rosario will now deliver his statement. FOREIGN SECRETARY DEL ROSARIO: Ladies and gentlemen, the year 2011 is a banner year for Philippines-U.S. relations. This year we are celebrating the 60th anniversary of the 1951 Philippines-U.S. Mutual Defense Treaty as well as the 50th
anniversary of the Peace Corps and USAID in the Philippines. The event
is marked no less than by the visit of Secretary Clinton, to be followed
by the meeting between President Aquino and President Obama in
Indonesia on the 18th of November.
These milestones and high-level meetings have tested the multifaceted
engagement between the Philippines and the United States, making it one
of the most durable and dynamic strategic partnerships in the whole
world.
Secretary Clinton and I had very fruitful discussions on a broad
range of bilateral, regional, and global issues this morning. We
exchanged views on how to employ the interlocking tools of development,
diplomacy, and defense to weld a formidable, more focused, and efficient
alliance that is results-oriented and forward-looking.
This morning we signed the Manila Declaration. It affirms the vigor
of our alliance, especially at a time when the Philippines is facing
challenges to its territorial integrity in the West Philippine Sea. As I
mentioned earlier in the signing, a stronger, reliable Philippine
defense in the West Philippine Sea upholds our common and shared
interests to freedom of navigation, unimpeded commerce, and respect for
international law.
The president also met with Secretary Clinton today and discussed
areas where their priorities converge and how the Philippines and the
U.S. can work in these areas together. We are charting the course of our
relations by seizing vast opportunities to grow our economies, open by
the fastest-growing region in the world, the Asia Pacific.
The Philippines and the U.S. blazed a trail in development-oriented
collaboration in Asia. We jointly embark on a mission to win a
sustainable and broad-based economic growth in our country through the
Partnership for Growth. A stronger economy for the Philippines is a
stronger ally for the United States and the region. We are committing
ourselves in implementing policies that will catalyze a kind of economic
growth that would have a perceptible impact on the lives of average
Filipinos across the nation. By unlocking the Philippines’ potential for
economic growth, the Partner for Growth will boost the Aquino
administration’s drive to unleash our country’s capacity to create equal
opportunities for everyone.
There is much reservoir of goodwill across both sides of the Pacific.
I am confident that our partnership will gather more steam as our
engagement intensifies in every front. I thank you. (Applause.) MODERATOR: Thank you, Secretary Del Rosario. Secretary Clinton
and Secretary Del Rosario will now take two questions from members of
the press. The first will be from Mr. Paul Eckert of Reuters. QUESTION: Thank you. Good afternoon. Paul Eckert of Reuters
News Agency. For both officials, the development yesterday down in Bali
where the ASEAN nations were unable to agree on a united stand on the
South China Sea, for Secretary Clinton, how does that complicate your
work going forward on this issue going into Bali and beyond? And more
broadly, all countries sort of wrestle with the economic appeal of China
and how to tap that, along with coping with some of the policies that
may be less palatable or even threatening, depending on where you sit.
So I’d welcome a broader philosophical comment from either official on
the second part of that question. Thank you. SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, Paul, let me start. First of all, we
believe that the United States participation for the first time in the
East Asia Summit as well as our third U.S.-ASEAN Leaders Meeting sends a
very strong message of what our level of commitment is to this region
and to the many issues that we confront. And we will certainly expect
and participate in a very open, frank discussion of maritime security
challenges in the region and how to address them cooperatively.
President Obama will reaffirm our national interest in the maintenance
of peace and security in the region and internationally, and that
includes freedom of navigation, overflight, respect for international
law, the rule of law, unimpeded lawful commerce across the region’s
maritime domain. And we further seek to see the Law of the Sea used as
the overriding framework for handling territorial disputes.
So we expect that there will be such a frank discussion. We have been
heartened by the strong response by a number of the countries that are
part of ASEAN and part of the broader East Asia Summit. And we think
this probably will require leader-level discussions, and we look forward
to those occurring in Bali. FOREIGN SECRETARY DEL ROSARIO: On the discussions of – about
the South China Sea, as far as we know it in the Philippines the West
Philippine Sea, we obviously have three concerns regarding that issue.
The first concern is we are – like many other nations, we share the
importance of freedom of navigation and unimpeded commerce. That’s one.
Secondly, we are in a territorial dispute issue. That’s the second. And
third is we have a particular interest in the West Philippine Sea and
the commerce there because of the number of seafarers that we have in
the Philippines. As you know, 25 percent of the seafarers of the entire
universe are Filipinos.
We do have – if you – we do have a territorial dispute and we are –
like other nations who are of interest in the issue, we do have an
interest in providing a solution in accordance with the rule of law.
Essentially, we’re talking about – or specifically UNCLOS. We are
looking for a peaceful resolution to the issue. We are looking for a
multilateral approach considering that there are many claimants
involved. And we also are looking for an observance of the Declaration
of Conduct that’s in place.
We are – that’s – we’re commonly embracing those facets of interest
and behavior, but we think that we – the Philippines has contributed
significantly to the issue by its introduction of an actionable
framework. It’s known as ZoPFFC. It stands for Zone of Peace, Freedom,
and Cooperation. It is a actionable framework that we have contrived
that will address the segregation of disputed versus the undisputed
areas so that the disputed areas can be used for joint development
purposes.
As you may know, we had pushed this and we were actually requested by
ASEAN to get together and to assemble a maritime legal forum
(inaudible) the Philippines. And unfortunately, from the very beginning,
we did not have a consensus because only eight of the ten countries
came to the table to assist us in vetting this initiative.
But nevertheless, we completed the results of that forum, of that
vetting. And as you probably have heard, we were successful in terms of
being able to establish a consistency between the actionable framework
that we were introducing to that of the DOC and we also have established
a relevance of the framework as well to UNCLOS. This, of course, was
brought up to the foreign ministers meeting in Bali that’s being held at
this time. And I understand that it was referred for further study. We
are – we considered that we have not been defeated, that we did do our
part in terms of being proactive, in terms of introducing what we felt
would be a way to be able to conclude an application of the rule of law
to the issue.
But the Philippines itself is – if I may go further with your
permission, Madam Secretary, we’re interested in being able to validate
our claim. And by this, we hope to be able to go to a dispute settlement
forum which is provided by UNCLOS. And there we have five choices. One
is ITLOS. The other is ICJ. And then there’s a third and a fourth, which
are forms of arbitration. And there’s a fifth, which is a compulsory
conciliation. The first and the second require that we approach the
forum with the other party, which in this case would be China, but I
think China hesitates to do this with us. So we will, in all likelihood,
proceed to the fifth mechanism and be able to secure a validation of
our claim from that particular mechanism. MODERATOR: And the last question for today will come from Mr. Willard Cheng of ABS-CBN. QUESTION: Good afternoon. Pardon my very long question, Madam
Secretary. The United States is known for its strong advocacy for human
rights, transparency, and accountability. I wonder what are your
thoughts about the refusal of the Aquino administration to allow former
President Arroyo to seek medical treatment abroad. And having personally
known her, are you concerned about the state of health of the former
president?
And secondly, Madam Secretary, the United States in recent days has
made known its plans to expand and diversify its maritime presence in
Asia and the Pacific. What will be the role of the Philippines in these
plans? And to what extent will the United States be involved in the
disputed Spratlys? And can you elaborate more in your statement that the
United States will remain in the corner of the Philippines, and will
you support the quest of the Philippines to validate its territorial
claims in international arbitration bodies? Thank you. SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, as to the first question, this is
obviously a matter for the authorities of the Philippine Government and
all of its branches, and it would not be appropriate for me as a
Secretary of State to comment any further.
We are strongly of the opinion that the disputes that the foreign
secretary referred to that exist primarily in the West Philippine Sea
between the Philippines and China should be resolved peacefully. The
United States does not take a position on any territorial claim, because
any nation with a claim has a right to assert it, but they do not have a
right to pursue it through intimidation or coercion. They should be
following international law, the rule of law, the UN Convention on Law
of the Seas, UNCLOS that the foreign secretary has referred to. There
are mechanisms within it, as he has just enumerated, for the resolution
of disputes. And we stand for the rule of law and we stand for
international norms and standards, which is why we support the peaceful
resolution.
At the same time, we recognize that our long mutual defense treaty
and alliance relationship with the Philippines has to be updated and
brought into the 21st century, and that will require working
with the Philippines to provide greater support for external defense,
particularly maritime domain awareness, defense of one’s maritime
boundaries. And we’ve begun some intensive consultations between our two
governments to determine exactly what the specifics of such an approach
would be, which is why we will be continuing those consultations.
Then in January, the defense secretaries and foreign secretaries will
meet in the first-ever 2+2 context. We do this with Japan; we do it
with Korea; we do it with Australia. We’re doing it now with the
Philippines in Washington. We also are looking forward to President
Obama welcoming President Aquino to the White House, to the Oval Office,
sometime early in the next year, because we have a lot of work to do.
And we want to be very sensitive to the requests and needs of the
Government of the Philippines, and we want to make it clear that our
military relationship, like every other aspect of our relationship, is
one based on mutual respect and mutual interest. And we think that the
time has come for us to look at how we can update our military
relationship moving into the future, knowing that there are new
challenges and new opportunities for us to be working together. QUESTION: Thank you. SECRETARY CLINTON: Thank you. MODERATOR: Thank you, Secretary Clinton. Thank you, Secretary Del Rosario. That concludes our press opportunity for today. (Applause.)