Secretary Clinton's Remarks at the International Conference on Afghanistan
Clinton's Remarks at the International Conference on Afghanistan
Secretary Clinton during remarks at the International conference on Afghanistan in London on 28 January 2010. (Embassy photo by SJ Mayhew)
Group photo of Secretary of State Hillary Clinton with women representatives of Afghan civil society, London 28 January 2010 (Embassy photo by SJ Mayhew)
28 January 2010
Secretary Clinton's Remarks at the International
Conference on Afghanistan
London, United Kingdom
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, good afternoon, everyone. I think we have just wrapped up a very productive conference and we have seen the results of cooperation in the international community on a number of very important issues. I want to thank Prime Minister Brown and Foreign Secretary Miliband, the Government of Afghanistan, and the United Nations for bringing us all together and sponsoring this important meeting.
And I think that what we have seen is a global challenge that is being
met with a global response. I especially thank the countries that have committed
additional troops, leading with our host country, the United Kingdom, but
including Italy, Germany, Romania. We also are grateful to all those who made
their contributions known today. There are other countries such as Russia,
Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, who are providing air space rights and other transit
assistance.
But as important as our military mission is, we know that
force alone cannot achieve our goals. Last week, I released the U.S. Afghanistan
and Pakistan Regional Stabilization Strategy. Its goal is to support Afghan-led
efforts to transform and strengthen their own society and ensure their own
security. As we heard a lot today, starting with Prime Minister Brown and
President Karzai and many others, the goal is to have an Afghan-led and
Afghan-owned strategy, and we are seeing that translated into reality every
day.
President Karzai laid out an ambitious agenda for reform at his
inauguration last year. There have been a number of plans put forth and
Afghanistan has moved forward on preparation for a conditions-based transition
to take responsibility for its own security and an agenda for development and
governance, which is critical to the future. Among the decisions made today was
to establish a Peace and Reintegration Trust Fund to support the Government of
Afghanistan’s efforts to draw disaffected Taliban back into society so long as
they renounce violence, renounce al-Qaida, agree to abide by the laws and
constitution of Afghanistan.
Japan has shown an extraordinary commitment
with its announcement of $50 million for the fund. And in parallel, the United
States military has been authorized to use substantial funds to support the
effort, enabling our commanders on the ground to support Afghan Government-led
initiatives to take insurgents off the battlefield.
We’ve agreed to
support NATO’s plan to work with the Afghan Government on the conditions-based,
province-by-province security transition. As President Obama has made clear, our
efforts will allow us to begin to transition our own troops out of Afghanistan
in July of 2011. But as I said this morning and would underscore this afternoon,
this is not an exit strategy. It is about assisting and partnering with the
Afghans.
Now, the kinds of reforms that President Karzai and the Afghan
Government have announced are important, and we’re going to watch them carefully
and make clear our expectations that they be fulfilled. Among them are their
efforts to combat corruption, provide more public services to people,
effectively manage international aid. We also had very constructive
conversations last night at dinner, hosted by Secretary Miliband this morning at
breakfast, hosted by Prime Minister Brown and during the conference, about how
the international community can support these reforms more effectively,
including significant progress toward Afghanistan’s benchmarks for debt relief
from the Paris Club and international financial institutions.
I also
believe very strongly, as is apparent in what I say about this issue, that women
have to be involved at every step of the way in this process. To that end, I
unveiled our Women’s Action Plan. It includes initiatives focused on women’s
security, women’s leadership in the public and private sector; women’s access to
judicial institutions, education, and health services; women’s ability to take
advantage of economic opportunities, especially in the agricultural sector. This
is a comprehensive, forward-looking agenda that stands in stark contrast to
al-Qaida’s recently announced agenda for Afghanistan’s women, attempting to send
female suicide bombers to the West.
So the agreement reached today brings us
closer to the goal of a stable Afghanistan and advances our efforts to combat
the violent extremists who threaten all of our citizens. In addition to this
important work on Afghanistan, I had the opportunity to meet one-on-one with a
number of my counterparts on the sidelines of this meeting. We discussed a wide
range of common concerns, including relief efforts in Haiti. And I thank the
British Government for its significant assistance support for the people of
Haiti.
I also had a chance to discuss Iran’s refusal to engage with the
international community on its nuclear program. They continue to violate IAEA
and Security Council requirements. We were disappointed by the Iranian
Government’s rejection of an offer that would have built confidence by trading
some of Iran’s stockpile of low-enriched uranium for reactor fuel to meet the
legitimate medical needs of the Iranian people.
The revelation of Iran’s
secret nuclear facility at Qom has raised further questions about Iran’s
intentions. And in response to these questions, the Iranian Government has
provided a continuous stream of threats to intensify its violation of
international nuclear norms. Iran’s approach leaves us with little choice but to
work with our partners to apply greater pressure in the hopes that it will cause
Iran to reconsider its rejection of diplomatic efforts with respect to its
nuclear ambitions.
Tomorrow, I will travel on to Paris where I will continue
many of these discussions with President Sarkozy and Foreign Minister Kouchner.
I look forward to our close consultations with respect to the challenges facing
us. And I’m delighted that we had an opportunity to get a lot of work done on
many matters in one place, a particularly favorite place of mine. So again, I
thank the British Government for their partnership and hospitality, and I’d be
glad to take your questions.
MODERATOR: This question
is from Duncan Gardham of the Daily Telegraph.
QUESTION:
Hi.
SECRETARY CLINTON:
Hi.
QUESTION: I’d like to ask about the general tenor of
the conference seems to be changing the pace of what’s been going on in
Afghanistan, and to some extent, looking towards the time when troops can leave.
A time scale has been mentioned this morning by President Karzai of around 15
years. And I wondered whether you thought that was a practical time limit to
start pulling troops out, and also to have the Taliban lay down their arms in
that – within that sort of time period?
SECRETARY
CLINTON: No, and I don’t think that’s what President Karzai meant.
First of all, we have increased the numbers of our military forces. There will
be more to come. As you know, the United States has added 30,000. Other
international partners have added 9,000. We have upped the tempo of our military
engagement and we’re beginning to see some evidence of reversing the momentum of
the Taliban. That is all to the good.
It is absolutely necessary in order
to provide the conditions for stability and security, but it is not sufficient
to provide the political environment in which a lasting peace could be
negotiated. So therefore, as you heard today, we will be pursuing the military
action, going very aggressively against the Taliban, those who are trying to
kill our soldiers and civilians and wreak havoc in Afghanistan, and at the same
time, creating an opportunity for Taliban who choose to leave the battlefield,
renounce violence, renounce al-Qaida, agree to abide by the laws and
constitution of Afghanistan to reenter society.
It is our working
assumption that we can make gains on both of these tracks over the next few
years and that we can begin to transition security to the Afghan security forces
on a timetable that is conditions-based, but which begins to have the Afghan
security forces assume greater and greater responsibility, province by province,
beginning this year. July of 2011 will mark a point of transition for American
troops as we take stock of where we have come with our security efforts. And we
expect that there will be a portion of the country that will be under Afghan
control, and we will move forward to transition out our forces as they are
replaced by trained and qualified Afghan forces.
I think what President
Karzai was referring to, and I’ve spoken to him about this personally on several
occasions, is that our military presence may continue as it does in many
countries, providing training, logistics, intelligence. But our combat role will
diminish and transition out. That’s as it should be. There was a very
significant event a few weeks ago with the multiply timed suicide attacks in
Kabul. That was handled well by the Afghans themselves. There were no
international troops involved. And the assessment by our commanders – American
and NATO ISAF commanders – is that the Afghan forces performed commendably.
We have seen an increase in the recruitment of the young men joining the
Afghan security forces in the last two months. We’ve seen an improvement in
retention. We’ve increased the pay, something that was quite noticeably lacking
since the Taliban paid more than the Afghan security forces or police paid.
So I mention all of that to create the context that we see this as an
evolving process where we are creating the conditions for Afghanistan to assume
responsibility for its own security, which will then permit the transfer out of
international combat forces. Having said that, there will likely be continuing
military aid, assistance, and advice from international partners beyond the
combat mission.
MODERATOR: The next question’s from Andy Quinn of
Reuters.
QUESTION: Madam Secretary, I’d like to ask a
little bit about this reintegration and reconciliation process. As you doubtless
know, the Afghan Government has invited the Taliban to take part in the loya
jirga that that they’re planning to have this year. I’d like to ask, does the
U.S. specifically support this invitation? And do you think that the invitation
could or should include top Taliban leadership such as Mullah Omar as long as
they, or if they, renounce ties to al-Qaida? Does the U.S. have any plans to
contribute funds, beyond the military funds that you’ve mentioned, to the
reintegration fund that the Japanese are helping to establish? And more broadly,
do you feel that this reconciliation process that we’re talking about today
represents the first point in a real roadmap toward ending the conflict in
Afghanistan? Thank you.
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, Andy, I
think that the starting premise is you don’t make peace with your friends. You
have to be willing to engage with your enemies if you expect to create a
situation that ends an insurgency or so marginalizes the remaining insurgents
that it doesn’t pose a threat to the stability and security of the people.
When President Karzai announced that he would be holding a jirga, which
is a traditional Afghan mechanism for trying to reconcile competing views and
reach decisions to take, it was natural for him to say that if we’re going to
have a peace jirga, people who are not already in agreement with you might
actually come.
Now, we have a very clear understanding of what we expect
from this process. We expect that a lot of the foot soldiers on the battlefield
will be leaving the Taliban because many of them have wanted to leave, many of
them are tired of fighting. We believe the tide is beginning to turn against
them, and we need incentives in order to both protect them and provide
alternatives to them to replace the payment they received as Taliban fighters.
This is similar to what the American military did in Iraq. As it became clear
that a number of Iraqis were tired of the brutality and barbarism of al-Qaida,
as they began to see the potential alternatives available to them in the
political system, they began to talk with our military personnel about changing
allegiance and becoming part of the forces fighting against the
terrorists.
So we have some experience in this now of recent vintage.
Some of the same people, including a British general who is active in this area
in Iraq, are advising General McChrystal. We’ve already seen some examples. In
fact, we saw – there’s an article in one of the American papers today talking
about a whole tribe, a whole tribe of Pashtuns, about 400,000 members, who want
to fight the Taliban. But you’ve got to realize the circumstances. There was a
tribe in a village in Pakistan who decided to fight the Taliban and they were
targeted with these brutal suicide bombings, killing more than a hundred people
at a volleyball match.
So in order to make good on the offer of an
alternative that can create the conditions for peace, you have to be prepared to
help fund it and provide protection for people. And that’s part of the planning.
We do not have any plans to add money to the reintegration fund because,
as I said, we have a significant amount of money that’s being used for the same
purposes coming through our American military. And this is an international
effort, and a number of international partners have signed up and made
commitments to the reintegration fund. But they will be working in the same
arena with the same purpose.
MODERATOR: And our last
question is Indira Lakshmanan from Bloomberg
News.
QUESTION: Thank you. Madam Secretary, what did you
hear from Chinese Foreign Minister Yang today that assures you China is ready to
support a new UN Security Council sanction, or resolution on Iran? And what was
Yang’s response to your call for an investigation of Chinese hacking against
Google and other U.S. companies and your concerns about internet censorship in
China? And lastly, what would you say to prominent American business leaders
like Bill Gates, who this week said that China’s internet censorship is actually
– quote – very limited?
SECRETARY CLINTON: On Iran, we
had a very productive conversation with Foreign Minister Yang. They are part of
the P-5+1 process, as you know. That process has been unified and we hope it
continues to move forward on that same track to work together to change the
strategic calculus of the Iranian leadership with respect to its nuclear
program.
We shared some of our thoughts with our Chinese counterparts. We
also set up some additional opportunities for expert consultations. We made it
clear to everyone with whom I spoke today and yesterday that our efforts to
apply pressure on Iran are not meant to punish the Iranian people, they are
meant to change the approach that the Iranian Government has taken toward its
nuclear program. And we made that clear when the P-5+1 agreed on a common plan
to offer Iran the opportunity to ship out its LEU and have it reprocessed for
their research reactor in Tehran, which they have thus far refused to
accept.
So China is very much engaged, a very active member of the P-5+1,
and we’re continuing to work together. I’m not going to preview what our plans
our, but I think we had a very constructive conversation.
I raised the
issue, as you would have expected I did, on the Google and internet freedom
front. China has its approach. Obviously, they feel strongly that they are much
more open than perhaps they’re getting credit for. We expressed – I expressed my
concerns that we don’t want to create a series of actions that in any way
impinges on the freedom and utility of the internet. But it was a very open,
candid conversation. We agreed we will continue to discuss this matter in the
context of our ongoing dialogue.
And as you can tell from the quote you
referred to by Bill Gates, different people have different responses or
different impressions. The overall issue is one that I think everyone should be
concerned about, and that is making sure that no one uses the internet for
purposes of censorship or repression. But we had a very positive exchange on
this issue with the Chinese today.
Let me end, because you’ve been very
patient – I know other people are probably waiting to come in and talk to you.
Let me end by just asking these four women from Afghanistan to stand up. Would
you all stand up? They are among the women who have been working in Afghanistan
for the last years on behalf of expanding opportunities for women and protecting
human rights and women’s rights. I’ve had a chance to work with some of the
Afghan women who were here for the conference today in the past, and they are
very much committed to their country’s future, but they’re also very committed
to making sure that women in Afghanistan play their rightful role in that
country’s future. And I just wanted to thank them for being here and for
speaking out.
Thank you all very much. (Applause.)