24 May 2012
Hillary Clinton Addresses Special Forces Gala
http://www.state.gov/secretary/rm/2012/05/190805.htm
Remarks at the Special Operations Command Gala Dinner
Remarks
Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of State
Tampa, Florida
May 23, 2012
ADM MCRAVEN: Thank you, Steve. Well, good evening, everyone, and welcome
to tonights gala dinner. Before I begin, please join me in a round
of applause for the staff of the Tampa Convention Center and the action officers
from USSOCOM who worked so very hard to make this event a great success.
(Applause.)
To our international guests, our local, state, and national leaders, our
guests from industry, and the National Defense Industrial Association, thank
you for making this event a priority in your busy schedule, and for your
continued support to Special Operations.
Now I have the great privilege of introducing our guest speaker, a woman
who has spent virtually her entire life in the service of our country and
in the service of the greater international community. She was the first
lady of the state of Arkansas, the first lady of the United States, a U.S.
senator from the great state of New York, and since 2009, she has held the
position as the U.S. Secretary of State.
In a Time Magazine article last month, she was named one of the top 100 most
influential people in the world. In that Time article, the former Secretary
of Defense, Bob Gates, said of her, and I quote, In a world that is
ever more complex, turbulent, and dangerous, Secretary Clinton has made a
singular contribution to strengthening this countrys relationships
with allies, partners, and friends, rallying other countries to join us in
dealing with challenges to the global order from Libya to Iran to the South
China Sea, and reaching out to the people in scores continue in scores
of countries to demonstrate that America cares about them.
No Secretary in recent memory has had to deal with more international challenges
than the war in Iraq and Afghanistan, to the Arab Spring, to the always difficult
and challenging North Korea and Iran. In spite of these challenges, she has
made incredible strides in safeguarding democratic reforms in Burma, advancing
womens rights around the globe, and reshaping the State Department
to align the incredible power of our diplomats, the civilian power, with
our already strong military power.
Secretary Clinton is beloved by the men and women in the U.S. military. She
is our type of lady a woman of uncompromising integrity who wont
back down from a good fight, particularly when it comes to matters of principle,
a leader who is passionate about the welfare of the worlds less privileged,
the disenfranchised, and the downtrodden, and a Secretary who deeply cares
for her people and who is an incredibly strong supporter of our men and women
in uniform.
Over the last few years, I have had several opportunities to work with Secretary
Clinton on some of the United Statess most sensitive military missions.
In each case, she listened intently to my advice. In each case, she was
instrumental in the final decisions. And in each and every case, she never,
ever wavered from her commitment to the American people. She is, without
a doubt, one of the finest public servants ever to serve this great nation.
Ladies and gentlemen, please join me in welcoming the United States Secretary
of State, The Honorable Hillary Rodham Clinton. (Applause.)
SECRETARY CLINTON: Good evening. Good evening. It is a great honor for me
to be here with you this evening. I want to thank Admiral McRaven for that
introduction, but far more than that, for his remarkable service to our country,
from leading an underwater demolition SEAL platoon to heading the Joint Special
Operations Command. Hes doing a terrific job as the ninth commander
of the United States Special Operations Command. (Applause.) Many of you
know, as Admiral McRaven knows, that it takes real guts to run a mission
deep into hostile territory, full of potential dangers. And of course, Im
talking about the White House Correspondents Dinner. (Laughter.)
I am pleased to be here with so many representatives to this conference from
90 countries around the world. Your participation is a testament to the important
partnerships, and I am grateful that you are here. Because we face common
challenges, we face common threats, and they cannot be contained by borders
and boundaries.
You know that extremist networks squeezed in one country migrate to others.
Terrorist propaganda from a cell in Yemen can incite attacks as far away
as Detroit or Delhi. A flu in Macao can become an epidemic in Miami. Technology
and globalization have made our countries and our communities interdependent
and interconnected. And todays threats have become so complex, fast-moving,
and cross-cutting that no one nation could ever hope to solve them alone.
From the first days of this Administration, we have worked to craft a new
approach to our national security that reflects this changing landscape,
starting with better integrating the three Ds of our foreign policy and national
security: diplomacy, development, and defense. And we call it smart power.
And I have been privileged to work with two secretaries of Defense, Bob Gates
and Leon Panetta, and two chairmen of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Mike Mullen
and Marty Dempsey, who understood and valued the role of diplomacy and
development, who saw that we need to work to try to prevent conflict, help
rebuild shattered societies, and lighten the load on our military.
For my part, first as a senator serving on the Armed Services Committee and
now as Secretary of State, I have seen and admired the extraordinary service
and sacrifice of our men and women in uniform. So we have made it a priority
to have our soldiers, diplomats, and development experts work hand-in-hand
across the globe. And we are getting better at coordinating budgets and
bureaucracies in Washington as well.
To my mind, Special Operations Forces exemplify the ethic of smart power
fast and flexible, constantly adapting, learning new languages and
cultures, dedicated to forming partnerships where we can work together. And
we believe that we should work together wherever we can, and go it alone
when we must. This model is delivering results.
Admiral McRaven talks about two mutually reinforcing strategies for Special
Operations: the direct and the indirect. Well, we all know about the direct
approach. Just ask the al-Qaida leaders who have been removed from the
battlefield.
But not enough attention is paid to the quiet, persistent work Special Operations
Forces are doing every single day along with many of you to build our joint
capacity. You are forging relationships in key communities, and not just
with other militaries, but also with civil society. You are responding to
natural disasters and alleviating humanitarian suffering.
Now, some might ask what does all this have to do with your core mission
of war fighting? Well, weve learned and its been a hard
lesson in the last decade weve learned that to defeat a terror
network, we need to attack its finances, recruitment, and safe havens. We
also need to take on its ideology and diminish its appeal, particularly to
young people. And we need effective international partners in both government
and civil society who can extend this effort to all the places where terrorists
hide and plot their attacks.
This is part of the smart power approach to our long fight against terrorism.
And so we need Special Operations Forces who are as comfortable drinking
tea with tribal leaders as raiding a terrorist compound. We also need diplomats
and development experts who understand modern warfare and are up to the job
of being your partners.
One of our senior Foreign Service officers, Karen Williams, is serving here
in Tampa on Admiral McRavens staff. And under an agreement finalized
this year, we are nearly doubling the number of military and Foreign Service
officers who will be exchanged between the Departments of State and Defense.
(Applause.) We know we need to better understand each other, and we know
that through that better understanding there is even more we can do together.
When I served on the Senate Armed Services Committee, I was impressed by
the Pentagons Quadrennial Defense Reviews, called the QDR, which guided
plans and priorities every four years. So when I became Secretary of State,
I launched the first-ever Quadrennial Diplomacy and Development Review, and
we call it the QDDR. Through it, we are overhauling the State Department
and USAID to become more operational, more strategic in our use of resources
and personnel, more expeditionary, and more focused on transnational threats.
Let me highlight a few examples. As part of the QDDR, we created a new Bureau
of Conflict and Stabilization Operations that is working to put into practice
lessons learned over the past decade and institutionalize a civilian surge
capacity to deal with crises and hotspots.
Experts from this new bureau are working closely with Special Operations
Forces around the world. Ill give you, though, just this one example
from Central Africa, where we are working together to help our African partners
pursue Joseph Kony and the Lords Resistance Army. In fact, they were
on the ground a few months before our troops arrived, building relationships
in local communities. And because of their work, village chiefs and other
leaders are actively encouraging defections from the Lords Resistance
Army. Just a few weeks ago, our civilians and troops together helped one
community set up its own radio station that is now broadcasting come
home messages to the fighters. Our diplomats also saw that the UN staff
in the region could be useful partners. So they worked through our team in
Washington and New York to obtain new authorities for the UN officials on
the ground and then link them up directly with our Special Operations Forces
to share expertise and improve coordination. Now, this mission isnt
finished yet, but you can begin to see the potential when soldiers and diplomats
live in the same camps and eat the same MREs. That is smart power in action.
Heres another example. We know we need to do a better job contesting
the online space, media websites and forums where al-Qaida and its affiliates
spread their propaganda and recruit followers. So at the State Department,
weve launched a new interagency Center for Strategic Counterterrorism
Communications. Its housed at the State Department, but it draws on
experts from the intelligence community and the Defense Department, including
Special Operations Forces.
The nerve center in Washington is linking up to military and civilian teams
around the world and serving as a force multiplier for our embassies
communications efforts. Together, we are working to pre-empt, discredit,
and outmaneuver extremist propagandists. A digital outreach team of tech
savvy specialists fluent in Urdu, Arabic, Somali is already
patrolling the web and using social media and other tools to expose the inherent
contradictions in al-Qaidas propaganda and also bring to light the
abuses committed by al-Qaida, particularly the continuing brutal attacks
on Muslim civilians.
For example, a couple of weeks ago, al-Qaidas affiliate in Yemen began
an advertising campaign on key tribal web sites bragging about killing Americans
and trying to recruit new supporters. Within 48 hours, our team plastered
the same sites with altered versions of the ads that showed the toll al-Qaida
attacks have taken on the Yemeni people. And we can tell that our efforts
are starting to have an impact, because we monitor the extremists venting
their frustration and asking their supporters not to believe everything they
read on the Internet. (Applause.)
Now, this kind of ideological battle is slow and incremental, but I think
its critical to our efforts, because what sustains al-Qaida and its
terrorist affiliates is the steady flow of new recruits. They replace the
terrorists you kill or capture so that they can plan new attacks. This is
not about winning a popularity contest, but it is a simple fact that achieving
our objectives is easier with more friends and fewer enemies. And I believe
passionately that the truth is our friend. Exposing the lies and evil that
rests at the heart of the terrorist narrative is absolutely to our advantage.
Now, weve also changed the way we do business on the civilian side
to be better partners to you in the military. As part of our reorganization,
weve created a full Counterterrorism Bureau at the State Department
that is spearheading a diplomatic campaign around the world to increase local
capacity of governments and to deny terrorists the space and financing they
need to plan and carry out attacks.
This fits right in with the purpose of this conference: deepening international
cooperation against terrorism and other shared challenges. As the threat
from al-Qaida becomes more diffuse and distributed, shifting from the core
to the affiliates, it is even more important to forge close ties with the
governments and communities on the front lines and to help build up their
counterterrorism capacity. After all, they often are better positioned than
we are to provide services to their people, disrupt plots, and prosecute
extremists, and they certainly often bear the brunt of terrorist attacks.
So we need to build an international counterterrorism network that is as
nimble and adaptive as our adversaries. Admiral McRaven helped establish
the NATO Special Operations Forces Coordination Centre, so I know he understands
how important this is.
Each year, the State Department trains nearly 7,000 police, prosecutors,
and counterterrorism officials from more than 60 countries, including frontline
states like Yemen and Pakistan. Were expanding our work with civil
society organizations in specific terrorist hotspots particular villages,
prisons, and schools to try to disrupt the process of radicalization
by creating jobs, promoting religious tolerance, amplifying the voices of
the victims of terrorism.
This whole effort goes hand-in-glove with the work of Special Operations
Forces to train elite troops in places like the Philippines, Colombia, and
Afghanistan under the Army Special Forces motto: By, with, and through.
Youre doing this in one form or another in more than 100 countries
around the world. And this work gives you a chance to develop a deeper
understanding of local culture and customs, to learn the human domain as
well as the physical terrain.
Im impressed by the work of your Cultural Support Teams, highly-trained
female Special Operations Forces who engage with local populations in sensitive
areas like Afghanistan. This is part of our National Action Plan on Women,
Peace, and Security that was developed jointly by the Departments of State,
Defense, and others to capitalize on the contributions women everywhere can
make to resolving conflicts and improving security. Around the world today,
women are refusing to sit on the sidelines while extremism undermines their
communities, steals their sons, kills their husbands, and destroys family
after family. (Applause.) Theyre joining police forces in Afghanistan.
Theyre writing newspaper articles in Yemen. Theyre forming
organizations such as Sisters Against Violent Extremism that has now spread
to 17 countries. And we are committed to working with these women and doing
everything we can to support their efforts as well.
We have to keep our international cooperation going and growing at every
level. Next week Ill be heading to Europe, and Ill end up in
Istanbul for the second meeting of the new Global Counterterrorism Forum,
which we helped launch last year. Turkey and the United States serve as the
founding co-chairs, and weve been joined by nearly 30 other nations.
Together, were working to identify threats and weaknesses like porous
borders, unchecked propaganda, and then devise solutions and mobilize resources.
For example, the UAE has agreed to host a new center to develop best practices
for countering extremism and radicalization.
Now, some of you in this room have come great distances to be here because
you understand that we need a global effort to defeat a global terrorist
network. And I thank you for that recognition and for your commitment.
I want to say just a final word about American Special Forces and to thank
the admiral and every member of the United States Special Operations Forces
who are here today Army Rangers and Special Forces soldiers, Navy
SEALs and Marine special operators, Air Force commandos, every one of you.
So much of what you do, both the tremendous successes and the terrible
sacrifices, will never be known by the citizens we serve. But I know what
you do, and so do others who marvel and appreciate what it means for you
to serve.
Weve just passed the one-year anniversary of the raid that killed Usama
bin Ladin. (Applause.) And I well remember those many hours in the Situation
Room, the small group that was part of the planning and decision-making process
with Admiral McRaven sitting there at the table with us. And I certainly
remember that day. We were following every twist and turn of that mission.
It was a day of stress and emotion, concern and commitment. I couldnt
help but think of all the people that I represented as a senator from New
York serving on 9/11 and how much they and all of us deserved justice for
our friends and our loved ones. I was thinking about America and how important
it was to protect our country from another attack. But mostly, I was thinking
of the men in the helicopters, praying for their safety as they risked their
lives on that moonless Pakistani night.
And one thing that I am always proud of and that I hope is conveyed to our
visitors and partners around the world: When you meet our special operators
or when you meet members of our military or our diplomats and development
experts, you will see every shade of skin color, every texture of hair, every
color of eye. And if you spend a little time talking and getting to know
that man or woman, you will find different parentage, different ethnicity,
different religions, because we are Americans. And as Americans, we have
a special opportunity and obligation in this interdependent, interconnected
world to stand up for the universal rights and dignity of every person; to
protect every man, woman, and child from the kind of senseless violence that
terrorism inflicts; and also, frankly, to model.
In many places where we go, I as a Secretary of State or our special forces
as members of our military, we see ancient disputes between tribes, ethnicities,
religions, sex of the same religion, men and women. Just about every possible
category is used all too often to separate people instead of finding common
ground. If we have learned nothing in the last decade, we should certainly
have learned that the terrorists are equal opportunity killers. They want
to inflict terror on everyone who does not see the world from their particular
narrow, outdated, dead-end worldview.
When you are pursuing a mission in partnership or on behalf of your own country,
let us remember that we are on the right side of history. We are on the side
of right. Your service is making the world safer for people to be who they
are, to live their lives in peace and harmony. That is going to be the challenge
of the 21st century. Will we once and for all recognize our common humanity
and stand together against the forces of darkness or not? Im betting
we will. And I think its a pretty good bet, knowing that our Special
Operations Forces and their partners are at the point of that spear.
Thank you for all that you do, not only to keep us safe and protect our ways
of life but to demonstrate unequivocally that the world will not tolerate
being undermined by those who refuse to recognize that we are truly one world
of humanity that deserves the opportunity to pursue our rights and opportunities
for a better life. I am very proud to be here to thank you. Thank you for
keeping our nation safe and strong. Thank you for working to keep other nations
safe and strong. Thank you for helping us build the world that our children
deserve.
Thank you all very much. (Applause.)
MODERATOR: Ladies and gentlemen, the commander will now present our guest
of honor with a token of our appreciation.
ADM MCRAVEN: Madam Secretary, a small token of our appreciation for joining
us here tonight. This is, as you quickly noted, our version of Excalibur,
the sword and the stone. And of course, as legend has it, only the wisest
and the bravest can pull the sword from the stone. My guess is it will come
out easily in your hand. So thank you very much, maam, for joining
us here tonight. Thank you very much.
SECRETARY CLINTON: Thank you so much, Admiral. (Applause.)
PRN: 2012/826
|