podesta-emails
Fwd: ICYMI: Former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright on Foreign Policy and the 2016 Election
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---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Hillary for America Press <[email protected]>
Date: Fri, Oct 16, 2015 at 5:14 PM
Subject: ICYMI: Former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright on Foreign
Policy and the 2016 Election
To: Hillary for America Press <[email protected]>
*IN CASE YOU MISSED IT*
[image: Center for American Progress masthead]
Former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright on Foreign Policy and the 2016
Election
<https://www.americanprogressaction.org/events/2015/10/12/123111/former-secretary-of-state-madeleine-albright-on-foreign-policy-and-the-2016-election/>October
16, 2015, 10:00am ET - 11:00am ET
“Thank you for that kind introduction and good morning to you all.
It is always a pleasure to visit the home of the Center for American
Progress and the CAP Action Fund, because this building houses an all-star
team of brilliant people with creative minds and practical skills.
Over the past decade, you have fashioned CAP into a treasure trove of
information that thought leaders, journalists, and policymakers can turn to
and trust.
But more importantly, this institution has become a powerful voice on
behalf of Americans who want our country to be strong and respected,
confident and just.
CAP was not created to re-fight the stale political wars of the past; its
orientation has always been toward the future.
Yet its purpose today is much the same as it was when it was founded in
2003 – to bring Americans together on behalf of policies that will bring
out the best in our country, both here at home and overseas.
I mention this context because it feeds directly into the topic I want to
address today – the 2016 election and the question of which party is best
positioned to keep our country safe and moving forward in the world.
I should say at the outset that I have some hesitation about weighing in on
matters of politics and foreign policy.
For although I have been involved in many campaigns, when I was secretary
of state I used to tell people that I had all my partisan political
instincts surgically removed.
I have also developed close relationships with many prominent Republicans,
including the unlikely friendship I struck up with Jesse Helms when I was
UN ambassador and he was chair of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.
Senator Helms and I disagreed on pretty much everything, but we grew to
trust and respect each other. And although it may seem old-fashioned, I
still believe that for our democracy to function, our leaders must be
capable of forging such relationships across the aisle.
So in some ways it would be natural for me to stay on the sidelines of this
campaign, but I have chosen to be involved for two reasons.
First, I am concerned that there is growing skepticism within the American
public about the benefits of U.S. engagement in the world, and I see it as
my duty to speak up during this election season about why America must stay
involved globally.
Second, I believe that Democrats have an historic opportunity to win even
broader support for a conception of American security that stays true to
our interests and ideals – a progressive-minded internationalism that
follows in the best traditions of FDR and Harry Truman.
The country saw our approach on display this week at the debate in Las
Vegas, where the Democratic candidates engaged in a remarkably substantive
discussion of the issues – including the question of America’s role in the
world.
The day following the debate I had the opportunity to talk to voters in
Iowa, where I was campaigning in support of Hillary Clinton. It was clear
to me that they found it refreshing to watch a civil conversation take
place instead of the screaming matches we have seen on the other side.
So even though the general election is many months away, the contrast
between the two parties is already well-established.
One party has remained true to its best traditions – the other is becoming
lost in the wilderness after making too many right hand turns.
For voters, this has created a choice between a Democratic party that does
battle against joblessness at home and terrorists abroad – and a Republican
leadership in Congress that sees no greater threat to our future than
Planned Parenthood.
When voters look to Democrats, they see pragmatists who offer solutions to
new challenges such as climate change. When they look at today’s
Republicans, they see leaders who still think the best way forward is to
deny science.
When voters look to Democrats, they see smart strategists who support the
use of diplomacy backed by force. When they look at Republicans, they see
candidates who believe that military force is the only tool in the toolbox.
Of course, the differences between the two parties on issues of national
security is not just a matter of theoretical debate – it has been on vivid
display in recent times.
During the eight years Republicans were in the White House, we saw
intelligence misused, professional diplomats and the uniformed military
ignored, and the role of history and culture in shaping events disregarded.
We saw policymakers who relied on wishful thinking instead of critical
thinking, and who forgot the true sources of our nation’s strength.
We saw leaders who were so thoughtless in deploying American power that
they ended up exposing its limits to the world, weakening our position in
every critical region.
So under Republicans we had a series of unforced strategic errors during
the first decade of this century – and America is still recovering from
those mistakes.
Yet the Republican candidates for president are eager for the public to
overlook this record, and keen to blame all of the world’s ills on the
“Obama-Clinton” foreign policy.
But we remember that, upon taking office, President Obama inherited an
incredible mess, including two hot wars, a broken Middle East, the biggest
international economic crisis since the Great Depression, and American
prestige at a lower level than at any time since the Vietnam War.
No president has a magic wand, but Barack Obama has put us firmly back on
the correct track.
He has rebuilt and strengthened our economy, pursued terrorists
relentlessly, reduced the burden on our military, and restored proper
balance to U.S. foreign policy – emphasizing not only defense but also
diplomacy, development, and democratic principles as well.
Although the world remains a dangerous place, the United States is now on
its strongest footing since President Clinton left office, both at home and
abroad.
Thanks in great measure to the efforts of Secretary Clinton, we have
restored America’s reputation after years of grave damage in the wake of
Iraq.
We have strengthened our position in Asia, and built stronger relationships
with India and Japan.
We successfully negotiated a bold diplomatic agreement with Iran, one that
prevents them from obtaining a nuclear weapon and avoids plunging us into
another war in a chaotic Middle East.
We have deployed smart power and placed a greater emphasis on technology,
public-private partnerships, economics and energy, and people-to-people
ties in global engagements.
The question voters will face next year is whether to build on this record
of progress, or take a giant leap back to the policies of the previous
decade.
To win, Democrats must punch back with the truth against those who distort
the record of our administration and our party.
But we must also make an affirmative case for why we should be entrusted
with this country’s security, and explain how our party’s policies are best
suited to handle global challenges in a world that is far
different from what it was in 2008, or even 2012.
As part of that effort, we must take into account what I call the Iraq
effect.
By that I mean the creeping sense that America can do little good in the
world, and that efforts to shape events abroad through diplomatic, economic
or military means are futile.
It is understandable that Americans are reluctant to spend time and money
solving problems overseas when those problems seem intractable, and we face
many difficult issues here at home.
But as tempting as it may be, simply circling the wagons is not an option
for the United States.
For history teaches us that sooner or later, the world’s problems will come
home to America.
While the Bush administration made grievous errors, and the Obama
administration has not solved every problem, we cannot use those
experiences as an excuse to retreat overseas.
When you serve as secretary of state, you are reminded constantly that the
world still sees America as a role model.
Our leadership rests on our commitment to democracy, liberty and law,
support for justice and peace, and advocacy of human rights and economic
opportunity for all.
For us to have credibility abroad, these concepts must be constantly upheld
and reinforced at home.
And for Americans to live our lives in safety and freedom, we must be
prepared to deploy all the tools of national power to shape the world in
the direction we would like to see it go.
This requires an engaged and proactive foreign policy, and a willingness to
accept some risk.
I raise the subject of risk because I am keenly aware of what is happening
on Capitol Hill next week, when Secretary Clinton will appear publicly
before the Select Committee on Benghazi.
Much has been said about the Benghazi Committee, but I have a unique
perspective on these issues going back to my time in government.
I enjoyed every day I served as secretary of state, with one exception –
August 7, 1998. That was the day our embassies in Kenya and Tanzania were
bombed. More than 220 people died, including 12 Americans and 40 Foreign
Service nationals. Almost 5,000 people were injured.
Nothing in my life can compare to the emotion I felt when I accompanied the
bodies of ten of my fallen colleagues across the Atlantic to a ceremony at
Andrews Air Force base.
I had often talked about how government officials should be accountable,
which is easy enough to do when you are pointing the finger at someone
else, but I had never felt the full burdens of high office until that day.
While I knew that I could not guarantee the safety of our people, I had a
responsibility to do everything within my power to try. So in the
aftermath of the bombings, we established an accountability
review board chaired by retired Admiral William Crowe.
In the course of the investigation, Admiral Crowe identified a number of
shortcomings in our approach to diplomatic security. A letter also
surfaced that our Ambassador to Kenya, Prudence Bushnell, had written
expressing concern about limited resources for embassy protection.
I faced many critics at the time, particularly in Congress, but we were
ultimately able to work together to increase funding for diplomatic
security and implement the recommendations of Admiral Crowe.
My experience in 1998 parallels Secretary Clinton’s in the aftermath of the
Benghazi attacks. We both took responsibility, appointed accountability
review boards, and worked with appropriate congressional oversight
committees to try to fix what went wrong.
But with all those similarities, there was one key difference. Three years
after the Benghazi attacks, Republicans in Congress chose to launch an
investigation – and, as they now admit, its purpose is to inflict political
damage on Hillary Clinton and the Obama administration.
It is very telling to me that the focus of the investigation, which has
cost taxpayers $4.5 million, now seems to have shifted to her e-mails.
Our country can and should have a debate about how to balance our need to
project influence abroad with our responsibility to protect our diplomats
and security professionals, acknowledging that the courageous people who
take these jobs know there are risks.
What we should never have done is to politicize the deaths of four
Americans. This investigation is an insult to their memories, and the
committee should be disbanded.
It takes a special kind of cynicism to exploit a terrorist attack for
partisan political gain, but unfortunately such views seem to be taking
hold this election cycle.
We have seen this administration’s opponents do everything possible to
derail sensitive international negotiations, while proclaiming that our
president is weak because he lacks the phony bluster of Putin.
But most worrying of all is the constant drumbeat of naysayers who argue
that our country is somehow headed down the tubes.
I, for one, reject their doomsday scenarios.
The truth is we don’t need to make America great again. We are great now,
and our best days are still ahead of us – if we have a leader who leverages
our strengths as a diverse, hard-working, and
innovative country of immigrants and strivers.
That is what Democrats must be about next year – appealing not to our
country’s fringe tendencies, but to the values that have made America great
and our engagement around the world so essential.
This can be done because it is what we have always done.
Consider the Democrat who was president when my family found refuge in this
country, Harry Truman.
He never hesitated to defend America.
But neither did he ever fail to associate the United States with the
purposes of the UN Charter, the interests of our allies and the goal of
helping others.
He had the strength to act decisively, but also the wisdom to lead in a way
that attracted international support.
He worked tirelessly to strengthen global institutions and law, but
reserved the option of independent action.
He saw America as exceptional not because it was exempt from the rules
demanded of others, but because it was determined to create a world in
which rules had real meaning.
And he was resolute in defining America not in terms of its possessions,
but rather its ideals.
“We believe that all men have a right to equal justice under law and equal
opportunity to share in the common good,” he said.
“We believe that all men have a right to freedom of thought and
expression.
We believe that all men are created equal because they are created in the
image of God.”
Truman’s words, with a little updating as to gender, still speak to us
today, a new day in an age-old struggle between hope and fear on earth.
It is a struggle we can and will win – if progressives stand up for what we
believe in, and show the country we can lead with intelligence, conviction,
and strength both here at home and abroad. Thank you very much.”
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Milia Fisher
Special Assistant to the Chair
Hillary for America
[email protected]
c: 858.395.1741
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