Sec. of State Speaks to Sami Abraham of GeoTV
Interview With Sami Abraham of Geo TV
Hillary Rodham
Clinton
Secretary of State
Interview released on
October 28, 2009
Washington, DC
October 26,
2009
QUESTION: Pakistan being a front-line state in
war against terror has often been described by the U.S.
policymakers an important ally of Washington. However,
recent reaction in Pakistan over the Kerry-Lugar bill has
suggested that there’s a wide gap between how the things
are being understood in Washington and how the efforts are
being interpreted in Islamabad.
Today, we have with us
U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, who is about to
embark on a journey to Pakistan, which many believe will be
perhaps one of the most important trips since she assumed
the office of Secretary of State.
Madame Secretary, thank
you very much for being with us today, and before we start,
I would like to say Happy Birthday to you and coming to the
point, tell us – this is not your first trip to Pakistan,
but as a Secretary of State, is it the first trip. How are
you feeling and what you will be focusing during this trip?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Thank you so much, Sami, and of
course, it is my birthday. Pakistan and I are the same age.
(Laughter.) And so I am very much looking forward to my
visit. It will be my fifth trip – one trip as First Lady,
three trips as a senator, and now my first trip as Secretary
of State. And I am very much looking forward to it.
I
think it’s important for our two countries to be
consulting closely together. It is my hope to turn the page
to start a new era in relationships between Pakistan and the
United States. And of course, personally, it is such a
pleasure for me. I have many Pakistani friends, Pakistani
American friends, and I’m looking forward to
returning.
QUESTION: Before your trip, there was
announcements by Ambassador Holbrooke and there was also a
task force to set up U.S. assistance to overcome energy
crisis in Pakistan. Would you tell us, will there be any
announcements in this regard? Or another thing which
Pakistan needs these days is the investment.
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, you are right on both
counts, and that’s why I’m talking about turning the
page on our relationship, because we want to work with the
people and Government of Pakistan to help realize some of
the desires and needs that the people of Pakistan have told
us about. And at the top of that list, of course, are things
like energy, particularly electricity that is reliable for
not only residential use, but commercial use – things like
jobs, improving the economy and the investment environment.
It is our very strong hope that we can be a partner with
Pakistan. Of course, Pakistan must chart its own future. It
must have its sovereignty respected. But it is, I hope, a
way for us to work with the people and government to say
what the people of Pakistan want is what people everywhere
want – a good job, a good education for children,
healthcare, energy needs met. And that’s what I’m coming
to offer.
QUESTION: Coming to the Kerry-Lugar bill, it
was meant, as U.S. officials say, to give support to the
people of Pakistan, but the way things have laid out, there
is skepticism in Pakistan, as in many Pakistanis believe
that perhaps still the position of conditions in the bill
reflect that U.S. does not trust Pakistani security forces
and does not believe that Pakistan is a trustworthy partner
in war on terror.
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, let me
respond, and I appreciate you raising it, because there has
been some misinformation that I hope to remedy. First, the
sacrifices that the people of Pakistan are making in the
struggle against violent extremism are extraordinary – the
courage of your military, the very determined effort that is
going on as we speak to root out those extremists who
threaten the lives and the livelihood and the property and
the future of Pakistan. And I am extremely impressed and
admiring of this effort.
Secondly, what we intended
with Kerry-Lugar was to offer more help than has ever been
offered to Pakistan on the civilian side, so that some of
these very legitimate needs that people have spoken to me
about for quite some time, about how to make sure that
Pakistan fulfills its own destiny, is what really is behind
what we are attempting to do with Kerry-Lugar. And I
appreciate the effort that’s been made to clarify that
information.
And thirdly, there are no conditions on
Pakistan. There are conditions that we place on ourselves.
There are really questions that we ask that we ask in most
of the aid programs that we provide over many years, so that
we are sure that we have the best partnership and that we
are providing the assistance that is most usable.
So
I think if we can clarify what we are attempting to do,
which is really in response to what the people in Pakistan
have told us over many years and this government has told
us, I believe that there can be no doubt that we are not in
any way attempting to dictate to the Pakistani Government or
military that we are not in any way infringing on
territorial sovereignty, that we are trying to move our
relationship into the same category that we have with other
countries so that we can be of assistance to the people of
Pakistan as you chart your own future.
QUESTION: Well,
there were certain reports, comments on the Kerry-Lugar
bill, and one comment was that with this bill, perhaps the
U.S. is making an effort to halt Pakistan’s nuclear
program, and specifically they mentioned one clause which
says that – the information or access to those who are in
the process of acquiring nuclear material. Now, people in
Pakistan say that acquiring the nuclear material does not
fall in proliferation. But still, that was mentioned in the
bill, and they believe that that clause was not aimed at
stopping proliferation, but perhaps to halt the nuclear
program of Pakistan.
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, that is
not at all what is intended or what had been assumed in the
process of this legislation. First, let me say that we have
confidence in the Pakistani Government, in the military, in
their efforts to safeguard Pakistan’s nuclear arsenal. We
have absolutely no reason to doubt the very strong measures
that Pakistan has taken.
But we are concerned about
proliferation, and I believe Pakistan should be concerned
about proliferation. What would happen if some terrorist
went off to somewhere else in the world and acquired
material to detonate a bomb that had nuclear material in it?
It would be devastating, whether it happened in Pakistan,
Afghanistan, in the Middle East, in Europe, the United
States. I think all people who know the importance of making
sure that this material is not proliferated into the wrong
hands should agree with us, but that has nothing to do with
our confidence in the Pakistani program.
QUESTION:
Let’s talk about war on terror. Right now, Pakistan
forces, they have started operation in Waziristan. But there
was a concern in Pakistan that when they started this
operation (inaudible), they abolished their check post by
Afghan borders Was there any specific reasons for
that?
SECRETARY CLINTON: No, no, not at all. I’m not
aware of that, but I know for my information, that we are
very impressed with the actions being taken by the Pakistani
military. This appears to be at a very well planned and
implemented effort to try to go after those who threaten
Pakistan.
I think your question is part of a broader
concern; how do we try to prevent the movement back and
forth across the border between Pakistan and Afghanistan so
that we are not threatening the people of Pakistan, because
people in northern Pakistan take refuge on the Afghan side
of the border, or vice versa, so that people don’t take
refuge inside Pakistan. So I think that that is – that
remains a very high priority. I don’t know about specific
military decisions, but I do know that the Obama
Administration is committed in the effort against the Afghan
Taliban, just as we see Pakistan going after elements of the
Pakistani Taliban that threaten Pakistan.
QUESTION:
Well, you weren’t the first one who said very openly that
it is time that the U.S. must engage in conversation with
those groups of Taliban who are willing to disassociate
themself from al-Qaida. Tell us, is there any progress on
that?
SECRETARY CLINTON: I do believe that as part of
a broad strategy of engagement with the people in
Afghanistan, there has to be an effort to determine who that
calls himself a Taliban is willing to engage in the
political process instead of engage in terrorism and
violence. Because it’s our information that there are
people on both sides of the border who get caught up in the
intimidation and the press by the hard core extremists, and
that they’re not committed ideologically. They feel
compelled to participate.
What we want to do is separate
those out, and we’re going to engage in that, and we look
to the Government of Pakistan – particularly the military
and the intelligence services – to help guide us in
that.
QUESTION: Well, does it apply on the Pakistani
Taliban also?
SECRETARY CLINTON: That’s up to the
Pakistanis. I mean, that is something that the Government of
Pakistan has to determine.
QUESTION: The biggest
problem which seems at the moment is the deficit of trust
between the two governments. And until so far, what has been
done apparently doesn’t look like it’s working because
the recent area report suggested that the majority of
Pakistanis don’t trust Americans; in the same way,
majority of American people doesn’t trust
Pakistan.
Is there any new strategy you are working
on? What do you think? What should be done to achieve that
goal?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, I think both President
Obama and I are committed to broadening and deepening our
relationship with Pakistan. And we see it as not only a
government-to-government relationship, or a
military-to-military, intelligence-to-intelligence, but a
people-to-people relationship.
I think with President
Obama and myself, you have two people who are very fond of
the Pakistani culture, like to eat Pakistani food, have
enjoyed, in my case, in wearing shalwar kameezs, who have
friends, longstanding friends going back to college in both
the case of the President and myself. And we deeply regret
that there is misunderstanding and that there may not be the
kind of relationship that we would like to see, which is why
I am very consciously trying to turn the page.
Now it
doesn’t happen overnight; it is something that has to be
earned and built on. But I believe in the last nine months,
we have seen an improvement. It may not yet have spread
across the entire population of either of our countries, but
I know that in our working with your government, we are
developing personal relationships in every aspect – the
civilian, military, intelligence side. I think we’re
having a level of candor and openness that may not have ever
been present before.
I’m looking forward to
restarting the strategic dialogue between the United States
and Pakistan because it’s not just about fighting
terrorism. Of course we both care about that. When I see
these horrible bombs and attacks in Islamabad or Lahore, it
just makes me sick It just hurts me. And so, yes, we do have
a joint common interest in preventing those who would rather
destroy than construct a better future.
But it’s
not just about that. It is about energy and business and
investment and education and healthcare, things that are
very close to my heart. So I hope through this trip, not
only in my formal meetings but in getting out in the
country, meeting with the people, answering direct questions
from the Pakistani press and the Pakistani people, we can
begin to build a stronger relationship.
QUESTION: As
you talk about stronger relationship and a level of trust,
we see statements and also conversations which are in the
newspapers that Pakistani security forces, they are wanted
to do operation in Waziristan (inaudible), but there was
shortage of supply of military equipment which was not being
provided by the United States And also, there was a
complaint by the Pakistanis that the reimbursements under
the CSF are very delayed and almost now $2 billion which are
pending And these things, according to Pakistani forces, are
hampering the war on terror.
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well,
we inherited a system which we are working to change. With
respect to the reimbursements, we are trying to expedite and
streamline that process. We have an obligation to the
American taxpayer, because in effect, we’re saying to
people who live and work in Chicago or in Los Angeles, you
have to help us to help Pakistan. And so we do have a
reimbursement accountability schedule which we use with
everyone around the world.
But I think under the
circumstances of what the Pakistan military is attempting to
do – and one of the examples that the Pakistani military
has given to us is that when people in the military are out
in Swat or Waziristan, they may go to a farmer and buy some
sheep in order to slaughter them and eat them. Well, the
farmer doesn’t have a receipt book. (Laughter.) And so
when we get something for reimbursement to help the troops
who are on the ground fighting the bad guys, as we call
them, we just have to work this out.
But it is not in
any way specifically about Pakistan or in any way meant to
be misconstrued. And that’s what I want to get across to
the people of Pakistan, is that we both have governments
with bureaucracies. Heaven knows they’re not the easiest
things to move and make do what they should do. But we are
very committed to this relationship. And so when we hear
things like that, we try to remedy them – maybe not as
fast as we would like, but we do try to
respond.
QUESTION: Another issue which is very
important to the region is relations between India and
Pakistan. President Obama, when he was campaigning as
candidate, he discussed the (inaudible) Kashmir issue. But
after his presidency, we haven’t seen anything on that
front. And many in Pakistan believe unless you start on the
Kashmir issue, a durable peace is not possible in the region
and relations between India and Pakistan will not be
normalized.
What is your take on that?
SECRETARY
CLINTON: Well, first, let me stress that our relationship to
India is a separate relationship from our relationship to
Pakistan. We want to have two solid bilateral relationships.
We believe that we have very important interests with
Pakistan and with India. Now it would be a very important
step for both India and Pakistan to work to resolve their
differences.
But we believe that the most durable
possible outcomes of any kind of resolution or normalization
can only come from the two countries themselves –
developing more trust, more confidence-building measures,
and working toward resolving. There was some very good work
done in the last several years which we encouraged and we
watched with admiration – the bus routes being open, for
example.
So we are going to encourage and hope that we
can see that occurring again, because at the end of the day,
Sami, my view is that India and Pakistan have so much more
to gain by working through their very difficult
relationship. It will help improve trade and investment and
it will create a better opportunity for Pakistan to prosper
and progress, and that’s what I hope will
happen.
QUESTION: In Sharm el-Sheikh, the prime
minister of India and prime minister of Pakistan, they met
and then a declaration came out in which both prime
ministers said that there will be dialogue and they will be
discussing issues, particularly it was mentioned about
Balochistan, because many Pakistani believe that India is
behind the insurgency over there.
Do you have any
information or is there any information which your
intelligence people are telling you about
that?
SECRETARY CLINTON: I don’t discuss
intelligence, but let me say that I think it’s very
important to follow up on what happened in Sharm el-Sheikh.
And we would encourage that because the air needs to be
cleared and a very open understanding should
exist.
QUESTION: And let me ask you this thing, that
there’s a review going on in – about Afghan policy. Do
you think – how much more time it will take before the new
policy is announced?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, I know
that the President has undertaken a very thorough review,
which I applaud, because I think it’s such an important
decision. But of course, the Afghan election is a very
critical milestone. So I would bet that it would be
somewhere in the vicinity, but I don’t know when – after
the Afghan election, before or after, somewhere in that
area.
QUESTION: Many in Pakistan believe that the
United States will be in Afghanistan for a very long time.
So do you see an open-ended military escalation over
there?
SECRETARY CLINTON: I don’t think that
open-ended is at all what the President is looking to. I
think what he’s looking to is how do we define the mission
and make progress so that we can provide more stability and
security for the people of Afghanistan, prevent the
spillover from Afghanistan into Pakistan, work jointly with
Afghanistan and Pakistan together against the extremist
threat which threatens all of us, and I think that’s how
he’s looking at it
And he’ll have more to say. I
don’t want to preempt my President. He’ll have more to
say when he makes the announcement.
QUESTION: Madame
Secretary, thank you very much for talking to us, and we
wish you best of luck in your trip to
Pakistan.
SECRETARY CLINTON: I’m so much looking
forward to it. Thank you very
much.
ENDS