State Department Photo
African Union Commission
Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
May 1, 2014
Well, Mr. Deputy Chairperson, thank you very, very much. Thank you.
First of all, we do feel at home. We’re very grateful to you for another
generous welcome. We’re happy to be here. I’m personally happy to be
back. And I appreciate the detail and breadth of your opening comments,
and they’re very important, particularly your discussion about trade and
the possibilities with respect to the meeting in Washington and beyond.
Please extend my best wishes to Chairperson Dlamini-Zuma. I know
she’s off on another visit. And we both understood that we were not able
to coordinate our schedules sufficiently this time, but I’m very
appreciative to her for being willing to allow the meeting to go on, and
we’re appreciative for your chairmanship and participation in the
meeting. And after I have a chance to share a few comments here and
we’ve opened up the meeting, as you know, our Assistant Secretary of
State Linda Thomas-Greenfield will continue the dialogue with Ambassador
Brigety, and we’ve very appreciative for both of their leadership on
these issues.
My privilege is to join you in opening the fourth U.S.-AU High-Level
Dialogue. And very simply, President Obama is excited that I am here on
his behalf, together with our delegation, in order to build on what we
have achieved together since the United States first launched our
mission to the AU in 2006. I would note that the United States is the
only AU partner with a permanent presence. And we hope that that
underscores the importance that we place on the relationship.
It’s fair to say – and I think your comments sort of summarized it
when you talked about the reduction in trade to some degree. When you
combine that with other challenges throughout Africa, particularly the
challenge of governance; some failed states, some failing; the challenge
of violence, which we see in obviously the neighbor in South Sudan and
in other places, is a challenge for all of us.
Because those who
challenge stability and peace and the structure of government are doing
so by promoting a brand of lawlessness and extremism that is destructive
to the democratic hopes and aspirations of the vast majority of people
in Africa. So we need to work together.
We also know, in addition to the challenges of that side of the
ledger, on the other side of the ledger you have an enormous growth in
the population of young people, who need to be educated, who will need
jobs in the future. And at the same time, Africa is home to eight of the
ten fastest-growing economies in the world. The United States is the
largest market in the world, and we think there is a lot more that we
can do together to promote prosperity, shared prosperity, in keeping
with our shared interests. Doing so is going to be critical to making
the most of the economic opportunities. It’s also going to be critical
to dealing with this challenge of violence and of young people. I think
you know, Mr. Deputy Chair, that there are too many nations that risk
falling into broad-based violence, or remain embroiled in too much
bloodshed. And so we are very, very supportive.
This morning I had a discussion with our foreign minister friends
from Kenya, and from Uganda, and here, our host. And we talked about
this, about the challenge of South Sudan now. The United States, I want
everybody to understand, fully supports African-led efforts to confront
the most deadly conflicts of the continent. And it is clear that the
unspeakable violence in Central African Republic, the deliberate killing
of civilians on both sides in South Sudan – both of those underscore
the urgency of the work that we have to do together. So I came here
committed today to make clear to you, and to our colleagues who are
working on this issue, that the United States will do everything we can,
with the United Nations to support the effort, to bring and help in
assisting with a peacekeeping force – peacemaking force, in some cases –
and we think that this is absolutely critical.
We are also enormously encouraged by the remarkable economic
activity, the rise of the economies that we see in parts of Africa. And
we want to support your efforts to spread that prosperity, to make sure
that everybody has a sense that they can share in the future. So a lot
of this is going to depend on the decisions that we take. It’ll depend
on the kinds of things that we’re going to dig into today in this
dialogue. It will depend on real, concrete choices that we can make
about how we could work together and proceed together. So I think this
forum is really a vital opportunity to deepen our partnership and make
the most of this particular moment of opportunity on the continent.
Now each of our key areas of success – of focus – peace and security;
democracy and governance; economic growth, trade, and investment; and
development and opportunity – each of these are critical parts of
President Obama’s strategy for the sub-Saharan Africa. That is exactly
the way he is looking at and trying to break up the choices that we’re
making. They happen to also represent an area where the African Union
has already taken a leading role. And so on each of these fronts, you
are really already engaged in the business of developing solutions to
the real concerns of the continent.
With the dialogue that we’re having here – and you mentioned it – we
also have this important meeting. The President is inviting all African
nations to come and join us in Washington. It’s not a – I want to
emphasize it’s not a summons. It’s not some kind of a sort of summary
invitation. It’s really representative of the President’s desire to make
clear to the world, as well as to Africa, that we want Washington to
focus more on this. And we believe that by inviting people to come to
Washington, it will help the Congress of the United States. It will help
the American people. It will help everybody to be able to share in the
importance of this agenda.
So with our work over the next few days here, with our work together
in the weeks and months ahead, we are absolutely committed to forging
stronger ties on the continent. And the President, as you know, will be
visiting. And he looks forward to that, as we look forward in the two
and three-quarter years of his Administration, to strengthen these bonds
and open up these opportunities to the greatest degree possible. Most
importantly, the President and I and all of us in this delegation want
to help forge a shared future, a sense of shared engagement, of shared
commitment to making the choices we have to make. And in the end, we’re
absolutely confident that the relationship between Africa and the United
States will be stronger and better for that. So thank you for inviting
me here today to share in this, and we look forward to the dialogue.
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