RSS Feed for This PostCurrent Article

Hillary Watch: Secretary Clinton Met Today with Former Secretary George Shultz

shultz-georgeBelow you’ll see the video and full transcript of Secretary Clinton’s and Schultz’s remarks to the press today. But first it’s entertaining to reminisce a bit about just who George Shultz is, and what he’s done in government — after all, many of our younger readers may not know much about him since he was most prominent in the Nixon and Reagan administrations. I have heard more than one person say that he was one of our great Secretaries of State. Here’s a fascinating snippet from his Wikipedia bio:

On July 16, 1982, he was appointed by President Ronald Reagan to serve as the sixtieth U.S. secretary of state, replacing Alexander Haig, who had resigned. Considered by some to be a dove on foreign policy within the Reagan administration, Shultz frequently clashed with the more hawkish members of the administration. In particular, he was well known for outspoken opposition to the “arms for hostages” scandal that would eventually become the Iran Contra situation. In a 1983 testimony before the U.S. Congress, he said that the Sandinista government in Nicaragua was “a cancer in our own land mass”, that must be “cut out”. He was also opposed to any negotiation with the government of Daniel Ortega: “Negotiations are a euphemism for capitulation if the shadow of power is not cast across the bargaining table.” During the First Intifada (see Arab-Israeli conflict), Shultz “proposed … an international convention in April 1988 … on an interim autonomy agreement for the West Bank and Gaza Strip, to be implemented as of October for a three-year period” [3]. However, this never materialized. …

While “Shultz has been called the father of the ‘Bush Doctrine’, because of his advocacy of preventive war,” he also came out for common sense on drugs and Cuba:

Shultz became the first prominent Republican to call for the legalization of recreational drugs. He went on to add his signature to an advertisement, published in The New York Times on June 8, 1998, entitled “We believe the global war on drugs is now causing more harm than drug abuse itself.”

He also has spoken against the Cuban embargo, going as far as calling the US policy towards Cuba “insane”.

He’s definitely an interesting and highly influential man, who served in both the Nixon and Reagan administrations.


Remarks with Former Secretary of State George P. Shultz Before Their Meeting


January 30, 2009

Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of State
Washington, DC

SECRETARY CLINTON: We are delighted to have former Secretary Shultz visit the State Department today. Some of you who may have been around a while know that he was Secretary of State for seven years and had a leadership role, was instrumental in so many of the important events of those years. But nearer to home here, he also led the efforts to renovate and refurbish the State Department.

So much of what we enjoy today and the beauty of these rooms is really traced to his interest in making sure that the State Department reflected, you know, the historic significance that it has, in fact, by the way that it appears.

So I’m delighted to have him here. We’re going to spend some time talking. I’m going to ask him to just give me whatever advice and counsel he wishes to share. Do you want to say something, George?

SECRETARY SHULTZ: I like to come back and look around. I was the first Secretary of State since Thomas Jefferson who liked construction jobs. (Laughter.) And when I hear those tap, taps, it means something’s happening.

SECRETARY CLINTON: That’s right.

SECRETARY SHULTZ: So I enjoyed fixing this. But more, it always seemed to me when you have visitors coming here from all over the world, and we put our good foot forward, and the décor is all sort of colonial America, so it tells them we have a history.

SECRETARY CLINTON: Right.

SECRETARY SHULTZ: And up in the Adams Room, I think it is, is the Thomas Jefferson desk.

SECRETARY CLINTON: Right.

SECRETARY SHULTZ: I love to show it to people because he designed it, he built it, he wrote portions of the Declaration of Independence on it. So there is a Renaissance man that’s deep in our history, and it’s right here in the Department of State.

SECRETARY CLINTON: That’s right. Well, it’s an interesting juxtaposition, but yesterday, I greeted the latest class of the Foreign Service school applicants, the Foreign Service applicants. And they were here and they’re on their way to becoming the next generation of our diplomats. So the continuity is very much in not only the present, but to be, you know, valued and respected. So let’s go have a conversation.

SECRETARY SHULTZ: Okay.

SECRETARY CLINTON: Thank you all very much. Thank you.

  • noproblama

    Damn, we missed the opportunity to have a great president.

    Instead we have President Beefcake, as the rag mags call him.

    But I just watched Robert Wuhl’s “Assume the Position” on HBO again and like he says, American’s love to star f**k and elect popular, albeit lousy leaders.

    Evidently it’s our heritage.

    “I sh*t you not.”

    • http://ezinearticles.com/?Three-Basic-Parenting-Styles&id=744499 Northwest rain

      Prez beefcake??? YECK and double yeck.

      That man is NOT sexy. Creepy — yes — sexy? NO.

      A sexy man is a take charge man — who is a real leader.

      Hillary is a sexy women — SHE is a leader.

    • Winston

      Beefcake
      SpamPie

      • MTdob4Hill

        Now that is change I can believe in!

  • elise

    Perhaps now that Fidel Castro is no longer in power, the insanity in our policy with Cuba will end and Sec. Schlutz will be vindicated. If a man with his experience and wisdom believes the war on drugs is worse than addiction, it might be a good idea to revisit the question. Mexico is being over run by drug cartels and neither the Mexican government nor the DEA is able to get a handle on a solution. As long as the market is here, they will thrive. There will never be enough border guards, fences tall enough or a Coast Guard efficient enough to stop the flow. It is great to see Hillary seeking out everyone she can and taking advise from every source in order to do her job better. At least someone in our government is serious about finding solutions.

    • Ani

      It is great to see Hillary seeking out everyone she can and taking advise from every source in order to do her job better. At least someone in our government is serious about finding solutions.

      Right, Elise. She is approaching this job with some humility. She is well aware there are many perspectives, much to absorb, and isn’t wasting any time. I also appreciate that she is a student of history.

      • elise

        I wish she could teach some humility to Obama, Ani. His arrogance is frightening.

        • http://ezinearticles.com/?Three-Basic-Parenting-Styles&id=744499 Northwest rain

          This isn’t going to happen — which gives me no joy to write.

          We have seen far too many narcissistic personalities force their way to the top — and then fail. GWB is a recent example.

          Probably Carter as well — and Ray-gun and Nixon — JFK perhaps?

  • fif

    He was also opposed to any negotiation with the government of Daniel Ortega: “Negotiations are a euphemism for capitulation if the shadow of power is not cast across the bargaining table.”

    That’s the position Hillary was emphasized repeatedly when Howdy Doody Obama talked about meeting without preconditions. His eagerness to be loved by everyone, and have us all “just get along,” is naive and dangerous. He got a taste of that this past week, when he pandered and schmoozed Republicans, only to be slapped in the face with a unanimous NO vote in the House. He should have been a preacher–that was his true calling. He could give sermons every day, and try to “bring people together.” Governing is a different animal.

  • BARB

    Only the Washington Post among the “big” 3 MSM newspapers carried the info about the Judicial Watch suit against Hillary Clinton…..and they did downplay it. Said the lawsuit was based on an “obscure” law.

  • Neverland

    God damn it, I love that woman!
    I’m filled with joy and respect everytime I watch Hillary at work. She’s magnificent.

  • James

    Hillary is looking pretty good!

  • Belle Gardens

    I’m curious as to Clinton’s reponse in regard to Obama’s decision to keep rendering the possibly innocent?

    Rendering is just so indicative of a lack of disciplne and skill within an army (or intelligence), evidence of a lack of ideas and intellect (but given the Obama’s big budget fiasco, big surprise)– I wonder if there is anyone there smart enough to finally GET IT?

    If the US uses its enemies methods against them,(Russia, say) rendering and torture presenting a HOLE by which others can exploit the US, why wouldn’t WE be gmaed the same way?

    And they really don’t get it.

    I had read Obama kept on the Brennan like people to sort of act as a defense against intel that might reject him — that’s so sweet, he thinks Brennan is smart, and the CIA homogeneous.

    It’s touching, really, a President that naive.

    Wait until he has to order his first missle strike…

    God bless George Soros.

    Really, I mean that…

    /snark, of course.

  • Richard Posner

    Meanwhile, over at FN, Billo the Clown inveighs against anyone who want to end the war on drugs-users as a puppet of International Liberalism who wants to hook your daughter on dope, probably so she’ll lie down with Negroes.