In which we scour the transcript of the State Department's
daily presser so you don't have to. Here are the highlights of today's briefing
by Department Spokesman Ian Kelly:
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is in Berlin
today at the 20th
anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall. She met with Chancellor Angela Merkel, Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle, Greek Prime Minister
GeorgePapandreou, U.S. embassy staff and German
students. Next she will go to Singapore for the Asia-Pacific Economic
Cooperation ministerial meetings, then over to the Philippines, and then back
to Singapore to be at Obama's side for the APEC summit.
The State Department has not confirmed that Iran
has
charged the three hikers they've been detaining, but "We believe that there is no evidence
for these kinds of charges," Kelly said. They are trying "constantly" to get
some access to the hikers through the Swiss embassy in Tehran.
On
the alleged
ties of Major Nidal Hasan to extremist groups, Kelly said, "I'm not sure that there is any link
between the horrible acts that took place at Fort Hood a couple of days and our
ongoing struggle against extremism in Afghanistan and Pakistan."
President
Obama will
meet with Israel President Benjamin
Netanyahu tonight, but there are no immediate plans for Special Envoy George Mitchell to return to the
region, Kelly said.
The U.S. government doesn't have a specific
position on the Dalai Lama's visit
to Arunachal Pradesh,
which the Chinese are so unhappy about. "He
of course has the right to go wherever he wants and talk to people that he
chooses to talk to," Kelly said.
The
U.S. is still waiting for a n official response from Iran to the uranium
transfer proposal put forth by the IAEA. "We're not putting any kind of formal
deadline on it," said Kelly, "But I think you've heard the secretary say that
our patience is not infinite,"
No
news on the stalled
agreement in Honduras and no decision on whether to send Ambassador Stephen Bosworth to Pyongyang.
But
Kelly did respond to the
new article by Seymour Hersh
questioning the safety and security of Pakistan's vast nuclear arsenal. "Let me
just say the U.S. has no intention of seizing Pakistani nuclear weapons or
material," he said, "We have confidence in the ability of the Pakistani
government to provide adequate security for their nuclear programs and
materials."
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