In which we scour the transcript of the State Department's
daily presser so you don't have to. Here are the highlights of Friday's
briefing at the Foreign Press Center by Department Spokesman Ian Kelly:
Secretary of State Hillary
Clinton is in Shanghai, where she met today with Shanghai vice mayor Shen Jun and the
commissioner of the Shanghai ExpoJose
Villarreal. Special Envoy George
Mitchell was in London today meeting with Israeli negotiators, while Deputy
Secretary of State James Steinberg
was in Israel attending the Saban forum (which also featured
Bill Clinton and Arnold Schwarzenegger) and having
some side meetings with Israeli and Palestinian officials.
Kelly didn't deny that the State Department delayed their
briefing scrambling to assemble a response to the new
IAEA report on Iran, but he still didn't have a comment at the briefing. The
State Department later released some comments, including, "The IAEA's latest report on Iran underscores
that Iran still refuses to comply fully with its international nuclear
obligations."
The U.S. is not
promising to veto a potential UN resolution to recognize a Palestinian state,
but "it is our very strong belief we are
convinced that this has to be achieved through negotiation between the two
parties," Kelly said. The Palestinians haven't asked the U.S. to support such a
resolution, yet, but they did call
on the EU for support.
Special Envoy Richard Holbrooke was in Berlin, Paris,
and Moscow. In Russia, he met with a whole bunch of officials, including his "counterpart,"
Deputy Foreign Minister Alexei
Borodavkin. Coincidentally
there is also a technical team in Moscow to "iron out" issues in the U.S.-Russia
transit agreement, but "we anticipate that regular flights will start as soon
as we've worked out these remaining logistical details," Kelly said, adding
that Holbrooke's agenda is "a higher political level."
Kelly wouldn't confirm reports
that the Obama administration's new Afghanistan strategy includes a call for
increased pressure on Pakistan to deal with extremists within its borders, but
he did say "we certainly have more confidence
now than we did even a few months ago" that Pakistan could fight the extremists
if they wanted to.
No progress on negotiations in Honduras and no comment on
the letter
ousted President Manuel Zelaya sent to Obama. But Principal Deputy Assistant
Secretary Craig Kelly has been in "constant" contact with both sides, Kelly
said.
The U.S. is sending a State-Defense Department delegation to
the meetings
of the International Criminal Court, Kelly admitted. "This in no way suggests that we no
longer have concerns about the ICC," he said, pointing out the observing the
meetings does not violate the American
Service-Members' Protection Act, in the administration's view.
The United State and Angola have
kicked off their new Strategic Partnership Dialogue, which Clinton and Angolan
Foreign Minister Assuncao dos Anjos agreed to during Clinton's September visit there. Ther are
two working groups, a security-focused one led by the African Affairs Bureau Principal
Deputy Assistant Secretary Donald
Yamamoto from our Bureau of African Affairs and an energy-focused one
chaired by coordinator for International Energy Affairs David Goldwyn.
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