U.S. Relations With the People's Republic of China (2009)
U.S. Department of State
Remarks with Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu
Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of State
Jerusalem
October 31, 2009
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QUESTION: Madame Secretary, you went to Abu Dhabi, and I believe you came up with not much from Abu Mazen, who is actually presenting Israel and the United States with lots of no's. Also, United States is encountering many no's from Iran. At the moment, it doesn't look like some arrangement is being made at the moment. What is your reaction to what -- receiving the no's from the Arab world?
And the same question, please, to Prime Minister Netanyahu.
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, first of all, I believe that strategic patience is a necessary part of my job, and I view the conversations that we had this morning with President Abbas and his team as being very constructive and useful in continuing the move toward engagement that leads to negotiations. So if Senator Mitchell and I appear to be patient and persistent, it's because we are. We think it's worth being both.
With respect to Iran, there is not yet a final decision with respect to the Tehran research reactor. The important matter that I would underscore is the unity among the P-5+1, which includes not only the United States but the United Kingdom, France, Germany, Russia, China, and also the EU, in putting forth and in staying firm with this. The world is united in a view that Iran should not have or acquire nuclear weapons capacity. And our view is that we are willing to work toward creative outcomes like shipping out the low-enriched uranium to be reprocessed outside of Iran. But we're not going to wait forever. Patience does have, finally, its limits. And it is time for Iran to fulfill its obligations and responsibilities to the international community, and accepting this deal would be a good beginning.
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