US to transfer diplomatic posts to developing countries (AFP) Updated: 2006-01-19 09:27
The United States will take 100 diplomatic posts from Washington and Europe
this year and move them to emerging nations such as India and China, US
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said.
Rice made the announcement in
a speech in Washington that outlined her hopes to transform the posture of
US diplomacy to focus more on promoting democratic and economic change.
"It is clear today that America must begin to reposition our diplomatic
forces around the world," the secretary told students at Washington's
prestigious Georgetown University.
"So, over the next few years, the United States will begin to shift several
hundred of our diplomatic positions to new, critical posts for the 21st
century," she said.
"We will begin this year with a down payment of moving 100 positions from
Europe and, yes, from here in Washington, DC, to countries like China and India
and Nigeria and Lebanon, where additional staffing will make an essential
difference."
The State Department, which Rice took over a year ago, counts some 7,440
diplomats and other employees abroad, according to official figures.
A senior department official said the transfers would affect only diplomats,
which account for some 4,000 of the personnel deployed overseas.
"Over a period of time you are going to look at a very significant refocusing
of the State Department efforts," said the official, who asked not to be named.
Rice appeared at Georgetown University before hundreds of students and
professors to explain the concept of "transformational diplomacy" preached by
the administration of President George W. Bush.
She said the policy was an attempt "to seek and support the growth of
democratic movements and institutions in every nation and culture, with the
ultimate goal of ending tyranny in our world."
"Transformational diplomacy is rooted in partnership, not in paternalism,"
she said, adding that it was based on "doing things with people, not for them."
Rice said the United States had to rebalance its resources, noting the State
Department had the same number of people in a country like Germany, with 82
million people, as in India, with a population of one billion.
"There are nearly 200 cities worldwide with over one million people in which
the United States has no formal diplomatic presence," she said. "This is where
the action is today, and this is where we must be."
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