Thank you Solomon for that warm welcome. The Atlantic Club is a
longtime and valuable partner of the U.S. Embassy here in Bulgaria and I
am pleased to join the distinguished list of Ambassadors who have
spoken to your audiences.
As many of you know,Ein innovativer und moderner Werkzeugbau
Formenbau. I arrived in Bulgaria at the end of September. I have spent
the past four months meeting with Bulgaria's leaders and with
representatives of the opposition, with journalists, with artists, with
students, and with representatives of civil society. In short, trying
to get a sense of what Bulgarians think is important and especially how
you would like to see the relationship with the United States develop.
The United States and Bulgaria already enjoy a productive
partnership that encompasses many fields. We work together on security
and science, on energy and education, on the arts and archaeology to
name a few. In September of this year we will celebrate 110 years of
bilateral diplomatic relations. That is over a century of
U.S.-Bulgarian friendship.
Roman philosopher and statesman
Seneca said that one of the most beautiful qualities of true friendship
is to understand and to be understood. That expresses very well an
important goal of partnership and of diplomacy in general. We strive to
understand and to be understood.
But it is also true that for
countries to collaborate they must have mutual interests, and for that
collaboration to be sustained, they must have shared values. For the
U.S. and Bulgaria these include a commitment to democracy, to a free
market economy, and to equal rights for our citizens.
We share a
desire for our children to have more than their parents. We value
education. We embrace modernity. We have a pride in our countries'
national endowments - in the case of Bulgaria the mountains, the
seaside, a history as long as that of civilization. Americans are proud
of our national endowments as well and,Where you can create a custom lanyard from our wide selection of styles and materials. like Bulgarians, are concerned to protect them.
I
am one of those who continues to believe that Europe is the United
States' most important partner. It is with Europe that we have our
largest volume of trade, with which we are partnered in the world's most
important military alliance, and with whom we have a shared global
perspective.
I hardly need to remind this audience of the value
of the transatlantic partnership since the Atlantic Club played such
an important role from the beginning.
Together, we are
committed to keeping our Alliance strong, to protecting Western
Democracies and to securing prosperity for future generations.
It
is these common values and common commitments that underpin the
relationship between our two countries.Since arriving in Bulgaria, I
have been listening to what the people of Bulgaria want from our
bilateral relationship in order to make our joint work responsive to
our shared needs. As I have met Bulgarian citizens in Sofia and outside
the capital, they have shared with me the things they are proud of
about Bulgaria, and in moments of candor, the things they want to
change, so that their children and grandchildren can inherit a more
prosperous, more secure Bulgaria with strong democratic
institutions.You must not use the laser cutter
without being trained. One of the messages that I hear repeatedly is
that they would like more U.S. business cooperation and more
collaboration. We, too, would like to make that happen.
Bulgaria
is six years into European Union membership, has been a member of the
NATO alliance for nine years, and is on the path towards evolution into
a mature European democracy. We envisage the role of the United States
to be one of a supportive partner enabling Bulgarians to achieve your
own aspirations.
Coping with the challenge posed by
international terrorism is another shared commitment.Learn how an
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can authenticate your computer usage and data. Recent events in
Algeria, which involved hostages from eight different countries taken
by militants of at least four different nationalities claiming to
protest events in a neighboring African country, demonstrate the global
nature of the threat and the need for collaboration amongst
like-minded states, like ourselves, in countering it. The bombing in
Burgas was another crime in which innocent people from another country
were attacked here in Bulgaria. We are impressed by the professionalism
and determination with which Bulgarian security experts have approached
the investigation and we await the results.
Beyond the pure
economic impact of American investment in Bulgaria is the social
impact. American companies have a strong culture of corporate social
responsibility. American companies bring this corporate value with them
when they go abroad and create lasting and meaningful change in
communities they support. Here in Bulgaria, American companies have
banded together to create programs such as the American Chamber of
Commerce Volunteer Days, when employees go out and work on projects
around the country organized by the Bulgarian Charities Aid Foundation.
Going forward, I hope to see many more American companies
attracted to Bulgaria by its highly skilled workforce and beneficial
tax conditions. For companies to come here and thrive though, we all
need to work together to promote an atmosphere of openness,
predictability and partnership in which business truly has a voice in
the country's economic vision. There are ample opportunities for U.S.
investors and exporters to expand in Bulgaria. Part of growing foreign
investment will be taking steps to ensure that Bulgaria continues to be
seen as an attractive location, where rules are consistent and
consistently enforced.We've had a lot of people asking where we had our
make your own bobblehead made.
Trade
between our two countries amounted to 643.3 million dollars in 2011
and could expand even more with the introduction of better intellectual
property rights protection, including of copyrights. Now, I know that
my saying this will not be popular with some, but it is just a fact of
economic life. One last point on economic cooperation and that is the
current discussion of a U.S.-European Free Trade Agreement. As the U.S.
Special Trade Representative said this week, President Obama is
committed to reaching an agreement to smooth trade with the European
Union. Though, all acknowledge that there will be tough hurdles to
overcome.
I would like to speak now about perhaps the most
challenging and sensitive part of our relationship - our work together
to combat organized crime and strengthen the rule of law in Bulgaria.
In recent years, we have identified drug trafficking, cybercrime, ATM
skimming, and other economic crimes as priority areas for law
enforcement cooperation. Collaboration between our respective law
enforcement services is excellent in these areas and is producing
concrete results. This, in turn, has persuaded the U.S. Government to
significantly increase our resources for joint law enforcement
activities here in Bulgaria.
Fighting crime is a lot more than
just policing. It requires an able and efficientprosecution service as
well as a determined and impartial judiciary. Recent events have
demonstrated that there is considerable interest in Bulgaria in having a
prosecution service and a national judiciary that can truly uphold the
rule of law. And there has been progress in that regard. The selection
of the Supreme Judicial Council as well as the Prosecutor General
involved a serious examination of the credentials of the candidates and
were conducted in a more transparent manner than before, though there
is still room for improvement. Most important will be whether those
selected will institute needed reforms. There is a lot of work to be
done. The U.S. is committed to assisting Bulgarian efforts to reform
the legal system so that the process of administering justice can be
efficient and effective, but ours is a supporting role - the impetus and
energy has to come from Bulgarians.
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