On April 26, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton  commented on the new diplomatic effort with Iran. She made her remarks  at an event hosted by the Woodrow Wilson International Center for  Scholars. The following is an excerpt:
By  next January, when I will have traveled, I guess, a million miles or  more, I will look back on this period as one that has been a great  privilege and honor to serve. But I will also know that we have a lot of  work to do. And when I came into this office, I knew that we were going  to have to confront a lot of difficult problems. I’ll just quickly  mention a few.
One, Iran’s nuclear activities. How  were we going to confront what was a clear threat? How could we unify  the international community so they were not either on the sidelines or  actively trying to undermine our diplomatic efforts?
So  what we did was to first decide we had to give diplomacy a real chance.  And President Obama extended an open hand to the Iranian people. In our  public diplomacy, we used every channel, from satellite TV and Twitter,  to old-fashioned snail mail. We cemented our partnership with European  allies. We reengaged with institutions like the International Atomic  Energy Agency. We convinced the entire Security Council, including  Russia and China, to enact the most onerous sanctions that ever had been  and to keep up the pressure.
And then we added to  that through our unilateral sanctions and the EU sanctions. We worked  directly with banks and insurance companies to make sure those sanctions  were implemented. Iran’s tankers now sit idle; its oil goes unsold; its  currency has collapsed. The window for engagement is still open, and we  are actively pursuing a diplomatic solution. But we know that we have  to continue to demonstrate that we’re making progress diplomatically.  It’s too soon to know how this story will end, but the fact that we’ve  returned to the negotiating table makes clear the choice for Iran’s  leaders.
We’re also looking for how to operate multidimensional diplomacy at all times. Building and holding a coalition to pressure and isolate Iran is one example, but there are others as well. Our willingness to engage showed good faith. Our willingness to listen showed humility. Our willingness to hammer out the kinds of solutions that would be acceptable beyond the usual suspects who always are with us is paying off.
