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Foreign Press Center Briefing on Preview of U.S. Participation in the Third Summit for Democracy

Washington Foreign Press Center Briefing on Preview of U.S. Participation in the Third Summit for Democracy, on March 13, 2024. Transcript: https://www.state.gov/briefings-foreign-press-centers/preview-of-the-third-summit-for-democracy The mission of the Foreign Press Centers is to assist foreign media in their coverage of the United States by providing firsthand access to both government and non-government experts to gain a deeper understanding of U.S. politics, history, values, and culture. The views expressed by briefers not affiliated with the Department of State or U.S. government are their own and do not necessarily reflect those of the Department of State or the U.S. government. Participation in Foreign Press Center programming by briefers not affiliated with the Department of State or U.S. government does not imply endorsement, approval, or recommendation of their views. ---------- Under the leadership of the President and Secretary of State, the U.S. Department of State leads America’s foreign policy through diplomacy, advocacy, and assistance by advancing the interests of the American people, their safety and economic prosperity. On behalf of the American people we promote and demonstrate democratic values and advance a free, peaceful, and prosperous world. The Secretary of State, appointed by the President with the advice and consent of the Senate, is the President's chief foreign affairs adviser. The Secretary carries out the President's foreign policies through the State Department, which includes the Foreign Service, Civil Service and U.S. Agency for International Development. Get updates from the U.S. Department of State at www.state.gov and on social media! Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/statedept Twitter: https://twitter.com/StateDept Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/statedept Flickr: https://flickr.com/photos/statephotos/ Subscribe to the State Department Blog: https://www.state.gov/blogs Watch on-demand State Department videos: https://video.state.gov/ Subscribe to The Week at State e-newsletter: http://ow.ly/diiN30ro7Cw State Department website: https://www.state.gov/ Careers website: https://careers.state.gov/ White House website: https://www.whitehouse.gov/ Terms of Use: https://state.gov/tou #StateDepartment #DepartmentofState #Diplomacy

U.S. Department of State

5 days ago

MODERATOR: Okay. Good afternoon and welcome to  the Washington Foreign Press Center, and welcome to those journalists participating online. My  name is Doris Robinson and I am the briefing moderator. Today’s briefing is a preview of U.S.  participation in the third Summit for Democracy. As a reminder, this briefing is on the record,  and a transcript will be posted later today at fpc.state.gov. For journalists online, please  make sure that your name and media outlet are listed on your Zoom prof
ile. We are short on time  today, so today’s briefing will end at 12:45. And now I will introduce our distinguished  briefers. Maher Bitar is the deputy assistant to the President and NSC coordinator for  intelligence and defense policy. Kelly Razzouk is special assistant to the President and NSC  senior director for democracy and human rights. Both briefers will start with opening comments and  then take your questions. We’ll start with Maher. MS RAZZOUK: Thank you so much. MODERATOR: Thank you
. MS RAZZOUK: Thanks so much, Doris, and thanks  to all of you for being here today. It’s such a pleasure to be here to discuss the Summit  for Democracy that will be held in Seoul, South Korea March 18th through  20th. As all of you know, President Biden launched the first Summit  for Democracy in 2021. The United States also co-hosted the second summit in 2023 with  four partner governments from around the world. I had the opportunity to participate  in the events in Costa Rica last year, and
they focused on youth and empowering  young people in democracy promotion. This year, we’re very proud to have passed  leadership of the third summit to the Republic of South Korea. This demonstrates the truth  that promoting and protecting democracy is a shared desire and a shared responsibility. People  the world over share a common desire to live in free societies in which their governments hear  their voices and respect their human dignity. The summit also takes place this year at a  critica
l moment during what has been called the year of elections. We are at an inflection  point. Globally, 2024 could be one of the most consequential election years in history. National  elections are anticipated in 40 countries, representing about half of the world’s population,  and the Republic of South Korea has chosen as its theme for this year “Democracy for Future  Generations,” something that we have also sought to emphasize, given the critical role that young  people play in defending and s
upporting democracy. The United States delegation to the summit will  be led by Secretary of State Antony Blinken. The U.S. delegation to Seoul will include senior  U.S. Government officials who are leading key components of the U.S. Government’s engagement  on summit themes. These include leaders from the White House National Security Council,  from the State Department, and from the United States Agency for International  Development. We intend to highlight the ways that the United States cont
inues to lead in  strengthening democratic resilience and respect for human rights around the world. This includes  expanded support to free and independent media, concrete actions to combat corruption, additional  resources dedicated to bolstering human rights and democratic reformers, and our continued  focus on free and fair elections globally. For the U.S. high-level event at the summit,  we have decided for the first time to convene a meeting on the topic of the misuse of  commercial spywar
e. This issue has been a priority for the Biden administration.  We have taken a series of critical steps to address this issue that Coordinator  Bitar will outline, and the reason we’re highlighting this at summit is because it’s both  a national security and intelligence threat, but also a threat to democracy. While the misuse  of commercial spyware by governments has eroded democratic values, misuse of commercial spyware  by governments has also been linked to arbitrary detentions, disappeara
nces, extrajudicial  killings, and transnational repression. The threat of commercial spyware to human  rights and to fundamental freedoms is not just theoretical. The misuse of commercial  spyware has a monumental impact on the ability of brave individuals around the world to  express themselves and their opinions. It limits the ability of journalists to expose  the truth to their communities around the world. It prevents opposition candidates  from freely challenging the status quo. And perhap
s even more importantly, these  threats do not just affect those with confirmed intrusions. They have a chilling  effect on important reporting, backsliding independent media, preventing the exposure of  corruption, intimidating opposition candidates, undermining political competition, and  bolstering oppressive environments. This can lead to the most heroic individuals –  those fighting for freedom, for democracy, for truth – living in constant states of fear. We  will be bringing those voices
from civil society, from governments, from the  private sector together in Seoul to discuss this important issue and the  multistakeholder approach to addressing it. I’d like to turn it over now to Coordinator  Bitar, who will discuss the joint statement on efforts to counter the proliferation  and misuse of commercial spyware that was launched at last year’s second Summit  for Democracy, as well as a set of actions the United States has taken since the  second summit on this issue. Thank you. M
R BITAR: Thank you. As Kelly noted, the U.S.  Government is undertaking a comprehensive campaign to counter the proliferation and misuse of  commercial spyware, which we see both – as both a national security threat as well as  a threat to human rights. As Kelly noted, commercial spyware misuse has posed  a distinct risk for U.S. Government personnel and has had tragic consequences  globally. Journalists the world over, like yourselves, have been targeted by such  sophisticated commercial survei
llance technology, as have political actors, human rights  defenders, and everyday citizens. As many of you will recall, we announced a series  of measures at the second Summit for Democracy last March. President Biden issued a new executive  order, the first of its kind in the world, to regulate U.S. Government use of commercial  spyware. This was a significant step to ensure the U.S. Government does not use or enable commercial  spyware that poses a counterintelligence threat to the United Sta
tes or is being used – misused  against Americans or to target activists, journalists, dissidents, and others. Two, to  leverage the U.S. Government’s own purchasing power to discourage misuse of commercial spyware;  and finally, to lead by example internationally. At the last summit, President Biden announced  the executive order and explained in his remarks, quote, “U.S. taxpayer dollars should not  support companies that are willing to sell their products to … [abet] human rights  violations,
” end quote. The United States, working with 10 likeminded partners,  also announced at the summit a novel international joint statement on an effort  to counter the proliferation and misuse of commercial spyware. The joint statement for the  first time collectively affirms the threat posed by the misuse of commercial spyware and resolves  to implement domestic measures and take regulatory and other actions to counter the proliferation  and misuse of this sophisticated technology. Finally, along
with 45 other countries,  the United States also agreed to new, quote, “Guiding Principles on Government Use  of Surveillance Technologies,” end quote, an arrangement which illustrates how governments  can maintain their commitment to respect democratic values and protect human rights in  the responsible use of surveillance technology. Now, since last March, over the past year, U.S.  Government has maintained momentum and expanded upon these efforts in consequential ways.  First, in July, the D
epartment of Commerce placed new export controls on additional  commercial spyware vendors, which followed an initial tranche of Entity List designations in  November of 2021. In October, we worked with 59 other countries at the Human Rights Council  in Geneva to issue a joint statement titled Heightened Risks Associated with Surveillance  Technologies and the Importance of Safeguards. Just a month ago, on February 5th, the Secretary  of State announced a new visa ban policy to block the entry t
o the United States of  individuals who have been involved with, who have enabled or profited from commercial  spyware misuse. And just last week, on March 5th, the U.S. Treasury Department imposed financial  sanctions on five entities and two individuals involved with commercial spyware entities  that pose a counterintelligence threat to the U.S. Government and have flouted  calls for safeguards while continuing to enable human rights abuses. This  is the first time the U.S. Government has leve
raged sanctions against actors  involved in commercial spyware misuse. Finally, on March 7th, just a few  days ago, the White House convened members of the investor community for the  first time for a dialogue on responsible investment of trusted capital in a number of  domains with national security implications, including commercial spyware, artificial  intelligence, and cyber security, among others. At this event, the investors  announced a set of principles and commitments to guide investmen
ts in ways that promote  the values of free and open societies. Now, together these actions send a clear message  to commercial spyware vendors and those that enable them that irresponsible business practices  that pose a counterintelligence threat to the United States and that enable human rights abuses  globally will be met with clear consequences. Our efforts now converge at the next  Summit for Democracy, which Secretary of State Blinken and other senior officials  from the White House, the
State Department, and USAID will attend. Importantly,  we plan to announce at the summit that several new likeminded partner countries  will be signing on to the joint statement on commercial spyware. This will reflect  growing international recognition of the shared challenge posed by spyware misuse and  the need for collective action. We will also convene for the first time ministers and senior  officials from a broad range of governments to specifically discuss the shared challenge of  commer
cial spyware proliferation and misuse. And to assure a broad range of voices are  heard, this dedicated event at the summit will feature a multi-stakeholder panel  with diverse representation, including a person targeted by commercial spyware, a civil  society representative, a representative from leading – from a leading technology company  involved in exposing commercial spyware, and finally, a member of the investor community  involved in steering responsible investments. This event will rein
force the need for  governments, civil society, industry, and investors to work collectively to  confront this threat. This issue presents a rare circumstance in which stakeholders  from all of these sectors are in fact rowing in the same direction and have a unique  opportunity to take mutually reinforcing action. For example, for many years civil society  organizations like the Citizen Lab, Access Now, and Amnesty International have conducted  invaluable investigations and reporting on intrusi
ons, and have provided direct support to  victims. Philanthropies in partnership with tech companies are funding organizations that support  victims and promote accountability for the misuse of commercial spyware. Just last week, the Ford  Foundation announced $4 million of grants globally in partnership with Apple and other companies  for this important work. Tech companies have been conducting their own investigations and  are releasing reports on incidents and trends, including recent reports
from both Meta  and Google over the past few weeks. And finally, investors are starting to recognize  the need to ensure their capital is supporting rather than undermining free and open societies.  As noted previously, a number of investment companies came together to release new voluntary  principles and commitments that touch on this, which is an important first step, although  certainly more is needed. Now, we look forward to bringing together these communities at  the summit to take stock
of what has been accomplished over the past year and to assess what  additional actions should be considered, including by governments, civil society, industry, and  investors around the world. Thank you very much. MODERATOR: Great. Thank you. We’ll start  with questions now. We’ll start in the room. Please raise your hand, and when I call  on you, please state your name and your media organization. For journalists online, please  raise your virtual hand. And let’s start here. QUESTION: Thank yo
u for doing this. My name is  Song Sangho, reporter from Yonhap News Agency from South Korea. And I hope that you can have  a good time in Seoul. And I have two questions. From the U.S. Government perspective, what  is the meaning of South Korea hosting this democracy at this time? And my second question is,  do you expect that the participating democracy at the third summit will have any opportunities to  discuss North Korea’s human rights violations or any acts that run counter to democratic v
alues,  either at the summit or on the sidelines? Thanks. MS RAZZOUK: Thank you so much for that question.  As President Biden said when we convened the first summit in 2021, democracy needs champions  globally, and so we are so thrilled that South Korea has stepped up as one of those champions  to host the Third Summit for Democracy. We are thrilled to partner with them, and we see  real value in the symbolic nature of them hosting the summit and bringing together  governments, civil society le
aders, NGOs, participants from all over the world to come to  Seoul and to make pledges, to make commitments, and to talk about democracy and how important  that is. So we see that as being truly valuable. To your question about specific countries  who might be discussed at this summit, obviously the human rights situation in North  Korea is something that we’ve taken very seriously and we’ve spoken out against that many times. For  the summit itself, we haven’t viewed the summit as a shaming ex
ercise. What we have viewed it as  is a place to talk about our affirmative vision for democracy and to bring together countries  from around the world to talk about and to share best practices about democracy promotion  and about human rights issues around the world. Thank you. MODERATOR: Thank you. Let’s go here. QUESTION: Thank you. Guys,  thank you for doing this. I have a couple of questions. I  can imagine that Bangladesh — MODERATOR: Can you say your name. QUESTION: Oh, my name is Mushfiq
ul Fazal.  I’m a Bangladeshi journalist representing Just News BD. I can imagine that Bangladesh  authorities not receiving an invitation for the upcoming summit quite reasonably. My question  is, why have not we seen any visible steps taken after the sham election in Bangladesh? Before  the election, Biden administration promised to take all necessary steps to ensure  a free, fair, and credible election, as we have seen your actions after election in  Nicaragua, Nigeria, Guatemala, and Bulgaria
also. MS RAZZOUK: Thank you so much. Well, I can’t speak  to the status of invitation for the summit. That would need be directed at South Korea, who is the  host of the summit this year. But with regards to your question about the elections, we have  shared the view – with other observers – that the elections were not free or fair, and we  regretted that not all parties were able to participate. We remain concerned about the arrests  of political opposition members. And looking ahead, the Unit
ed States remains committed to  partnering with Bangladesh to advance our shared vision for free and open Indo-Pacific. We want  to deepen our people to people economic ties, and we’ll continue to discuss those issues  with the Bangladeshi Government going forward. QUESTION: (Inaudible) as the largest democracy in the world, (inaudible) on democracy – freedom of expression, minority rights, and human rights? MS RAZZOUK: We said very clearly that every democracy is different, that there is no blu
eprint for democracy. We obviously had addressed  democratic reform and efforts in the context of our bilateral relationship with these various countries, but we’re – for the summit purposes, we’re very focused on democracy globally and how  we can share best practices and promote democracy, given the fact that, as I mentioned  previously, 2024 is truly the year of elections. And so we’re very focused on  ensuring that there can be youth engagement, that we can see all of these stakeholders comi
ng  together and share best practices at the summit in terms of next steps with regards to  democracy promotion around the world. QUESTION: Thank you. MODERATOR: Let’s go here. QUESTION: The whole spyware aspect that you guys  were talking about, one of the most well-known commercial – pieces of commercial spyware  was Pegasus. The company that made that, NSO, was blacklisted by the Biden administration  for, quote, being “contrary to the foreign policy and national security interests of the  U.
S.” But how does the U.S. think that they complicate – the relationship between NSO  and the Israeli Government complicates the way that the American administration gives  aid to Israel given the current situation? MR BITAR: Thank you. So what I would  underscore is that the policy approach of the Biden administration has been one  that is government and country agnostic. We have looked very clearly at the actions  of commercial spyware vendors themselves. We have looked at the evidence that has
emerged,  including evidence, as I mentioned, that civil society organizations have been able to surface as  journalists have been able to surface, and we have taken as a result appropriate action focused  on the activities that have been taking place that meet the threshold that was outlined, as you  said, by the Department of Commerce, for instance. So what we would underscore is we have taken  a number of actions, as I mentioned. One is using Department of Commerce authorities.  More recentl
y you may have seen we leveraged Treasury sanctions authorities against a different  commercial spyware vendor. And what we have also done is ensure that we engage diplomatically  with a range of countries around the world, and that’s why for us the joint statement  that we issued at the last Summit for Democracy and that we would be focusing  on and updating at the current Summit for Democracy will be an important reflection  of the growing international recognition of the challenge here and th
e need to  ensure that there’s collective action. So just to come back to your question, as a  result, the way we’ve approached this is really going after activities rather than – of these  commercial vendors rather than any other angle. QUESTION: It’s (inaudible), it’s wireless, has to be approved by the Israeli ministry of defense. So how do you separate the two? MR BITAR: Again, we look at misuse around  the world. So the extent to which there has been misuse by governments around the  world,
or also risks to U.S. Government personnel. So the extent to which U.S.  Government personnel may be at risk or may have been targeted by those activities.  And I would only be able to go that far. MODERATOR: Thank you. We have – we’re  short on time. Let’s go ahead and take a question online. Robert Papa from MCN  TV, Albania, go ahead with your question. QUESTION: Yes, do you hear me? MODERATOR: Yes. QUESTION: You have been talking a lot  about democracy. Albania is a hybrid democracy. I don’
t know if you have  an idea about the Charles McGonigal. The head of counterintelligence was –  he was sentenced by the court in D.C., but the Albanian primer was involved, under  investigation. And why U.S. Government is tolerating Albanian primer with a  huge corruption in his government too? MS RAZZOUK: Thank you. I’m not familiar  with exactly what you’re referring to, so we can definitely take that back and  come back to you on that. Thank you. QUESTION: Thanks. MODERATOR: Thank you. And we
’ll  take our last question here. QUESTION: I think this initiative which you have  started under the Biden administration – yes, this is Hamdi Mohamed Salah from Egypt –  Egypt news. The initiative taken by your administration in 2021 (inaudible) agreed  initiative to leading (inaudible) accounts such as democracy and so on. The problem  is, are you going to institutionalize this initiative so it will continue, particularly  as you are talking about the year of election? So is it going to conti
nue? Is it only  going to be on the very wishes of other governments like South Korea or Switzerland  to be able to cooperate? That’s first one. But the part two: You need to develop an approach  for regional consensus. So you have a particular program you’re fitting for a particular region,  which can be edging out from the own (inaudible). MS RAZZOUK: Thank you very much for that  question. I think we need to contact you for the next summit for some of your great ideas. As you know from the la
st summit gathering  that we had, there were regional gatherings that were held all around the world, and  this year we did see it as such a positive step to have South Korea taking a leadership  role and stepping up to host the summit. But we are talking to our partners and looking  forward at what we can do to ensure that we institutionalize some of the gains that have  been made through the summits and that we look forward to future summit gatherings and to talk  to our partners about how we
can continue that. So I won’t get ahead of any of the announcements  that will be made at the summit itself, but those are definitely questions that  we’re looking at, and I think the point about ensuring that this is a cross-regional  and multi-stakeholder summit gathering is something that is very important and  that we would like to see continue. MODERATOR: Thank you. I’m afraid we’re  out of time for questions. I’ll turn it back to our briefers for any closing remarks. MS RAZZOUK: Thank you,
Doris. MODERATOR: Thank you. Well, I would like to thank our briefers for taking the time to brief us today and for all of the journalists who participated. This concludes today’s briefing. Thank you.

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