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November 6, 2015 UNCLASSIFIED BRIEFING MEMORANDUM TO: Ambassador Alexa L. Wesner THROUGH: DCM – Eugene Young FROM: A/PAO – Kellee Farmer SUBJECT: Participation in the press conference on the 70 th anniversary of CARE Austria Date and Time : Thursday, November 19, 2015; 10 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. Place: Café Landtmann (Loebl Salon); Universitaetsring 4, 1010 Vienna ACCOMPANIED BY: APAO Kellee Farmer, Alice Burton/PAS Objective/Approach: You have agreed to participate in a press conference to kick off the celebratory events throughout 2015/2016 for CARE Austria’s 70 th anniversary. This is an excellent opportunity to highlight U.S. humanitarian and economic aid for Austria after WWII. Background: The other participants in the press conference are CARE CEO Andrea Wagner-Hager and Austrian Development Agency (ADA) CEO Martin Ledolter. The organizers requested that you give the historical context, which will be followed up by other speakers who will detail CARE’s current development efforts, and Austria’s cooperation with CARE. UNCLASSIFIED

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Page 1: CARE Briefing Memo

November 6, 2015

UNCLASSIFIED BRIEFING MEMORANDUM

TO: Ambassador Alexa L. Wesner

THROUGH: DCM – Eugene Young

FROM: A/PAO – Kellee Farmer

SUBJECT: Participation in the press conference on the 70th anniversary of CARE Austria

Date and Time: Thursday, November 19, 2015; 10 a.m. to 10:30 a.m.Place: Café Landtmann (Loebl Salon); Universitaetsring 4, 1010 Vienna

ACCOMPANIED BY: APAO Kellee Farmer, Alice Burton/PAS

Objective/Approach: You have agreed to participate in a press conference to kick off the celebratory events throughout 2015/2016 for CARE Austria’s 70th anniversary. This is an excellent opportunity to highlight U.S. humanitarian and economic aid for Austria after WWII.

Background: The other participants in the press conference are CARE CEO Andrea Wagner-Hager and Austrian Development Agency (ADA) CEO Martin Ledolter. The organizers requested that you give the historical context, which will be followed up by other speakers who will detail CARE’s current development efforts, and Austria’s cooperation with CARE.

The press conference will be moderated by Thomas Haunschmid of CARE. All participants will make their statements seated at a table on the stage (microphones provided). The conference is in German. You will make your statement in English and answer questions in English. If you wish, Alice Burton can provide whisper translation of the German statements. All major Austrian media have been invited, including print, radio and TV. Questions on U.S. contribution in the current refugee crisis might come up.

Attachments: Scenario CARE background/Bios Draft statement

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Suggested quote for the Press release, announcing the press conference Press guidance on refugees

Scenario:

9:50 a.m. Alice Burton will meet you at the entrance of Café Landtmann and escort you to the venue.

10:00 a.m. Moderator Thomas Haunschmid introduces the participants.

Your statement (3 – 5 minutes on historic overview of U.S. aid, including CARE after WWII)

Statement by CARE CEO Andrea Wagner-Hager on CARE’s mission and current projects

Statement by Martin Ledolter on the Austrian Development Agency’s mission and cooperation with CARE.

10:15 a.m. Press questions

10:30 a.m. End of press conference

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BACKGROUND:

CARE:

CARE was founded in November 1945 by two American businessmen as a vehicle for sending packages of food and basic supplies to Europeans who were in danger of starvation, following the Second World War. The first packages were delivered to Le Havre, France in May 1946, and the first batch of 3,200 packages arrived in Vienna in July 1946. Eventually, more than one million packages were distributed in Austria. Today, CARE is a worldwide humanitarian aid organization and a major implementing partner for USAID. CARE is celebrating this 70th anniversary throughout the fall of 2015 and spring of 2016.

Bios:

Dr. Andrea Wagner-Hager is the CEO of CARE Austria. CARE Austria is a branch of CARE International. She heads the programs finances, public relations, and marketing.

Mr. Martin Ledolter is the Managing Director of the Austrian Development Agency (ADA). ADA is part of the Austrian Foreign Ministry, supporting through bilateral programs with eleven partner countries in Africa, Asia, and South-Eastern/Eastern Europe. In 2009, Ledolter, a long-term ECONPOL contact, participated in an International Visitor on Demand exchange program on Security Issues under U.S. Embassy Vienna auspices.

Mr. Thomas Haunschmid is the Senior Communications Manager for CARE Austria.

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DRAFT STATEMENT:

Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. It is my pleasure to celebrate with

CARE Austria the 70th anniversary of the first delivery of CARE packages to

Europe in November 1945. Austria received the first CARE package on

May 11, 1946. What started out as a spontaneous humanitarian aid program

became over the years one of the largest emergency and development aid

organizations in the world.

Seventy years ago, at the end of World War II, twenty-two American

charities, a mixture of civic, religious, cooperative and labor organizations

got together to found CARE. What at first was a small operation, which

acquired surplus rations from the U.S. Army for hungry people in Europe,

became an organized, cooperative, international humanitarian effort – still

predicated on the simplest of actions -- families in America, helping families

in war-torn Europe.

Ten dollars allowed ordinary citizens to personally support a specific family,

but over time, packages could be addressed "For a hungry person in

Europe." This allowed the aid to reach those especially in need. Imagine if

you will, the families on both sides of this package – the Americans,

supporting relief to the families of their former foes on the battlefields, and

the Austrians, receiving a package from a stranger in their time of greatest

need. As U.S. Ambassador, I occasionally meet these grateful strangers –

they are elderly now, but they remember like yesterday what it was like –

they were just kids, traumatized by war and burdened by hunger, and they

remember how they felt when they opened their family’s CARE package.

By 1955, one hundred million of these packages had been distributed.

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More than one million CARE packages arrived here in Austria, and

hundreds of volunteers at the Austro-American Societies took over the

distribution of these packages. I am proud to say that the Austro-American

Societies throughout Austria still provide a cultural and personal bridge

between the U.S. and Austria, continuing their valuable work that began

with the CARE packages.

When President Harry S Truman purchased a CARE Package, it was

expected that the CARE program would last only for a few years – until the

immediate needs of Europe were settled. Former CARE General Manager

Paul Comely French was convinced that “…that the fall and winter of 1948-

49 will be the last winter in which CARE's services will be needed." Alas,

as you will hear next, 70 years on, the need for CARE, and the work it does,

remains great.

Thank you CARE for your most valuable work and here’s to another seventy

years of striving towards a world where poverty is defeated and everybody

can live in dignity and security. (CARE Vision)

To close, I would like to quote President John F. Kennedy, speaking about

the impact of CARE: “Every CARE Package is a personal contribution to

the world peace our nation seeks. It expresses America's concern and

friendship in a language all peoples understand."

Thank you for inviting me here today to share in these important

celebrations.UNCLASSIFIED

Page 6: CARE Briefing Memo

Suggested quote for the press release, announcing the press conference:

President John F. Kennedy sagte über die CARE Packages in Jahr 1962:

"Every CARE Package is a personal contribution to the world peace our nation seeks. It

expresses America's concern and friendship in a language all peoples understand."

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PRESS GUIDANCE – REFUGEES/SYRIA TALKS:

RM Press GuidanceSeptember 16, 2015

Q: What is the United States doing in response to the European migration and refugee crisis?

To date, the United States is the single largest donor of humanitarian aid for the Syrian conflict. We view our humanitarian support both in Syria and the region as part of the solution, providing assistance to those in need before they are compelled to flee.

The U.S. has provided over $4.1 billion in humanitarian assistance since the start of the Syrian crisis – more than any other single donor – to help address dire humanitarian conditions faced by 7.6 million displaced people inside Syria and over 4 million Syrian refugees in the region, particularly in Lebanon, Turkey, Jordan, Iraq and Egypt.

This fiscal year, we have provided a $26.6 million regional contribution to UNHCR for its programs in Europe that may be used to help provide food, water, and legal assistance to refugees transiting Greece, Macedonia, and Serbia.

It is our hope that by increasing support to humanitarian assistance and protection efforts in Syria and neighboring countries, fewer refugees will decide to move on and they will be able to return home more easily when the conflict ends.

RemarksJohn KerrySecretary of StateGrand HotelVienna, AustriaOctober 30, 2015

SECRETARY KERRY: Well, good afternoon. I thank all of you for your patience today and appreciate your waiting around here so we had a moment to come and share some thoughts with you. I want to begin by thanking all of our foreign minister counterparts. Sergey Lavrov and I asked many people to come and many dropped things at the last minute. They changed their schedules and made themselves available. And we’re very grateful that they all sensed the importance of taking time out of their schedules in order to be here, and I think that really underscores the urgency of this issue. I want to thank the United Nations represented by Staffan de Mistura for the role they will play going forward. And I’m very grateful for Staffan’s willingness to take this on.

Four and a half years of war in Syria we all believe has been far too long, and the consequences of that war for so many people, innocent people, is beyond description – devastation in refugee camps, migration effects all over. The result has been a lot of suffering and far too much damage to the economic and social and political fabric of the region. And so we came here – the foreign

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ministers who came here today – with the conviction that the fighting and the killing absolutely has to end. And it’s up to us to try to find a way to do that.

Our shared task is to find a way to use the tools of diplomacy in order to make that happen. This is a relatively large diplomatic group that met today because there are a lot of people who are stakeholders because there are a lot of neighbors, and there are a lot of people who are supporting, one way or the other, one side or another. And so it will take pressure from many different directions to reverse the escalation of conflict and to lay a credible groundwork for peace.

Daesh and other terrorist organizations, we all believe, can never be allowed to unite or govern Syria. The United States position regarding Syria, I emphasize, has not changed. Sergey Lavrov and Prime Minister Zarif and I and others agree to disagree. The United States position is there is no way that President Assad can unite and govern Syria. And we believe that Syrians deserve a different choice, and our goal is to work with Syrians from many factions to develop that choice.

But we can’t allow that difference to get in the way of the possibility of diplomacy to end the killing and to find the solution. And that is a significance of the decision that was really made here today was that even though we acknowledge the difference, we know it is urgent to get to the table and to begin the process of real negotiations. So we’re employing a two-pronged approach. Speaking for the United States, we are intensifying our counter-Daesh campaign and we are intensifying our diplomatic efforts in order to end the conflict. And we believe these steps are mutually reinforcing. And that is why today President Obama made an announcement about stepping up the fight against Daesh. He authorized a small complement of U.S. Special Operations Forces to deploy to northern Syria where they will help to coordinate local ground forces and coalition efforts in order to counter Daesh.

But at the end of the day, the United States and our coalition partners believe that there is absolutely nothing that would do more to fight Daesh than to achieve a political transition that strengthens the governance capacity of Syria, sidelines the person that we believe attracts so many foreign fighters and so much terror, and unite the country against extremism. Make no mistake, the answer to the Syrian civil war is not found in a military alliance with Assad, from our point of view. But I am convinced that it can be found through a broadly supported diplomatic initiative aimed at a negotiated political transition, consistent with the Geneva communique.

And I want to thank Sergey Lavrov for his efforts to try to find that diplomatic solution and for the commitment of Russia even as it is engaged in supporting Assad, which is not a secret, in believing that we need to move towards a political solution. There is nothing inevitable in our judgment about the war in Syria. The war came about because of choices that people made. And what people have the power to choose, they have the power to change.

To change the pattern of violence in Syria, we have to change some of the patterns of thinking, so that the choice is not between a dictator and Daesh, but between war and peace, between destroying and building, between catering to the violent extremes and empowering the political center.

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We’re not going to succeed in that by focusing on how we got to where we are. And frankly, we spent a fair amount of time today making sure that the discussion didn’t get bogged down in the past. And I appreciate the discipline and the effort that all of the participants made to look to the future and to try to find the ways to move there. We have to be creative and we have to be determined in deciding how we go from here and where we go from here. And that was the subject of today’s discussions.

I want to make it clear also, none of us expected today to walk in and have one side or other say to the other, “Hey, Assad’s not an issue anymore,” or, “Assad’s going to do this or that.” That was not ever in anybody’s contemplation. This is the beginning of a new diplomatic process, not the final chapter. But I can tell you that all of us were convinced of the importance of finding a way to get back to the negotiating in a way that’s real. And what makes it real this time, unlike any other previous meeting, every stakeholder was represented there in terms of all of the countries who are supporting one side or another in this conflict.

So I will leave for the rest of my overseas trip with a fresh sense of the possibility of encouragement. I’m a realist. I know it’s difficult and I saw today in some of the conversation just how complicated and difficult it is indeed. But I believe the diplomatic situation is today more promising than it has been in some time because all of the stakeholders came to this table. There were tough conversations today. They were honest, frank. But there is more willingness and commitment by all the parties there today to continue to talk about practical steps, and there is more clarity about intentions. I’m not going to make any great claims here. I’m not going to blow anything up beyond the difficult path that it is. But I can report that we did make progress on the following.

The participants agreed today that Syria’s unity, independence, territorial integrity, and secular character are fundamental. We agreed that Syria’s state institutions will remain intact. We agreed that the rights of all Syrians, regardless of ethnicity or religious denomination, must be protected. We agreed that it is imperative to accelerate all diplomatic efforts to end the war. We agreed that humanitarian access must be assured throughout the territory of Syria, and the participants will increase support for internally displaced persons, refugees, and their host countries.

We agreed that Daesh and other terrorist groups as designated by the UN Security Council and as agreed by the participants must be defeated. Pursuant to the 2012 Geneva communique and UN Security Council Resolution 2118, we invited the UN to convene representatives of the Government of Syria and the Syrian opposition for a political process leading to a credible, inclusive, non-sectarian governance followed by a new constitution and elections. We agreed that these elections must be administered under UN supervision to the satisfaction of the government and to the highest international standards of transparency and accountability, free and fair, with all Syrians, including the diaspora, eligible to participate.

We agreed that this political process will be Syrian-led and Syrian-owned and that the Syrian people will decide the future of Syria. And we agreed together with the United Nations to explore modalities for and implementation of a nationwide ceasefire to be initiated on a date certain and in parallel with this renewed political process.

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We will spend the coming days working to narrow remaining areas of disagreement and to build on the areas of agreement, and we will reconvene within two weeks to continue these discussions.

So in closing, let me just reiterate that we all have a sense of urgency. We all know what it is stake. And personally, I have met with refugees, the survivors of barrel bombing, the unspeakable torture that has taken place. I’ve talked to women who struggle to hold their families together despite constant danger, bitter cold, and shortages of shelter and medicine and food. And I’ve heard the blood-chilling stories of doctors and relief workers who are dealing with the humanitarian trauma that this war is creating on a daily basis.

I am aware, as you are, of atrocities that have been committed and are being committed by the extremes on both sides. As I said a couple of days ago, the challenge is nothing less than to chart a course out of hell. And that’s not going to happen overnight, but I am convinced that the steps that we worked on today, if followed up on, if worked on in good faith, can begin to move us in the right direction. And it’s our job to accelerate the momentum so that we’re not back here next year or even the year after facing a Middle East with even more refugees, with even greater numbers of dead and displaced, and with even more suffering and more eroding hope. The time has come to stop the building – stop the bleeding and start the building, and that is exactly what we have set out to do. And I thank Staffan and I thank Sergey for the efforts to at least try to open a new chapter.

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Drafted: PA/Nick Gregory x2063Cleared: PA/Alice BurtonPA/Kellee FarmerEP/Kelly Merrick

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