[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 114 (Friday, July 30, 2010)]
[Senate]
[Pages S6546-S6547]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
NATIONAL COUNCIL ON INTERNATIONAL VISITORS
Mr. SPECTER. Mr. President, I wish to speak to a resolution honoring
the National Council for International Visitors, NCIV, on the occasion
of its 50th anniversary. The United States has the responsibility of
protecting its citizens by ensuring peace, and I believe that citizen
diplomacy as practiced by the NCIV is a crucial tool to achieving that
end.
With the goal of promoting ``excellence in civilian diplomacy,'' the
NCIV promotes the idea that individual citizens have the right and
responsibility to promote peaceful and cooperative foreign relations.
NCIV champions the belief that ``citizen diplomacy has the power to
shape American perceptions of foreign cultures and international
perceptions of the United States, effectively shattering stereotypes,
illuminating differences, underscoring
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common human values, and developing the web of human connections needed
to achieve more peaceful relations between nations.''
In a partnership with the Department of State, the NCIV cosponsors
the International Visitor Leadership Program, IVLP, which brings
distinguished foreign leaders to the United States for short-term
professional programs. Since 1961, the NCIV has organized people-to-
people exchanges for more than 190,000 foreign leaders participating in
the IVLP, and of these participants, 285 went on to lead their
respective countries. The IVLP's distinguished alumni include Tony
Blair, Margaret Thatcher, Anwar Sadat, Indira Gandhi, and Nicolas
Sarkozy, among others.
Throughout my tenure in the Senate, I have sought to engage leaders
of friendly and adversarial nations alike, as I recognize the potential
for dialogue to yield positive results where few prospects for progress
were at first seen. Refusing to negotiate with adversarial countries
exacerbates relations with these nations, and the resulting mutual lack
of understanding strengthens anti-American sentiments.
It is my personal experience that meeting with leaders whose policies
are in conflict with those of the United States can yield positive
results. I cite my interactions with former President Hafiz al-Asad of
Syria, President Fidel Castro of Cuba, and President Hugo Chavez of
Venezuela as examples. Achievements resulting in some small part from
this personal diplomacy included expansion of emigration rights in
Syria and cooperation with Cuba and Venezuela on counter-narcotics
policy. By investing in diplomacy, the United States can foster
international relationships that facilitate peaceful resolutions to
conflict.
The NCIV promotes these relationships on an individual basis,
``[bridging] cultures and [building] mutually beneficial relationships
through international exchanges.'' I nominated the NCIV network of
citizen diplomats for the 2001 Nobel Prize believing they ``have done .
. . the best work for fraternity between nations.'' On the occasion of
the NCIV's 50th anniversary, I hope that my colleagues join me in
honoring their work.
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