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Trade, not Syria, dominates John Kerry’s first speech as secretary of state

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“The deal that our embassy helped secure, valued at $160 million, goes right back into American communities from coast to coast,” Kerry said. “That’s the difference that our embassies abroad actually can make back here at home.”

Kerry warned, however, that the United States needed to redouble such efforts to compete with China, which is also the second-largest U.S. trading partner. He noted that seven of the 10 fastest-growing countries are on the African continent, where China “is already investing more than we do there.”

As dire budget cuts loom with sequestration — a projected $2.6 billion in cuts for the State Department, including $850 million from daily operations — Kerry defended his agency’s spending, stressing that the entire U.S. foreign policy budget is only slightly more than 1 percent of the national budget.

“It sounds expensive, but, my friends, it’s not,” Kerry said. “The State Department’s conflict stabilization budget is around $60 million a year. That’s how much the movie ‘The Avengers’ took in on a single Sunday last May. The difference is, the folks we have on the ground are actual superheroes.”

Kerry was particularly protective of foreign aid, which is often among the first items on the chopping block in tough times. The State Department projects roughly $1.7 billion in cuts to foreign aid under the mandatory budget cuts. Kerry lauded the fact that 11 of the top 15 U.S. trade partners were former recipients of U.S. assistance and said the money must continue to flow, as an investment, in order to grow a new crop of beneficiaries-turned-economic allies.

“My credibility as a diplomat working to help other countries create order is strongest when America at last puts its own fiscal house in order, and that has to be now,” Kerry said to applause.

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