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Europe and Eurasia: Remarks Before Meeting With EU High Representative Federica Mogherini, U.K. Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson, French Foreign Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault, German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier, and Italian Foreign Minister…

SECRETARY KERRY: Well, good morning everybody, and welcome. Welcome to Tufts University, welcome to the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, and welcome especially to greater Boston and to Massachusetts. I am personally particularly grateful to everybody after an extremely busy and intense week in New York to be able to come up here so that we can come together in order to talk quietly and digest, in a way, much of what we talked about during the week and have a little more time to pull thoughts together.

It’s a pleasure for me to be able to have you all come and share a beautiful fall day in Boston. We’ll get a little chance to have some New England cuisine and get out on the harbor later and continue the conversations.

I might emphasize that this is a place that has had longstanding ties to Europe, obviously. And leaving aside sort of the earliest days of history here, which everybody is more than familiar with, the fact is that the last century was defined by the cooperation between most of the countries at this table and the direction that we took – and particularly the post-Cold War period, where we defined the United Nations, succeeded in ending the Cold War in a way that we felt it should end. And now we’re in a new moment of great experience, obviously.

Every one of you has had ties here and engagements here, and we really appreciate your taking this moment to come and work through particularly Syria, Ukraine, Russia, the challenges of counter violent extremism, the work we need to do to bring the climate agreement into force, and the great challenge of so many people and young people around the world who are desperately in need of opportunity, of jobs, of education, of a future.

So we have our work cut out for us. I think every single one of the countries here has a remarkable record in this last quarter-century of being at the forefront of common sense and reasonableness. And frankly, we share a set of values that you just cannot underestimate in terms of the leverage that that has and the force that it has when we come together to coordinate our activities.

So let me say that we will also talk today about Iran and the implementation of the Iran agreement, and we will also have a chance to share thoughts about the economic dynamics going forward, particularly as we navigate through the shoals of Brexit and try to keep Europe as strong and united as possible, and make sure that the United Kingdom is in a position to in fact fully deliver on its intention to be even more of a force in the context of these kinds of challenges that we face.

One thing I think all of us join in saying – and I want to make this clear – what is happening in Aleppo today is unacceptable. It is beyond the pale. If people are serious about wanting a peaceful outcome to this war, then they should cease and desist bombing innocent women and children, cease cutting off water and laying siege in medieval terms to an entire community, and work with the international community in order to be able to bring peace to people who are starving – literally starving, but also starving for the possibilities of a future without chlorine dropping on them out of the sky, barrel bombs, and indiscriminate bombing. And Russia needs to set an example, not a precedent – an unacceptable precedent, I might add, for the entire world.

I know we will as a group have more to say about this later today, so I’ll leave it at that. But we also stand absolutely united for a democratic Ukraine, another place where we call on Russia to cooperate and to move forward with a peaceful resolution.

So we have a lot to discuss; I’m not going to go on. I just want to thank everybody for coming out to share the opening of this session, and I thank particularly my colleagues for being here to take part in it. Thank you all.