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Scottish Independence: Hillary Clinton opposes 'Yes' vote | Scottish Independence: Hillary Clinton opposes 'Yes' vote |
(about 4 hours later) | |
Former US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has said she would "hate" for Britain to "lose Scotland". | Former US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has said she would "hate" for Britain to "lose Scotland". |
Her intervention on BBC's Newsnight programme came ahead of the 18 September Scottish independence referendum. | |
Ms Clinton praised the democratic way in which Scotland's future was being decided, adding: "I don't have a vote". | |
The campaign for independence said a "Yes" vote would allow Scotland's relationship with the US to "flourish". | |
Ms Clinton's comments came during a promotional tour for her memoirs, amid continuing speculation as to whether she will mount a US presidential campaign. | |
The current US president, Barack Obama, has already intervened in the referendum debate, saying his country's interest was to ensure it retained a "strong, robust, united and effective partner". | |
When asked about the referendum, Ms Clinton told the BBC: "Oh, I would hate to have you lose Scotland. | |
"I got an honorary degree from St Andrews. | "I got an honorary degree from St Andrews. |
"I hope that that doesn't happen but again I don't have a vote in Scotland." | "I hope that that doesn't happen but again I don't have a vote in Scotland." |
Analysis: Scott Lucas, professor of American studies, Birmingham University | |
Hillary Clinton doesn't make off-the-cuff remarks, and she certainly doesn't do so on foreign affairs. | |
The fact that President Obama, and indeed other European politicians, have come out vocally against Scottish independence really points to a coordination among policy-makers on both sides of the Atlantic who basically are saying Scotland should remain part of Britain and, in turn, part of the EU. | |
I think this is a concerted campaign. I think it's one that's been discussed by the White House, I think it's been discussed by Number 10 and by other European capitals to try to deter Scottish voters from breaking away from Britain. | |
In a sense, they're comfortable. They know the EU, they know it with Scotland being inside it, and change basically frightens them. | |
The Swedish foreign minister, Carl Bildt, referred to Scotland leaving as the Balkanisation of Britain, which invokes scary images of the 1990s wars in the former Yugoslavia. | |
I don't agree with those perceptions, but right now this is as much a battle of propaganda as it is one of reality. | |
Hillary Clinton is speaking to the Scottish and British public. | |
She might say, and President Obama might say, 'it's up to Scottish voters to make a decision' - but that's like my mother telling me, 'I can't tell you what to do, but you really shouldn't go to that party on Friday night'. | |
It will be interesting to see how Scottish voters react, because my perception is that - far from pushing Scottish voters to say 'we have to stay part of Britain' - I think they may assert their own, as it were, independence from these politicians by voting in the referendum precisely to come out of Britain. | |
The American politician said the process in Scotland was quite different from the recent vote in Crimea over its separation from Ukraine. | The American politician said the process in Scotland was quite different from the recent vote in Crimea over its separation from Ukraine. |
She added: "There have been legal processes associated with it (the Scottish referendum) and we'll see what the people decide but I would think it would be a loss for both sides. But again I don't have a vote." | She added: "There have been legal processes associated with it (the Scottish referendum) and we'll see what the people decide but I would think it would be a loss for both sides. But again I don't have a vote." |
A spokesman for the pro-Union Better Together campaign said: "Hillary Clinton is a figure who is respected right across the world. Like president Obama, she understands that the UK is at its strongest when it works together." | A spokesman for the pro-Union Better Together campaign said: "Hillary Clinton is a figure who is respected right across the world. Like president Obama, she understands that the UK is at its strongest when it works together." |
A Yes Scotland spokesman said: "As she says, the decision about Scotland's future is one for the people of Scotland to make. | A Yes Scotland spokesman said: "As she says, the decision about Scotland's future is one for the people of Scotland to make. |
"After a Yes vote, the friendship between Scotland and the United States will flourish to the benefit of both nations." | "After a Yes vote, the friendship between Scotland and the United States will flourish to the benefit of both nations." |