Hillary Clinton says goodbye to state department
USA
Hillary Clinton has said the world is a safer place, in her farewell address to state department staff on her last day as America's top diplomat.
Mrs Clinton, 65, leaves the post after four years, visits to 112 countries and nearly a million air miles.
She will be replaced by John Kerry, a Massachusetts senator, who was sworn in at a private ceremony on Friday.
The former first lady is now discussed as a possible candidate for the 2016 presidential election.
Mrs Clinton said leading the agency as the 67th US Secretary of State had been a "unique and singular, exciting and challenging" experience.
She acknowledged the attack on the US embassy in Turkey - a sobering reminder of the everyday global threats that will face her successor.
Mrs Clinton has been coy about a possible White House run in four years' time. She has said she has no specific plans for the future, but that she "absolutely" still plans to make a difference on issues she cares about.
"I am going to be secretary of state until the very last minute when I walk out the door," she told the Associated Press on Thursday.
"And then I am going to take the weekend off and then I may start thinking about all the various offers and requests and ideas that have come my way."
Mrs Clinton's time in office will also be remembered for the attack last September on a consulate in Benghazi, Libya, that killed a US ambassador and three other Americans. She has apologised for that security failure.


















































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