The U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton received a standing ovation from her staff as she returned to work after a month of illness, her spokesperson said, adding the leader was “looking terrific.”
“She looks fantastic. She seems to be terrific,” State Department spokesperson Victoria Nuland said, after Ms. Clinton resumed her work at Foggy Bottom headquarters of the State Department and held meetings with her top officials.
However, at the advice of her doctors, she would not be travelling abroad, Ms. Nuland said.
Ms. Clinton was away from the State Department for about a month now, because of stomach infection she developed during her European trip in early December last year. She was later admitted to the hospital towards the end of the year, after doctors detected blood clot in her head.
Doctors have now declared her fully recovered.
Wearing a brilliant pink jacket, Ms. Clinton arrived at the State Department early in the morning and then went straight for her meeting with top State Department officials.
“When she walked in the room, she had a standing ovation from 75 people assembled, and then Deputy Secretary (Thomas) Nides presented her with a gift from all of us in a big box,” Ms. Nuland said.
“First of all he said, ‘As you know, Washington is a contact sport.’ And (then) she opened the box, and inside was a football helmet with the State Department seal, lots of good padding, and also a football jersey that said Ms. Clinton on the back and on the front it says number 112, which symbolizes the number of countries that she’s visited as Secretary of State,” she said.
“She (Clinton) loved it. She thought it was cool. But then, being Hillary Clinton, she wanted to get right to business. So we do what we always do in that meeting, went around the room, and she heard from everybody what they’re working on and what’s coming forward,” Ms. Nuland said.
Resuming to her hectic schedule, Ms. Clinton has a series of meetings lined up through the week including those at the White House and with the visiting Afghan President, Hamid Karzai, later this week.
“She did take the opportunity to reiterate to everybody that with regard to the Accountability Review Board recommendations that she wants to have every single one of those recommendations on its way to implementation by the time her successor is sworn in and takes up his duties, and that she’s expecting everybody to work hard in that regard. And then obviously, she was interested in hearing about all of the policies underway, particularly focused, obviously, on President Karzai’s visit later in the week,” she said.
Ms. Clinton, she said, is now assisting Senator John Kerry in the transition.
Mr. Kerry has been nominated by the U.S. President, Barack Obama, to succeed her.
She is also preparing for Congressional testimony on the hill on the terrorist attack in Benghazi that killed the U.S. Ambassador to Libya, and two other U.S. nationals.