"As we plan for the coming year, we are focused on looking at long-term solutions, not the crises of the day, but on finding a way to lay the groundwork for security and stability for decades to come," Kerry said in his address to the National Defence University.
Kerry said this year the US, it would be recognised has a critical role to play on the world stage.
"Ultimately, we need to ensure that the next President can continue to build on the successes that we have seen over the past seven years to pick up on the efforts still underway and benefit from the hard fought progress that our nation has made on so many different fronts," he said.
Describing terrorism as a top challenge of the current year, Kerry exuded confidence that Islamic State would be defeated.
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"Daesh is, literally, the embodiment of evil -- psychopaths who murder and rape, adventurists in some cases, criminals in many cases who torture and pillage, and call it the will of God," Kerry said.
Kerry said the US will continue to monitor
implementation of the Iranian nuclear agreement closely, because existential challenges are at stake here.
"Implementation day, which is the day on which Iran proves that it has sufficiently downsized its nuclear programme and can begin to receive sanctions relief, is going to take place very soon, likely within the next coming days somewhere. And when that happens, we are convinced it will make us and our partners around the world more safe and secure," Kerry said.
The Paris agreement on climate change, he said was made possible by unprecedented collaboration on climate issue between the US and China, which began by an initiative from President Obama that the US would engage with China in order to bring Beijing in instead of leaving it outside, as it has been in most of the meetings previously that we have had on the issue.