Long-time diplomat Deborah Jones took the oath of office on Tuesday to replace Chris Stevens in a ceremony at the State Department.
For Jones, a fluent Arabic speaker, her diplomatic career is "not a just a job; it's a calling. It's a mission, and she shares that with her predecessor, Chris," Kerry said.
He said Jones would embody in her work "the dream of the Libyan people to be free and to exercise their rights and to enjoy democracy," stressing that the next few years were going to be critical to the country's transformation.
Nine months later, despite a Libyan and FBI-led investigation, no one has been charged with the killings, and the events in Benghazi remain a political football with Republicans accusing the US administration of a cover-up.
Jones said she wanted to mark her swearing-in, which she likened to a wedding, with a bit more "hoopla" because the State Department family needed it as part of the healing process as they grieve for Stevens and his colleagues.
"It is these rituals that remind us of what brought us to serve in the first place, the ideals we are privileged to represent, far beyond the din of Washington's political noise."
While Jones acknowledged it would take time for a democracy to take firm hold in Libya, she praised the Libyan people's commitment to such ideals.
"The Libyan people endured 42 years of rule by intimidation. They courageously defeated a dictator and are now determined to experience governance by representation," she said, vowing to stand by their side.
From 2008 to 2011, she was ambassador to Kuwait.
Jones was the right person to take on the job in a "tough part of the world at this critical moment in history," Kerry said.
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