The  5-month-old country is one of the most underdeveloped places in the  world, and it still has many lingering disputes with its former rulers  in Sudan — disputes that could scare off potential investors.
                     Secretary  of State Hillary Clinton kicked off the two-day International  Engagement Conference for South Sudan by likening the new state to a  tiny infant in need of intensive care.
She  talked about the challenges facing a country that has few paved roads  and little in the way of infrastructure.  But, she said, one thing South  Sudan does have going for it is potential oil wealth — and that needs  to be well-managed.
                     "South Sudan defied the  odds simply by being born," Clinton said. "We know that [the oil] will  either help your country finance its own path out of poverty, or you  will fall prey to the natural resource curse, which will enrich a small  elite, outside interests, corporations and countries, and leave your  people hardly better off than when you started."
                     Clinton  urged South Sudanese President Salva Kiir to look at Norway and   Botswana as examples of countries with well-managed natural resources.
                     Kiir  told the audience that he is working on transparency rules and hopes  for big investments.  He pointed out that the American oil company  Chevron was the first to discover oil in the region, but war and U.S.  sanctions have kept American companies out.
                                                                  Will American Companies Invest?
                     Now,  Kiir said, the Obama administration is changing its licensing rules and  making it possible for American energy companies to invest.
                     Kiir  told the crowd, "I want to invite you today to come with me to South  Sudan after this conference to help develop our potential in oil, gas  and mineral resources."
                     But he also appealed  for patience, saying the challenges are great for a country born out of  decades of war, and acknowledging ongoing tensions with Sudan.
                     Sudan  accuses South Sudan of arming rebels in two regions in the north, which  South Sudan denies.  Princeton Lyman, U.S. envoy for both Sudans, has  been keeping a close watch on the situation along the border.
                     "It  is a flashpoint," Lyman says, "not that we think the two are going to  go to war in that sense, but the conflict on the border [and] the  clashes that take place raise a lot of tension, and they impact on the  ability of the two to negotiate other issues."
                     And  the two Sudans have many outstanding issues to negotiate.  Lyman thinks  the North should focus on those negotiations as well as on its own  financial woes, having lost a lot of its oil wealth and territory to the  South.
                     "What we are saying is this is no  time to go to war in three or four of the states of your country," Lyman  says. "It is important to get a negotiated solution to the oil sector  with the South."
                     The tensions between the two  Sudans were high on everyone's mind at the conference in Washington,  even as South Sudan tried to encourage investors to bring their money  and ideas to the world's newest nation.
 
