Remarks by President Obama at Opening Session of the U.S.-ASEAN Summit○Obama(2016.02.15)
REMARKS BY PRESIDENT OBAMA AT OPENING SESSION OF
THE U.S.-ASEAN SUMMIT
Sunnylands Center
The Annenberg Retreat at Sunnylands
Rancho Mirage, California
The Annenberg Retreat at Sunnylands
Rancho Mirage, California
3:47 P.M. PST
I want to thank my co-chair, President
Choummaly of Laos; Secretary General Minh ;
and leaders from all 10 ASEAN nations for being here.
As everyone knows, I first came to know the people and the beauty and the
strength of Southeast Asia as a boy when I lived in
Indonesia for several years with my mother. As President, I’ve had the opportunity to visit
most of your countries. You and the people
of ASEAN have always shown me extraordinary hospitality, and I hope we can reciprocate
with the warmth today and tomorrow -- which is why I did not hold this summit in
Washington . It
is cold there. It’s snowing. So, welcome to beautiful, warm Sunnylands. (Laughter.)
As President, I’ve insisted that even as the United States confronts urgent
threats around the world, our foreign policy also has to seize on new opportunities. And few regions present more opportunity to the
21st century than the Asia Pacific. That’s
why, early in my presidency, I decided that the United
States, as a Pacific nation, would rebalance our foreign policy and play a larger
and long-term role in the Asia Pacific.
And this has included engagement with Southeast Asia and ASEAN, which is
central to the region’s peace and prosperity, and to our shared goal of building
a regional order where all nations play by the same
rules.
As part of our deeper engagement, I'm proud to
be the first U.S. President to meet with leaders of all 10 ASEAN countries. This summit marks our seventh meeting. At your invitation,
the United States joined the East Asia Summit, and together we’ve made it the region’s leading forum for
addressing political and security challenges.
I’ve made now seven visits to the ASEAN region -- more than any previous
American President. At our last meeting in Kuala Lumpur, we forged a new Strategic
Partnership. And our sustained engagement
is delivering concrete results that benefit all of us -- momentum that we can build
on here at this summit.
Together, we can continue to increase the trade and economic partnerships
that create jobs and opportunity for our people. Since I took office, we’ve boosted trade between
the United States and ASEAN by 55 percent.
The region is now our fourth largest goods trading partner, including U.S.
exports that support more than 500,000 American jobs. U.S companies have been the largest source of
foreign investment in ASEAN -- one of the many reasons that the region’s GDP has
surged in recent years, lifting people from poverty into the middle class.
I want to take this opportunity to again congratulate my fellow leaders on
the formation of the ASEAN Community, which is another important step toward integrating
your economies. Here at this summit, we can
build on this progress and do more to encourage
entrepreneurship and innovation so that growth and development is sustainable and
inclusive and benefits all people.
Together, we can also
continue to increase our security cooperation to meet shared challenges. In recent years, the United States has increased
our maritime security assistance to our allies and partners in the region, improving
our mutual capabilities to protect lawful commerce and to respond to humanitarian
crisis. Here at this summit, we can advance
our shared vision of a regional order where international rules and norms,
including freedom of navigation, are upheld and where disputes are resolved through
peaceful, legal means.
Together, we can continue
to support the aspirations and dignity of our citizens. The historic election in Myanmar and the transition
now underway gives hope for a nation that is inclusive, united, peaceful and democratic. In joining the TPP, Singapore, Vietnam, Malaysia
and Brunei have committed to high labor and environmental standards.
I’m very proud that our Young Southeast Asian Leaders Initiative is helping
to empower young men and women who are shaping the region every day. As you know, I've held a number of town hall meetings
with these remarkable young people. And their
idealism, their courage, their willingness to work for the future that they believe
in should all give us hope. As leaders, we
have to answer their aspirations. And here
at the summit, we can reaffirm that strong, prosperous and inclusive societies require
good governance, rule of law, accountable institutions, vibrant civil societies,
and upholding human rights.
Finally, together, we can continue to
do more around the world to meet transnational challenges that no one nation can meet alone. As we were reminded again by the attack in Jakarta
last month, the scourge of terrorism demands that we stay vigilant, share more information
and work cooperatively to protect our people.
Just as our nations worked together to
achieve a strong climate change agreement in Paris, now we need to implement that
agreement and step up investment in clean, affordable energy, including for developing
countries.
So, economic growth that is inclusive, creating opportunity for all; mutual security and the peaceful resolution of disputes;
human dignity, including respect for human rights and development that is sustainable
-- that is our vision. That’s what brings
us here together today.
I want to thank all of my fellow leaders for being here and for your commitment
to a strong U.S.-ASEAN partnership. And given
the extraordinary progress that we’ve achieved together
these past seven years, I’m confident that we can continue our momentum at this
summit.
With that, I want to invite President Choummaly to say a few words as well.
END 3:55 P.M. PST
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