Google – AFP, Shaun Tandon (AFP), 25 July 2013
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US
President Barack Obama and President Truong Tan Sang of Vietnam
meet in the
White House in Washington, July 25, 2013 (AFP, Saul Loeb)
|
WASHINGTON
— US President Barack Obama said Thursday he spoke frankly to Vietnam's leader
about human rights but called for greater cooperation between the former war
adversaries in areas from trade to security.
President
Truong Tan Sang was only the second Vietnamese head of state to visit the White
House since the normalization of relations in 1975 and he was jeered on his
arrival by hundreds of Vietnamese Americans, many waving the flags of the
former Saigon regime and chanting slogans that were occasionally audible inside
the White House.
But the two
leaders looked upbeat during their meeting at the Oval Office, with Obama
saying that Sang showed him a letter written by revolutionary Ho Chi Minh to
former US president Harry Truman that voiced hope for strong relations, two
decades before their war started.
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Several
hundred demonstrators from the
Vietnamese-American community rally at
the White
House on July 25, 2013 (AFP,
Karen Bleier)
|
Obama,
however, said that he pressed Sang on human rights, a long-standing concern of
US lawmakers and Vietnamese Americans.
"The
United States continues to believe that all of us have to respect issues like
freedom of expression, freedom of religion, freedom of assembly," Obama
told reporters at the Oval Office with Sang at his side.
"We
had a very candid conversation about both the progress that Vietnam is making
and the challenges that remain," he said.
Several
lawmakers have accused Obama of merely mentioning human rights and said he
should have made progress a condition for further improvements in relations.
Sang, who
acknowledged "differences" between the two countries on human rights,
said that Obama had promised to visit Vietnam by the end of his second term.
Obama, who would be the third successive US president to visit Vietnam, is
expected in the region in October for summits in Bali and Brunei.
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A member of
the Vietnamese Community
wears a sign during a protest in front of
the White
House on July 25, 2013 (AFP,
Karen Bleier)
|
One factor
that has increased ties between the United States and Vietnam is concerns over
the rise of China.
Obama
reiterated US calls for progress on an initiative backed by the 10-member
Association of Southeast Asian Nations to work with China on a code of conduct,
which would set rules to manage disputes and prevent potential mishaps from
escalating.
Obama hoped
to "arrive at codes of conduct that will help to resolve these issues
peacefully and fairly."
Obama has
increasingly put a focus on Southeast Asia, seeing the region as economically
vibrant, largely US-friendly and neglected in the past by US policymakers. Sang
is the fourth Southeast Asian leader to visit the White House this year.
The United
States has spearheaded its Asian effort by championing the Trans-Pacific
Partnership, which aims to create a vast free trade zone across the Pacific.
Twelve nations are participating, including Vietnam and most recently Japan,
meaning that the pact would cover 40 percent of the world economy.
Obama has
set a goal of completing negotiations on the Trans-Pacific Partnership by the
end of the year, although few expect that such a complex deal will be ready so
soon.
"We
are committed to the ambitious goal of completing this agreement before the end
of the year because we know that this can create jobs and increase investment
across the region and in both of our countries," he said.
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Members of
the Vietnamese Community
chant and sing during a protest in front
of the White
House July 25, 2013 (AFP,
Karen Bleier)
|
The
hundreds of demonstrators in Lafayette Park across from the White House waved
flags of the former South Vietnam and chanted slogans that could sometimes be
heard inside the executive mansion.
One
protester held up a banner, "Communist - Go Home." But in a sign of
the patriotism that also drives Vietnamese Americans, several held up signs
denouncing not Sang but China over its territorial claims.
"What
we want to do is respect human rights and freedom in Vietnam," said
demonstrator Huu Dinh Vo of the Federation of Vietnamese American Communities.
"Okay,
you can invite him, but you have to put on the table pressure to push the
Vietnamese communists to comply with international law and human rights and
freedom like in other countries," he said.




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