Yahoo – AFP,
Jerome Cartillier, 8 July 2015
US
President Barack Obama welcomed the leader of Vietnam's Communist Party on
Tuesday to the White House for historic but "candid" talks marking
two decades of rapprochement between the former enemies.
Nguyen Phu
Trong is the first general secretary of the Vietnamese Communist Party to visit
the United States and the White House, and was given the rare honor of an Oval
Office meeting -- usually reserved for heads of state and government.
Washington
and Hanoi -- which ended their bitter war 40 years ago, and are marking the
20th anniversary of the formal normalization of relations -- are seeking
stronger ties in the face of an increasingly assertive China.
The two
men, smiling and rather relaxed as they sat next to each other in the Oval
Office after their highly symbolic talks, insisted on the progress made in the
last two decades.
"Obviously
there has been a difficult history," Obama said. "What we've seen is
the emergence of a constructive relationship that is based on mutual
respect."
The US president
said trade ties, tensions in the South China Sea over Beijing's territorial
claims and the thorny issue of human rights had been raised.
"We
discussed candidly some of our differences around issues of human rights,"
Obama said, expressing confidence that any "tensions can be resolved in an
effective fashion.
Trong described
the talks as "cordial, constructive, positive and frank," and also
qualified their talks on trade and rights as "candid."
Without
explicitly referring to China, he raised concerns about recent activities in
the South China Sea "that are not in accordance with international
law."
Beijing has
taken a more assertive stance on territorial claims in the South China Sea --
including deploying military equipment to the disputed Spratly Islands, claimed
in part by Vietnam.
The South
China Sea is home to strategically vital shipping lanes and is believed to be
rich in oil and gas.
Obama --
who leaves office in 18 months -- said he looked forward to visiting Vietnam
"sometime in the future," without offering a specific timetable.
'Nothing
but promise'
The White
House talks -- followed by a lunch hosted by Vice President Joe Biden, who said
the future held "nothing but promise" for US-Vietnam ties -- have
certainly sparked criticism.
![]() |
Vietnamese
Communist Party General
Secretary Nguyen Phu Trong speaks
before a luncheon at
the US State
Department on July 7, 2015 in
Washington, DC (AFP Photo/
Brendan
Smialowski)
|
Demonstrators
carried signs with slogans like "Freedom of speech in Vietnam now"
and called on Hanoi to release all political prisoners.
In an open
letter to the president, nine Democratic and Republican members of Congress
have complained that the invitation and warm welcome for Trong send the wrong
message.
"This
authoritarian one-party system is the root cause of the deplorable human rights
situation in Vietnam," the letter said, calling for Obama to demand the
release of Vietnamese political prisoners.
Beyond the
rights question, another major issue on the table is trade. Obama is seeking to
reach a 12-nation Pacific trade pact, known as the Trans-Pacific Partnership,
that would include Vietnam.
Republican
Congressman Chris Smith, one of those who signed the letter, and others in
Congress would like to see Vietnam excluded from the TPP until it makes
progress on political rights.
"President
Obama... still believes that trade will change Vietnam's behavior," Smith
told AFP ahead of the visit.
"After
Vietnam was given admission to the World Trade Organization in 2007, it
ratcheted up repression; expecting a different result now is just plain
unrealistic."
'Astounding' progress
John
Sifton, an Asia specialist for Human Rights Watch, told AFP that not enough had
changed in Vietnam to warrant an Oval Office sit-down.
He called
on Obama "to raise the volume on the human rights concerns -- especially
so if the two countries are planning to announce a new level in their
diplomatic ties."
Part of
taking it to the next level could be the lifting of a US ban on weapons sales,
which Vietnam is keen to achieve.
In October,
Washington announced the partial lifting of the ban, and authorized sales of
maritime defense equipment to Vietnam. But current US laws bar the sale of
lethal weapons to Hanoi.
The State
Department official said that Washington wanted to see more progress on human
rights before going any further.
On
Wednesday, Trong was to meet with Senator John McCain, a onetime prisoner of
war in Vietnam who hailed the "astounding" progress made in bilateral
ties and called for further easing of the lethal weapons ban.




No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.