US completely lifts arms embargo on Việt Nam
23/5/16
Barack Obama announces removal of embargo on first visit, saying he wants to normalise relations with former enemy.
Barack Obama has lifted a decades-old arms export embargo for Vietnam during his first visit to the communist country, looking to bolster a government seen as a crucial, though flawed partner even as he pushes for better human rights from the one-party state.
The US president announced the full removal of the embargo at a news conference, saying the move was intended to step toward normalising relations with the former war enemy and to eliminate a “lingering vestige of the cold war”.
“At this stage both sides have developed a level of trust and cooperation,” Obama said, adding that he expected deepening cooperation between the two nation’s militaries.
Lifting the arms embargo will be a psychological boost for Vietnam’s leaders as they look to counter an increasingly aggressive China, but there may not be a big jump in sales. The Vietnamese president, Tran Dai Quang, thanked Obama for lifting the embargo.
US politicians and activists had urged the president to press the communist leadership for greater freedoms before lifting the embargo.
Vietnam holds about 100 political prisoners and there have been more detentions this year.
The US partially lifted the embargo in 2014, but
Vietnam wanted full access as it tries to deal with China’s assertive land reclamation and military construction in nearby seas.
Vietnam has not bought anything, but removing the remaining restrictions shows relations are fully normalised and opens the way to deeper security cooperation.
After three days in Vietnam, Obama heads to Japan for an international summit and
a visit to Hiroshima, where he will be the first sitting president to visit the site of the first atomic bomb attack.
He arrived in Hanoi, the capital, late on Sunday, making him the third sitting president to visit the country since the end of the war. Four decades after the fall of Saigon, now called Ho Chi Minh City, and two decades after Bill Clinton restored relations, Obama is eager to upgrade relations with an emerging power whose rapidly expanding middle class beckons as a promising market for US goods and an offset to China’s growing strength.
Obama was greeted on Monday by Quang at the presidential palace. He congratulated Vietnam for making “extraordinary progress” and said he hoped the visit would show a continued interest in strengthening ties in the years to come.
Obama will make the case for stronger commercial and security ties, including approval of the 12-nation Trans-Pacific Trade agreement that is stalled in Congress and facing strong opposition from the 2016 presidential candidates.
The US is eager to boost trade with a fast-growing middle class in Vietnam that is expected to double by 2020. That would mean knocking down auto, food and machine tariffs to get more US products into Vietnam.
In Japan, Obama will attend a summit of the Group of Seven industrialised nations, where the uncertain global economy will be a top concern. They will also grapple with a full array of world challenges, including the fight against Islamic State in Iraq and Syria and the refugee crisis in Europe.
Obama will finish his trip in Hiroshima, where the US dropped the atomic bomb that killed 140,000 people, ushering in the nuclear age seven decades ago. Another bomb killed 70,000 in Nagasaki three days later.
It will be a moment to reflect on the devastating costs of war and to try to give new impetus to the call for a nuclear-free world that Obama issued seven years ago in his first year as president. He has faced criticism, however, that his mere presence at the site of the atomic bomb explosion could be viewed as an apology for an act that many Americans see as justified./.
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