| | | Americas & Beyond | April 2009
Obama's Weekly Address: The Challenges of Our Time White House Blog go to original
In this week’s address, filmed aboard Air Force One between vital diplomatic engagements abroad, the President discusses the breadth and depth of the global challenges we face. Recapping his trip, though, it is clear just how much opportunity lies in reshaping America’s relationships around the world.
On everything from turning our economy around - which shed hundreds of thousands more jobs last month - to ending the threat of nuclear arms, "The only way forward is through shared and persistent efforts to combat fear and want wherever they exist." Obama Sees Worldwide Threat to Economy, Security Will Lester - Capitol Hill Blue go to original
From terrorism to the economic meltdown, problems menacing the United States' security and economy also threaten an increasingly interconnected world, President Barack Obama said Saturday.
"In this new century, we live in a world that has grown smaller and more interconnected than at any time in history," Obama said in his weekly radio and Internet address, taped during his first presidential trip to Europe. "Threats to our nation's security and economy can no longer be kept at bay by oceans or by borders drawn on maps."
Because no one nation can handle such threats alone, it is valuable for a president to make such trips "to strengthen and protect our nation," he said.
Economic problems overseas mean people in those countries cannot buy the goods produced in the United States, which means more lost jobs, he said.
"The only way out of a recession that is global in scope is with a response that is global in coordination," he said. "That is why I'm pleased that after two days of careful negotiation, the G-20 nations have agreed on a series of unprecedented steps that I believe will be a turning point in our pursuit of a global economic recovery." The countries are moving to get banks lending again and moving to tighten financial regulations, he said.
Common concerns extend well beyond the economy.
Obama spoke of discussions with Russian President Dmitry Medvedev and Chinese President Hu Jintao during his trip.
"President Hu and I agreed that the link between China's economy and ours is of great mutual benefit, and we established a new strategic and economic dialogue between the U.S. and China," he said. "President Medvedev and I discussed our shared commitment to a world without nuclear weapons, and we signed a declaration putting America and Russia on the path to a new treaty to further reduce our nuclear arsenals."
Obama noted that he's asking NATO allies "for additional civilian support and assistance" in Afghanistan.
"That is where al-Qaida trains, plots and threatens to launch their next attack," the president said. "And that attack could occur in any nation, which means that every nation has a stake in ensuring that our mission in Afghanistan succeeds."
Obama said he's been working with other nations "to find common ground and strengthen our alliances," but cautioned there is more work to be done.
"But we have made real and unprecedented progress and will continue to do so in the weeks and months ahead," he said. "In the end, we recognize that no corner of the globe can wall itself off from the threats of the 21st century, or from the needs and concerns of fellow nations." |
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