Prospects
for Vietnam-US relations under spotlight
A discussion about Vietnam-US relations
between the US ambassador to Vietnam Ted Osius and US and international
scholars was held on June 9 in Washington DC.
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The event was hosted by the
Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) to mark President
Obama’s recent visit to Vietnam.
Osius reviewed important events during President Obama’s visit, including the lifting of the US’s arms embargo on Vietnam and agreements to boost cooperation in security, disaster mitigation, settling war aftermath, and combating the illegal wild life trade.
The
US diplomat said 20 agreements were signed during President Obama’s visit,
far from what he expected,“So what that tells me is the Vietnamese was ready.
They’re ready to collaborate with us across the board and all of these
different areas. And what it tells me is this: we have a really solid
foundation for the next 50-60 years of relationship.”
In
regard to the possibility of the US accessing Vietnam’s Cam Ranh port, Mr
Osius said the US respects Vietnam’s defense policy of not joining any
military alliance and not being a military ally to any country, or allowing
any country to have a military base in Vietnam, and not relying on one
country against another.
He said if certain conditions are
met, the US will make the most of paid services including fuel supply and
ship repair at Cam Ranh International Port as Singapore and Japan have done
but not to place a military base there.
The
US wants to have strong partners with the ability to determine and address
challenges in the East Sea, he said, adding that ASEAN should have a unified
reaction before an upcoming ruling by the Permanent Court of Arbitration over
the Philippines’ lawsuit against China concerning their disputes in the East
Sea.
The US is stepping cooperation
with Vietnam in clearing bombs and landmines left over from the war and will
continue to help the country decontaminate dioxins in a number of localities.
VOV
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Thứ Sáu, 10 tháng 6, 2016
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