At the opening ceremony of the Summit of the Americas on April 17, president Obama addresses the issues that have divided the hemisphere, from Cuba to American disengagement to anti-Americanism. |
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In his remarks at the opening ceremony of the Summit
of the Americas on Friday, April 17, president Barack Obama reiterated areas of opportunity for new partnerships, from stimulating the economy throughout the hemisphere, to alleviating poverty, to using the hemisphere’s vast resources to revolutionize energy use as we know it. Once again he addressed the need to stop the flow of drugs and guns across borders, saying that he is "making it a priority to ratify the Illicit Trafficking in Firearms Convention as another tool that we can use to prevent this from happening." The President closed his remarks on issues that have long dominated relationships between the Americas, and which have already seen broad change in these first few months.
Following is the full text of president Obama's remarks:
REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
AT THE SUMMIT OF THE AMERICAS
OPENING CEREMONY
Hyatt Regency
Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago
April 17, 2009
7:30 P.M. EDT
THE PRESIDENT: Good evening. I am honored to join you here
today, and I want to thank Prime Minister Manning, the people
of Trinidad and Tobago for their generosity in hosting the
Fifth Summit of the Americas. And I want to extend my greetings
to all the heads of state, many of who I am meeting for
the first time. All of us are extraordinarily excited to
have this opportunity to visit this wonderful country --
and as somebody who grew up on an island, I can tell you
I feel right at home. (Applause.)
It's appropriate and important that we hold this summit
in the Caribbean. The energy, the dynamism, the diversity
of the Caribbean people inspires us all, and are such an
important part of what we share in common as a hemisphere.
I think everybody recognizes that we come together at a
critical moment for the people of the Americas. Our well-being
has been set back by a historic economic crisis. Our safety
is endangered by a broad range of threats. But this peril
can be eclipsed by the promise of a new prosperity and personal
security and the protection of liberty and justice for all
the people of our hemisphere. That's the future that we
can build together, but only if we move forward with a new
sense of partnership.
All of us must now renew the common stake that we have
in one another. I know that promises of partnership have
gone unfulfilled in the past, and that trust has to be earned
over time. While the United States has done much to promote
peace and prosperity in the hemisphere, we have at times
been disengaged, and at times we sought to dictate our terms.
But I pledge to you that we seek an equal partnership. (Applause.)
There is no senior partner and junior partner in our relations;
there is simply engagement based on mutual respect and common
interests and shared values. So I'm here to launch a new
chapter of engagement that will be sustained throughout
my administration. (Applause.)
To move forward, we cannot let ourselves be prisoners of
past disagreements. I am very grateful that President Ortega
-- (applause) -- I'm grateful that President Ortega did
not blame me for things that happened when I was three months
old. (Laughter.) Too often, an opportunity to build a fresh
partnership of the Americas has been undermined by stale
debates. And we've heard all these arguments before, these
debates that would have us make a false choice between rigid,
state-run economies or unbridled and unregulated capitalism;
between blame for right-wing paramilitaries or left-wing
insurgents; between sticking to inflexible policies with
regard to Cuba or denying the full human rights that are
owed to the Cuban people.
I didn't come here to debate the past -- I came here to
deal with the future. (Applause.) I believe, as some of
our previous speakers have stated, that we must learn from
history, but we can't be trapped by it. As neighbors, we
have a responsibility to each other and to our citizens.
And by working together, we can take important steps forward
to advance prosperity and security and liberty. That is
the 21st century agenda that we come together to enact.
That's the new direction that we can pursue.
Before we move forward for our shared discussions over
this weekend, I'd like to put forward several areas where
the United States is committed already to strengthening
collective action on behalf of our shared goals.
First, we must come together on behalf of our common prosperity.
That's what we've already begun to do. Our unprecedented
actions to stimulate growth and restart the flow of credit
will help create jobs and prosperity within our borders
and within yours. We joined with our G20 partners to set
aside over a trillion dollars for countries going through
difficult times, recognizing that we have to provide assistance
to those countries that are most vulnerable. We will work
with you to ensure that the Inter-American Development Bank
can take the necessary steps to increase its current levels
of lending and to carefully study the needs for recapitalization
in the future. And we recognize that we have a special responsibility,
as one of the world's financial centers, to work with partners
around the globe to reform a failed regulatory system --
so that we can prevent the kinds of financial abuses that
led to this current crisis from ever happening again, and
achieve an economic expansion not just in the United States
but all across the hemisphere that is built not on bubbles,
but on sustainable economic growth.
We're also committed to combating inequality and creating
prosperity from the bottom up. This is something that I've
spoken about in the United States, and it's something that
I believe applies across the region. I've asked Congress
for $448 million in immediate assistance for those who have
been hit hardest by the crisis beyond our borders. And today,
I'm pleased to announce a new Microfinance Growth Fund for
the hemisphere that can restart the lending that can power
businesses and entrepreneurs in each and every country that's
represented here. This is not charity. (Applause.) Let me
be clear: This is not charity. Together, we can create a
broader foundation of prosperity that builds new markets
and powers new growth for all peoples in the hemisphere,
because our economies are intertwined.
Next, we can strengthen the foundation of our prosperity
and our security and our environment through a new partnership
on energy. Our hemisphere is blessed with bountiful resources,
and we are all endangered by climate change. Now we must
come together to find new ways to produce and use energy
so that we can create jobs and protect our planet.
So today, I'm proposing the creation of a new Energy and
Climate Partnership of the Americas that can forge progress
to a more secure and sustainable future. It's a partnership
that will harness the vision and determination of countries
like Mexico and Brazil that have already done outstanding
work in this area to promote renewable energy and reduce
greenhouse gas emissions. Each country will bring its own
unique resources and needs, so we will ensure that each
country can maximize its strengths as we promote efficiency
and improve our infrastructure, share technologies, support
investments in renewable sources of energy. And in doing
so, we can create the jobs of the future, lower greenhouse
gas emissions, and make this hemisphere a model for cooperation.
The dangers of climate change are part of a broad range
of threats to our citizens, so the third area where we must
work together is to advance our common security.
Today, too many people in the Americas live in fear. We
must not tolerate violence and insecurity, no matter where
it comes from. Children must be safe to play in the street,
and families should never face the pain of a kidnapping.
Policemen must be more powerful than kingpins, and judges
must advance the rule of law. Illegal guns must not flow
freely into criminal hands, and illegal drugs must not destroy
lives and distort our economy.
Yesterday, President Calderón of Mexico and I renewed
our commitment to combat the dangers posed by drug cartels.
Today, I want to announce a new initiative to invest $30
million to strengthen cooperation on security in the Caribbean.
And I have directed key members of my Cabinet to build and
sustain relations with their counterparts in the hemisphere
to constantly adjust our tactics, to build upon best practices,
and develop new modes of cooperation -- because the United
States is a friend of every nation and person who seeks
a future of security and dignity.
And let me add that I recognize that the problem will not
simply be solved by law enforcement if we're not also dealing
with our responsibilities in the United States. And that's
why we will take aggressive action to reduce our demand
for drugs, and to stop the flow of guns and bulk cash south
across our borders. (Applause.) And that's why I'm making
it a priority to ratify the Illicit Trafficking in Firearms
Convention as another tool that we can use to prevent this
from happening. And I also am mindful of the statement that's
been made earlier, that unless we provide opportunity for
an education and for jobs and a career for the young people
in the region, then too many will end up being attracted
to the drug trade. And so we cannot separate out dealing
with the drug issue on the interdiction side and the law
enforcement side from the need for critical development
in our communities.
Finally, we know that true security only comes with liberty
and justice. Those are bedrock values of the Inter-American
charter. Generations of our people have worked and fought
and sacrificed for them. And it is our responsibility to
advance them in our time.
So together, we have to stand up against any force that
separates any of our people from that story of liberty --
whether it's crushing poverty or corrosive corruption; social
exclusion or persistent racism or discrimination. Here in
this room, and on this dais, we see the diversity of the
Americas. Every one of our nations has a right to follow
its own path. But we all have a responsibility to see that
the people of the Americans [sic] have the ability to pursue
their own dreams in democratic societies.
There's been several remarks directed at the issue of the
relationship between the United States and Cuba, so let
me address this. The United States seeks a new beginning
with Cuba. I know that there is a longer -- (applause) --
I know there's a longer journey that must be traveled to
overcome decades of mistrust, but there are critical steps
we can take toward a new day. I've already changed a Cuba
policy that I believe has failed to advance liberty or opportunity
for the Cuban people. We will now allow Cuban Americans
to visit the islands whenever they choose and provide resources
to their families -- the same way that so many people in
my country send money back to their families in your countries
to pay for everyday needs.
Over the past two years, I've indicated, and I repeat today,
that I'm prepared to have my administration engage with
the Cuban government on a wide range of issues -- from drugs,
migration, and economic issues, to human rights, free speech,
and democratic reform. Now, let me be clear, I'm not interested
in talking just for the sake of talking. But I do believe
that we can move U.S.-Cuban relations in a new direction.
As has already been noted, and I think my presence here
indicates, the United States has changed over time. (Applause.)
It has not always been easy, but it has changed. And so
I think it's important to remind my fellow leaders that
it's not just the United States that has to change. All
of us have responsibilities to look towards the future.
(Applause.)
I think it's important to recognize, given historic suspicions,
that the United States' policy should not be interference
in other countries, but that also means that we can't blame
the United States for every problem that arises in the hemisphere.
That's part of the bargain. (Applause.) That's part of the
change that has to take place. That's the old way, and we
need a new way.
The United States will be willing to acknowledge past errors
where those errors have been made. We will be partners in
helping to alleviate poverty. But the American people have
to get some positive reinforcement if they are to be engaged
in the efforts to lift other countries out of the poverty
that they're experiencing.
Every nation has been on its own journey. Here in Trinidad
and Tobago, we must respect those differences while celebrating
those things that we share in common. Our nations were all
colonized by empires and achieved our own liberation. Our
people reflect the extraordinary diversity of human beings,
and our shared values reflect a common humanity -- the universal
desire to leave our children a world that is more prosperous
and peaceful than the one that we inherited.
So as we gather here, let us remember that our success
must be measured by the ability of people to live their
dreams. That's a goal that cannot be encompassed with any
one policy or communiqué. It's not a matter of abstractions
or ideological debates. It's a question of whether or not
we are in a concrete way making the lives of our citizens
better. It's reflected in the hopes of our children, in
the strength of our democratic institutions, and our faith
in the future.
It will take time. Nothing is going to happen overnight.
But I pledge to you that the United States will be there
as a friend and a partner, because our futures are inextricably
bound to the future of the people of the entire hemisphere.
And we are committed to shaping that future through engagement
that is strong and sustained, that is meaningful, that is
successful, and that is based on mutual respect and equality.
Thank you very much. (Applause.)
END
7:46 P.M. EDT