US has elevated its ties with India across the board: Obama

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U.S. President Barack Obama (R) shakes hands with India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi after their remarks to reporters following a meeting in the Oval Office at the White House in Washington, U.S. June 7, 2016. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst

Welcoming Indias growing role in the Asia-Pacific region, the US has said it will continue to work with other countries in the region for “addressing political and security challenges.”

“Weve elevated our ties with India across the board, and we welcome Indias growing role in the Asia Pacific, Obama said in a major policy speech on Asia-Pacific region in Laos yesterday.

This is for the first time that a US President has visited Laos.

Obama said to keep the peace and deter aggression, the US has deployed more of its most advanced military capabilities to the region, including ships and aircraft to Singapore.

“And by the end of the decade, a majority of our Navy and Air Force fleets will be based out of the Pacific. And our allies and partners are collaborating more with each other as well. So our alliances and defence capabilities in the Asia Pacific are as strong as theyve ever been,” he said.

“Weve also forged deeper ties with emerging economies and emerging powers. With Indonesia and Malaysia, were promoting entrepreneurship. Were opposing violent extremism, and were addressing environmental degradation,” he said.

“With my recent visit to Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City, weve shown our commitment to fully normalising our relationship with Vietnam,” Obama said.

“Weve deepened our cooperation with regional institutions, especially here in Southeast Asia. And as part of our new strategic partnership with ASEAN, weve agreed to key principles, including that ASEAN will remain central to peace, prosperity and progress in the Asia Pacific,” Obama said.

“The US is now part of the East Asia Summit, and together weve made it the leading forum in the region for addressing political and security challenges, including maritime security,” he said.

Obama said the US has worked to build a constructive relationship with China.

“Our two governments continue to have serious differences in important areas. The US will remain unwavering in our support for universal human rights, but at the same time, weve shown that we can work together to advance mutual interests.

The US and China are engaged across more areas than ever before — from preventing Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon, to our shared commitment to denuclearizing the Korean Peninsula, to our historic leadership together on climate change,” he said.

“So I will say it again:  The United States welcomes the rise of a China that is peaceful and stable and prosperous and a responsible player in global affairs, because we believe that will benefit all of us,” he added.

“In other words, the US is more deeply engaged across the Asia Pacific than we have been in decades. Our position is stronger. And weve sent a clear message that, as a Pacific nation, were here to stay. In good times and bad, you can count on the United States of America,” Obama said.