Talking to the press on April 15, Blinken, who has been on an official visit to Vietnam from April 14 to 16, said that he was in Vietnam at the behest of President Joe Biden to further broaden and deepen that partnership following the President’s phone talks with Party General Secretary Nguyen Phu Trong last month and building on earlier high-level visits, including from Vice President Kamala Harris, Secretary of Defence Lloyd Austin, US Trade Representative Katherine Tai, USAID Administrator Samantha Power, and recently members of the Congress.

leftcenterrightdel
U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken speaks at the press briefing in Hanoi on April 15.

Throughout his engagements on April 15, he focused on how the U.S. can continue to support Vietnam’s success – which is good for the Vietnamese people, Americans, and the entire region.

He stressed the two countries are cooperating for common interests, and that the U.S. believes by supporting Vietnam’s wishes, it can promote its own goals, from creating jobs for people and enhancing the strength of U.S. enterprises to making more strides to resolve the climate crisis and prevent pandemics.

The two sides also discussed mutual respect for the centrality of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) and the close partnership via regional economic frameworks, including the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) that the U.S. hosts this year and the Mekong - U.S. partnership.

The U.S. highly valued Vietnam’s indispensable role in the settlement of development challenges in the Mekong River region, Blinken went on, noting that his country is developing the bilateral economic partnership to help Vietnam boost important reforms in the fields of labour, intellectual property, and trade fairness, thus turning the Southeast Asian country into one of the fast-growing economies in the world.

The U.S. believes that Vietnam can achieve its goal of becoming a connected and high-income country by 2045 by pursuing growth that lifts all communities while building resilience to adapt to climate change, according to the diplomat.

He added the U.S. is activating the new bilateral climate initiatives that Vice President Harris announced during her visit to Vietnam in August 2021. It is capitalizing on such regional frameworks as the Just Energy Transition Partnership that Vietnam recently joined, in which it will invest 15.5 billion USD in helping Vietnam achieve net zero emissions by 2050 and carry out the Japan - U.S. - Mekong Power Partnership.

The U.S. is also cooperating in assisting Vietnam to build the public health capacity, including the establishment of a CDC Vietnam country office, the Secretary of State said, describing the close and fruitful cooperation amid the COVID-19 pandemic as a vivid demonstration of their ties in the period needing mutual assistance most.

He reaffirmed the U.S.’s respect to Vietnam’s political institutions, independence, sovereignty, and territorial integrity, as well as support for a strong, independent, resilient, and prosperous Vietnam.

The diplomat also underscored the U.S.’s commitment to address war consequences, including joint works to clear unexploded ordnance and the new 73 million USD contract to treat contaminated soil and sediment at Bien Hoa Air Base.

Blinken held that the two countries have made another step forwards to strengthen relations by breaking ground for the new U.S. embassy campus, which once completed, will match the vision for the future of the bilateral partnership.

The official expressed his belief that the Vietnam - US ties will develop more strongly in the coming decades.

Source: VNA