THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
________________________________________________________________
For Immediate Release November 18, 2010
REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
AT A MEETING ON THE NEW START TREATY
Roosevelt Room
We’ve taken the time to do this right. To ensure that the treaty got a fair hearing, we submitted to the Senate last spring. Because of the leadership of John Kerry and Dick Lugar, there have been 18 hearings on this subject. There have been multiple briefings. It has been fully and carefully vetted, and has the full endorsement of our nation’s military leadership. Vice Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Hoss Cartwright is here and will confirm that this is in our national security interests.
My administration is also prepared to go the extra mile to ensure that our remaining stockpile and nuclear infrastructure is modernized -- which I know is a key concern of many around this table and also many on Capitol Hill. We’ve committed to invest $80 billion on the effort to modernize over the next decade. And based on our consultations with Senator Kyl, we’ve agreed to request an additional $4.1 billion over the next five years.
So the key point here is this is not about politics -– it’s about national security. This is not a matter that can be delayed. Every month that goes by without a treaty means that we are not able to verify what’s going on on the ground in Russia. And if we delay indefinitely, American leadership on nonproliferation and America’s national security will be weakened.
Now, as Senator Reid said yesterday, there is time on the Senate calendar to get this treaty ratified this year. So I’ve asked Vice President Biden to focus on this issue day and night until it gets done. It’s important to our national security to let this treaty go up for a vote. I’m confident that it’s the right thing to do. The people around this table think it’s the right thing to do.
I would welcome the press to query the leadership here, people who have been national security advisors, secretaries of state, and key advisors -- defense secretaries for Democratic and Republican administrations, and they will confirm that this is the right thing to do.
So we’ve got a lot on our plate during this lame duck session. I recognize that given the difficulties in the economy that there may be those, perhaps Democrats and Republicans on the Hill, who think this is not a top priority. I would not be emphasizing this and these folks would not have traveled all this way if we didn’t feel that this was absolutely important to get done now.
And so I’m looking forward to strong cooperation between Democrats and Republicans on Capitol Hill, as exemplified by John Kerry and Dick Lugar, to get this done over the course of the next several weeks.
All right? Thank you very much.
Q Do you have the votes in the Senate?
THE PRESIDENT: I’m confident that we should be able to get the votes. Keep in mind that every President since Ronald Reagan has presented a arms treaty with Russia and been able to get ratification. And for the most part, these treaties have been debated on the merits; the majority of them have passed overwhelmingly with bipartisan support. There’s no reason that we shouldn’t be able to get that done this time as well.
END 10:42 A.M. EST
Obama congratulates Kikwete, Shein, SeifBy DAILY NEWS Reporter, 15th November 2010 @ 12:04 , Total hits: 224THE United States President, Mr Barack Obama, has congratulated President Jakaya Kikwete for being re-elected for the second term in office in the last month elections.
In a statement issued by the US Embassy in Dar es Salaam on Monday, President Obama says he looks forward to working with President Kikwete and members of the 10th Parliament in building on the long, fruitful partnership between the two nations to advance shared development goals and tackle the many global challenges ahead.
“I also wish to extend my congratulations to Zanzibar’s President Ali Mohamed Shein, First Vice-President Seif Sharif Hamad, the new unity government and most especially the Zanzibari people, who have made history by conducting a peaceful contest after years of strife,” says Mr Obama.
He has further commended the people of Tanzania on their continued commitment to a tradition of multiparty contests since it was introduced in the country in 1992.
“When we met at the White House in 2009, I said to President Kikwete the people of the United States support all Tanzanians in your efforts to institutionalise democratic, transparent governance, to realise the full potential of your Union and to ensure that the steps you have taken together toward a lasting peace and prosperity cannot be reversed,” he says.
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