Joint Press Conference at the East Room, White House, in Washington DC
PM Lee Hsien Loong held a joint press conference with US President Barack Obama at the East Room, White House, in Washington DC on 2 August 2016. PM Lee was on an official visit to the United States from 31 July to 5 August 2016.
President Obama: First question is Margaret Brennan.
Q: Thank you, Mr President. Given the Republican nominee's recent comments about the Khan family and his statement that, if President, he would consider recognising Russia's annexation of Crimea, does it make you question his fitness to be President? And secondly, sir, on Libya. You have said in the past that the worst mistake of your presidency may have been your failure to plan for the aftermath of that 2011 NATO intervention in Libya. Do you see your new decision to bomb ISIS there as a direct result of that?
President Obama: Yes, I think the Republican nominee is unfit to serve as President. I said so last week, and he keeps on proving it. The notion that he would attack a Gold Star family that had made such extraordinary sacrifices on behalf of our country, the fact that he doesn’t appear to have basic knowledge around critical issues in Europe, in the Middle East, in Asia, means that he's woefully unprepared to do this job.
And this is not just my opinion. I think what's been interesting is the repeated denunciations of his statements by leading Republicans, including the Speaker of the House and the Senate Majority Leader, and prominent Republicans like John McCain. And the question I think that they have to ask themselves is, if you are repeatedly having to say in very strong terms that what he has said is unacceptable, why are you still endorsing him? What does this say about your party that this is your standard bearer? This isn’t a situation where you have an episodic gaffe. This is daily, and weekly, where they are distancing themselves from statements he's making. There has to be a point in which you say, this is not somebody I can support for President of the United States, even if he purports to be a member of my party.
And the fact that that has not yet happened makes some of these denunciations ring hollow. I don’t doubt their sincerity. I don’t doubt that they were outraged about some of the statements that Mr Trump and his supporters made about the Khan family. But there has to come a point at which you say somebody who makes those kinds of statements doesn’t have the judgment, the temperament, the understanding to occupy the most powerful position in the world. Because a lot of people depend on the White House getting stuff right, and this is different than just having policy disagreements. I recognise that they all profoundly disagree with myself or Hillary Clinton on tax policy or on certain elements of foreign policy. But there have been Republican Presidents with whom I disagreed with, but I didn’t have a doubt that they could function as President. I think I was right, and Mitt Romney and John McCain were wrong on certain policy issues, but I never thought that they couldn’t do the job. And had they won, I would have been disappointed, but I would have said to all Americans they are – this is our President, and I know they’re going to abide by certain norms and rules and common sense, will observe basic decency, will have enough knowledge about economic policy and foreign policy and our constitutional traditions and rule of law that our government will work, and then we’ll compete four years from now to try to win an election.
But that’s not the situation here. And that’s not just my opinion; that is the opinion of many prominent Republicans. There has to come a point at which you say, enough. And the alternative is that the entire party, the Republican Party, effectively endorses and validates the positions that are being articulated by Mr Trump. And as I said in my speech last week, I don’t think that actually represents the views of a whole lot of Republicans out there.
With respect to Libya, I have said on several occasions that we did the right thing in preventing what could have been a massacre, a blood bath in Libya. And we did so as part of an international coalition and under UN mandate. But I think that all of us, collectively, were not sufficiently attentive to what had to happen the day after, and the day after, and the day after that, in order to ensure that there were strong structures in place to assure basic security and peace inside of Libya.
The good news is, is that we now have the beginnings of a government in the Government of National Accord. They are serious about trying to bring all the factions together to start creating a basic security structure to begin to monitor Libya’s borders and to cooperate internationally to deal with issues like ISIL penetration on their territory. And at the request of that government, after they had already made significant progress against ISIL and had essentially pushed ISIL into a very confined area in and around Sirte, it is in America’s national security interest in our fight against ISIL to make sure that they’re able to finish the job. And so we’re working in partnership with them to assure that ISIL does not get a stronghold in Libya, even as Libya begins what is going to be a long process to establish a functioning government and security system there.
So the good news is that they recognise this terrorist organisation in their midst is contrary to their national interests as well as the world’s. And we’re hopeful that having completed this process of driving ISIL out, they will then be in a position to start bringing the parties together inside that country. And not only us, but the Europeans and other countries around the world have a great interest in seeing stability in Libya, because that – the absence of stability has helped to fuel some of the challenges that we’ve seen in terms of the migration crisis in Europe and some of the humanitarian tragedies that we’ve seen in the open seas between Libya and Europe.
Q: Thank you, PM Lee and President Obama. First question is for Prime Minister Lee. You’ve spoken about the continuation of the US rebalance being a significant part of peace and stability in Asia. How do you envision this continuation proceeding in the next 50 years, and what role do you see Singapore playing in this context? What are some of the hot-button issues that we’re likely to face as the US, hopefully, continues its rebalance?
Second question. You’ve mentioned the strong bipartisan links that Singapore has had with nine different US Presidents from both sides of the political divide, a very strong record there. How would we address a US leader which adopts the stance that it's more closed-off, more anti-globalisation, for example, if we see that in November?
President Obama, I have a question about the military collaboration which has been a cornerstone of the relationship between Singapore and the US, especially coming on the heels of the latest announcement of the medical team to the global coalition against ISIS. With the rising threat of terror in Asia, and indeed the rest of the world, the potential for military confrontation in the South China Sea, how do you see Singapore featuring in US plans to address this going forward?
And last question. “Four more years” is a phrase that I think you’ve been hearing a little bit in the past few weeks and months. And while that’s not possible – if it were, how would you continue developing relationships with Singapore? What would be your key focus going forward, maybe the next 50 years, as well? Thank you.
PM: 50 years is a very long time. 50 years ago, nobody imagined what the world would be like today or what Singapore would be like today, and that we would have such a deep and broad relationship and so many things to do together. We would like to build on this for the next 50 years. It depends on how each of our countries does in Singapore, whether they are able to remain stable, prosperous, open, successful; in America, whether you remain one of the dynamic, vibrant, leading economies in the world, in a world in which there are other powers, other centres of creativity and technology, science and progress, but yet it is a unique participant with a history of contributing to the world not just for your own interest but because you believe that the world should be a better place for all countries.
And if America can do that, and if Singapore can maintain our success, then I think there are many opportunities for us to make common cause together. And then, the rebalancing, which the President has enunciated and executed, will sustain and endure for many years to come. It will be a very different world. The countries will grow; other countries will slow down. Demographics will have a big factor to come. I mean, if we look at Japan, their population has been shrinking and they will have to do something, somehow, to turn it around. Otherwise 50 more years of population shrinking and you have a very small country left in terms of economy, in terms of influence internationally.
Singapore, too, has demographic issues. America has a demographic change – the population is not shrinking, but the composition is changing. In this situation, we have to adjust to a new world, maintaining our position and our ability to compete, and yet knowing that it is not going to be the same as it was in 1946 when America was about one-quarter of the world's GDP. So that is the crucial factor over the next 50 years.
As for what we do over bipartisan links, if there is a US leader who is more closed-off and wants to turn inward, I do not think this is the right forum or indeed there is any right forum for me to talk about US politics in public at this moment. We will work with whoever is the US administration, whichever party. We have worked with five Republican and four Democratic administrations. And our experience of American elections, presidential elections, has been that many pressures build up during the election campaign. And after the elections, in a calmer, cooler atmosphere, positions are re-thought, strategies are nuanced, and a certain balance is kept in the direction of the ship of state. It does not turn completely upside down. The Americans take pride in having a system with checks and balances so that it is not so easy to do things, but it is not so easy to completely mess things up. And we admire that and sometimes we depend upon that.
President Obama: He's absolutely right. The wisdom of our Founders.
With respect to military cooperation, obviously Singapore is a small country, but as I have said before, it punches above its weight. Because so much of our work in the Asia Pacific region is not a matter of active conflict, but rather creating an architecture, a framework of rules and norms that keeps the peace and that has underwritten security for the region and for us for many years now. And Singapore is so often the adult in the room, the level head, that can help us work with a wide range of countries around certain issues, help defuse tensions. In many ways, the diplomatic work and collaboration that we do with Singapore is as critical, if not more critical, than the work militarily.
But what is also true is the nature of threats today, when you think of cyber threats or our concern about enforcing sanctions against North Korea to ensure non-proliferation of nuclear materials, or being able to counter-message ISIL in a place like Southeast Asia, and ensure information-sharing with countries where there may be a budding terrorist threat -- those are all issues of military finesse and intelligence and precision, and those are areas where Singapore excels.
So in addition to being a very important logistical hub and centre for our operations, the partnership that we're able to maintain helps us to work with a whole range of other countries much more effectively than we would if Singapore weren't there and we were having to just try to gather up all these countries individually. And that's where ASEAN and the East Asia Summit I think has also been very important, because it is institutionalising many of these practices in ways that hopefully avoids conflict in the first place, which would be in everybody's interest.
As far as where the relationship goes, I think the Prime Minister is absolutely right –50 years from now, it's very hard to anticipate where we're going, but there are certain trends that I think are inevitable. The Asia Pacific region will continue to grow and it will continue to account for a larger share of the world’s economy. There are going to be countries in the Southeast Asian region that look to follow the path of Singapore into a mature, advanced economy. It is going to be a big market. And the United States is still going to have a massive interest in maintaining itself as a Asia Pacific power and in maintaining strong bonds of trade and commerce, and scientific exchange and educational exchange.
And given the close strategic interests, but maybe even more importantly, the close people-to-people ties between America and Singapore, I think that we can anticipate that that will be just as strong 50 years from now as it is today.
Singapore has to take into account not just American interests. China is a big neighbour and there are strong commercial ties and cultural ties there as well. And in that sense, Singapore actually can serve as a useful partner with us and with China to assure that the US-Sino relationship moves in a productive way, which I think would be in the interest of both countries.
So this is going to be a central engine for world growth. And if we do a good job in maintaining stability, ensuring a rules-based order, continuing to promote greater transparency in reducing corruption in the region so that all people are benefitting from the rapid growth that is taking place, then I think the future 50 years from now will be bright.
Jordan Fabian.
Q: Thank you, Mr President. You're here today touting the Trans-Pacific Partnership, but Hillary Clinton is against it. Her vice presidential nominee, Tim Kaine, has now reversed himself and is now against it. Donald Trump is, too, meaning that the next President is opposed to this deal. So my question is, if you take both candidates at their word, how do you plan to get Congress to pass this deal during the lame duck, and what’s your plan to convince members to do so given the opposition I just described?
And secondly, security officials inside and outside the government have said they’re almost certain that the hack of the Democratic National Committee came from Russia. Does it look to you like Russia is meddling in the US election? And what impact should that have on your administration’s relationship with Moscow?
President Obama: Well, right now, I'm President, and I'm for it. And I think I've got the better argument. And I've made this argument before; I'll make it again. We are part of a global economy. We're not reversing that. It can't be reversed, because it is driven by technology, and it is driven by travel and cargo containers, and the fact that the demand for products inside of our country means we've got to get some things from other places, and our export sector is a huge contributor to jobs and our economic wellbeing. Most manufactured products now involve a global supply chain where parts are made in all corners of the globe, and converge and then get assembled and packaged and sold. And so the notion that we're going to pull that up root and branch is unrealistic. Point number one.
Point number two. It is absolutely true, the evidence shows that some past trade deals have not delivered on all the benefits that were promised and had very localised costs. There were communities that were hurt because plants moved out. People lost jobs. Jobs were created because of those trade deals, but jobs were also lost. And people who experienced those losses, those communities didn't get as much help as they needed to.
And what is also true as a consequence of globalisation and automation, what you've seen is labour, workers losing leverage and capital being mobile, being able to locate around the world. That has all contributed to growing inequality both here in the United States, but in many advanced economies. So there’s a real problem, but the answer is not cutting off globalisation. The answer is, how do we make sure that globalisation, technology, automation – those things work for us, not against us. And TPP is designed to do precisely that.
Number one, it knocks out 18,000 tariffs that other countries place on American products and goods. Our economy currently has fewer tariffs, is more open than many of our trading partners. So if everybody agrees that we're going to have lower tariffs, that's good for American businesses and American workers. And we should want that, we should pursue it.
Number two, the complaint about previous trade deals was that labour agreements and environmental agreements sounded good, but they weren’t enforceable the same way you could complain about tariffs and actually get action to ensure that tariffs were not enforced. Well, TPP actually strengthens labour agreements and environmental agreements. And they are just as enforceable as any other part of the agreement. In fact, people take them so seriously that right now, for example, Vietnam is drafting and presenting unprecedented labour reforms in Vietnam, changing their constitution to recognise worker organisations in Vietnam for the first time.
So what we're doing is we're raising standards for workers in those countries, which means it’s harder for them to undercut labour standards here in the United States. The same is true for environmental standards. The same is true for things like human trafficking, where we’ve got a country like Malaysia taking really serious efforts to crack down on human trafficking. Why? Because TPP says you need to. It gives us leverage to promote things that progressives and people here in this country, including labour unions, say they care about.
So if you care about preventing abuse of workers, child labour, wildlife trafficking, overfishing, the decimation of forests, all those things are addressed in this agreement. I have not yet heard anybody make an argument that the existing trading rules are better for issues like labour rights and environmental rights than they would be if we got TPP passed.
And so I’m going to continue to make this case. And I’ve got some very close friends, people I admire a lot, but who I just disagree with them. And that’s okay. I respect the arguments that they’re making. They’re coming from a sincere concern about the position or workers and wages in this country. But I think I’ve got the better argument, and I’ve got the evidence to support it.
And hopefully, after the election is over and the dust settles, there will be more attention to the actual facts behind the deal and it won’t just be a political symbol or a political football. And I will actually sit down with people on both sides, on the right and on the left. I’ll sit down publicly with them and we’ll go through the whole provisions. I would enjoy that, because there’s a lot of misinformation.
I’m really confident I can make the case this is good for American workers and the American people. And people said we weren’t going to be able to get the trade authority to even present this before Congress, and somehow we muddled through and got it done. And I intend to do the same with respect to the actual agreement.
You had a second question. That was a long answer. I apologise, Mr Prime Minister, but every once in a while…
Q: The DNC hack by Russia.
President Obama: Oh. The FBI is still doing an investigation. You’re right that there have been some assessments made that this might have been a Russian hack. What I can tell you without commenting on the specifics is that there are a lot of countries out there that are trying to hack into our stuff – governmental databases, but also private sector databases and non-for-profit databases. And this is why we’ve stood up such an aggressive effort to strengthen our cybersecurity.
And we have provisions in place where if we see evidence of a malicious attack by a state actor, we can impose potentially certain proportional penalties. But that requires us to really be able to pin down and know what we’re talking about. And so I don’t want to get out ahead of the legal evidence and facts that we may have in order to make those kinds of decisions.
More broadly, we’re trying to promote international norms and rules that say there are certain things that states should not be doing to each other when it comes to cyberattacks. There are certain things that are out of bounds. And those norms I think are going to slowly build and get more adherence over time. But it’s – we’re still early in the process. I mean, in some ways, the explosion of the Internet and its importance to our communication systems has far outstripped the legal architecture to protect them, and we’re playing catch-up. But we’re going to have to keep on at it.
In terms of how it affects our relationship with Russia – look, I think we’ve already got a lot of differences with Russia on a whole bunch of issues. But I think that we’ve been able to try to stay focused on those areas where we still have a common interest, understanding that we have deep disagreements on issues like Ukraine, but perhaps, potentially, we have an interest in bringing an end to violence in Syria. How do we balance those issues – that’s pretty standard statecraft at this point with Russia.
If, in fact, Russia engaged in this activity, it’s just one on a long list of issues that me and Mr Putin talk about and that I’ve got a real problem with. And so I don’t think that it wildly swings what is a tough, difficult relationship that we have with Russia right now. But it’s not going to stop us from still trying to pursue solutions so that we can, for example, implement the Minsk Agreement and get Russia and those separatists to lay down arms and stop bullying Ukraine. That’s not going to stop us from trying to make sure that we can bring a political transition inside of Syria that can end the hardship there.
PM: Can I say something about the TPP? I do not want to wade into your domestic politics, but looking at it from somebody on the other side of the Pacific who has been intimately involved and, in fact, triggered the whole process, because we started the P4, the little FTA on which the TPP formed, and which has become this important initiative.
The economic arguments for the TPP in terms of trade – I think the President has presented them eloquently, what the benefits are to American companies. It is a deal which the countries have negotiated, each one providing market access on their side in return for gaining market access on the other side, each one committing to rules in exchange for the other side committing to rules. It is a hard-fought bargaining process. The negotiators spent many trips, many nights, many dawns, and fought it out. But actually, at the end of it, everybody must decide, is it a plus or a minus for them. And I think in your case, Mike Froman did a very good job as USTR. Our various trade representatives and negotiators did their best to make sure that they could bring back something which the political leaderships could stand by and support. And it is an achievement that all the members of the TPP, at the end of this, are still with us, and nobody has dropped out of this. So, obviously, there is something in it for each one of us. And I think we should also look at the other side of the economic benefit, which is not the producers – I am making, I am exporting, therefore I am earning a job – but also I am spending, I am consuming, I am importing, and because it's freed up trade, I am getting a wider range of products, of services, of opportunities, which will improve my livelihood. People talk about Walmart, that products come from all over Asia. Who benefits – Walmart? Many people in America, not just exporters, but even people living in the Rust Belt, people living in the Midwest. These are part of your everyday invisible standard of living, and yet it is real and it is valuable.
So in terms of the economic benefits, the TPP is a big deal. I think in terms of America's engagement of the region, you have put a reputation on the line. It is the big thing which America is doing in the Asia Pacific with the Obama administration, consistently over many, many years of hard work and pushing. Your partners, your friends who have come to the table, who have negotiated, each one of them has overcome some domestic political objection, some sensitivity, some political cost to come to the table and make this deal.
And if, at the end, waiting at the altar, the bride does not arrive, I think there are people who are going to be very hurt, not just emotionally but really damaged for a long time to come. Mr Abe, for example, several of his predecessors thought seriously about and decided not to participate in the TPP. They came very close. They prepared the ground, they walked away. But Mr Abe came through and decided to commit. Why? Because he wants to help. He wants his country to benefit and to open up its markets, and this is one way to do it. And you do not do this, while it hurts Mr Abe is one thing, but it hurts your relationship with Japan, your security agreement with Japan. And the Japanese, living in an uncertain world, depending on an American nuclear umbrella, will have to say, on trade, the Americans could not follow through; if it's life and death, whom do I have to depend upon? It is an absolutely serious calculation, which will not be said openly, but I have no doubts will be thought.
I think if you go beyond that, I would like to link up the TPP question with another question from Nicholas, which is, where do we go over the next 50 years? And that really depends whether we go towards interdependence and therefore peaceful cooperation, or whether we go for self-sufficiency, rivalry, and therefore a higher risk of conflict.
Asia has tried both. The world has tried both. In the 1930s with Smoot-Hawley, with the Depression, with a very difficult international environment, you went for protectionist policies, you had a rivalry with Japan, which led to war. After the war, because America was open, because you promoted trade, because you encouraged investments and encouraged other countries to open up, therefore the Asia Pacific has been peaceful and the Pax Americana has been a pax and not a war. If over the next 50 years, you continue to work towards interdependence and cooperation and mutual prosperity, then 50 years from now we can say these have been peaceful years, and we have made further progress together. But if you go in the opposite direction, and you decide that this is a big Pacific but it is big enough to split it down the middle, and one chunk is mine and the other chunk belongs to some of the Asians – China or India or Japan – I think that is a very different world. One of the reasons why you have a manageable relationship with China now is because you have trade with them. It is enormous, it is mutually beneficial; both sides want to maintain that relationship. If you did not, it would be like the Soviet Union during the Cold War when you had negligible trade and while you still had to find ways to work together, but it is much harder.
Now, the TPP does not include China, although some people think it does, but the TPP points the direction towards the world, towards your whole orientation of your society. And if you set the wrong direction, maybe in the next 50 years sometime you will turn around, but it will cost you many years and the world will have to pay quite a high price.
Q: My name is Lee U Wen from the Business Times in Singapore. Good afternoon, President Obama and Prime Minister Lee. I have two questions. The first is just a follow-up to the TPP. I mean, a lot has been said, everyone knows what is at stake, but what is the future of the TPP if it does not get ratified by January, the lame duck session? The fear is that if things wait too long, it might need to be re-opened up for renegotiation and that will probably kill the deal. So what is, post-January, how can we reassure the TPP nations and the people that there is the political will to get this done as soon as possible?
The second question is for President Obama. We are almost at the end of your eight years in office. I would like you to evaluate the progress of the US rebalance to Asia. What is something that you are most proud of? Is there something that you would have done differently? And what is your message to your successor, whoever he or she may be, to continue to engage Singapore, Southeast Asia, and the rest of the Asia Pacific? Thank you.
President Obama: Well, with respect to TPP, I thought that Prime Minister Lee’s points were right on target. And this is an economic agreement, but what we've learned in history is, is that you can't separate out economic interests and issues and security issues and interests.
And the Prime Minister is absolutely right. We have benefitted from enormous peace and prosperity around the world, an unprecedented period where the great powers were not engaged in conflict, in part because of growing interdependence. If you think about those parts of the world where we still see conflict, where we still see high levels of violence, they're typically places that are less integrated into the world economy, and there’s a reason for that.
So I think there is a powerful economic case, just a basic bread-and-butter case to be made about why this is good for Americans workers and good for American exports and ultimately good for American wages, if it’s structured properly. But I also think that there is a strong security component to this. And what I also think is important is for people to recognise that the alternative is not TPP or some imaginary circumstance in which suddenly we're able to sell goods around the world wherever we want, but nobody is able to sell goods to us; where we can operate anywhere around the world under fair rules, but they can't operate here in that fashion. That's not – whatever is being imagined as the alternative is not the alternative.
The alternative is what we have today – a situation in which we don't have as many protections around labour and environmental issues as we’d like; a situation in which there are countries like Japan that sell a lot of goods here, but that keep pretty restricted access for US companies and US workers to their markets. And Prime Minister Lee is right that Prime Minister Abe of Japan, for example, has taken some significant risks because he knows that he needs to make his economy more competitive, and as a consequence is willing to open access that we haven’t seen in the past. And that's a big market, still one of the top three economies in the world.
So the last point I’d make around this is China. As Prime Minister Lee mentioned, China is not a part of TPP. But if we don't establish strong rules, norms for how trade and commerce are conducted in the Asia Pacific region, then China will. And China is already engaging all the countries in the region around its own version of trade agreements. And they're sure not worried about labour standards, or environmental standards, or human trafficking, or anti-corruption measures. So you get a low-standard, lowest common denominator trade deal – and if America isn't creating high standards, then China’s rules will govern in the fastest-growing part of the world.
That's bad for us economically, but it's also bad for security interests. It's also bad for the interests in promoting norms against child labour, or against human trafficking, or making sure that everybody is working harder to raise conservation standards. And that's the alternative. That's the option. So I think it is very important for us to get this done.
In terms of assurances, nothing in life is certain, but we've got a pretty good track record of getting stuff done when I think it's important. And I will say this – that this actually is not just a Obama administration initiative. This concept began in a Republican administration. We pushed it through. We made it happen. We made sure that the things that I care about in terms of labour and environmental standards were incorporated into it. But, historically, this has had strong bipartisan support.
So the bottom line is, we'll go out there and we're going to make those arguments, and ultimately I think we're going to be successful.
In terms of my rebalance legacy, across the board we are just in the game. We are focused on Asia in a way that we weren’t when I came into office. And the countries in Asia have noticed. Our alliances are stronger. Our security arrangements are deeper – whether in Australia, or the Philippines, or Singapore. Our defence budgets reflect our commitment to things like maritime security in the region. The continuing efforts around building the East Asia Summit architecture means that there’s the kind of day-to-day interaction around a whole range of issues, whether it's disaster relief, or public health issues, or counterterrorism. There's consultations that are taking place today were not taking place eight years ago.
So I think on every dimension, we are in a much stronger position to engage, influence, and learn from our Asia Pacific partners.
The thing I probably enjoy most has been our Young Southeast Asian Leaders programme, just because whenever I meet with the young people from ASEAN countries, I am inspired. It makes me very optimistic about the future and what’s going to happen over those next 50 years. Because if you ask them about the future that they want to see, they are very much committed to an interdependent world, a world in which people are learning and exchanging ideas, and engaged in scientific and educational exchange, and a world in which people’s different cultures and backgrounds are a source of strength and cooperation as opposed to conflict and fear.
And that's true in Southeast Asia. That's true in Africa. That's true in Latin America. That's true in Europe. A lot of this fear – the choice that was posed by Prime Minister Lee between interdependence and self-sufficiency that is not achievable, and ultimately rivalry and conflict – those who opt for rivalry are folks who are looking backwards. You talk to young people around the world, they understand that interdependence is the way that we're going to assure peace and prosperity for all of us for years to come.
And so that may be the thing that has some of the most lasting impact. I suspect in some of those town hall meetings I've had, there are some future prime ministers and presidents and business leaders and non-for-profit leaders that are going to do great things, and I'm glad to have been able to have played a small part in that.
PM: Thank you. Thank you very much.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Please click here for the White House release of President Obama's and PM Lee's remarks at the Joint Press Conference: https://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2016/08/02/remarks-president-obama-and-prime-minister-lee-singapore-joint-press
Explore recent content
Explore related topics