Remarks by President Obama and President Funes of El Salvador after Meeting

By The White House on 03/08/2010 – 2:20 pm PDT -- Headlines

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And so my main goal today is communicating how interested the United States is in continuing to be an equal partner with El Salvador and other countries in the region — a relationship based on mutual interest and mutual respect.  And I wish him all the best as he continues to pursue his goals for a more prosperous and secure El Salvador.

PRESIDENT FUNES:  (As translated.)  And to the press, I am extremely surprised about this excellent summary.  After 20 years of being a journalist, I thought that I could summarize our interview of more than an hour in a better way, but President Obama has surprised me in how he has summarized the meeting.

I would like to talk about two or three things.  I have spoken to President Obama about this, and I want to commend him because he shares the same democratic values, and his new vision of how he is dealing with the hemisphere and particularly in Central America.

Traditionally Central America has been seen as a migratory problem for the United States.  But Central America, and in particular El Salvador, needs to generate the opportunities of work in order to be able to keep people back in El Salvador.  And as they have a better job generation, and people have better health and education, people will be able to remain in countries and have a better life.

We have spoken with President Obama about how to make a strategic alliance and face common problems that we have in the nation, such as drug traffic and organized crime.  And the alliance that we wish to make is in order to combat poverty and to get people out of marginal situations and out of the exclusion.  This has to be a regional effort and we have to — and they have social policies that we need to build together.

The U.S. needs to be a strategic — or we hope it will be a strategic partner for our country.  And in this way, the people will have better social well-being and we will be able to combat drug traffic, organized crime, because they will not find — as we have new policies, they will not find fertile grounds.

I’m not here to ask President Obama to do for us what we haven’t been able to do for such a long time.  We have a big challenge on our hands, and one of our challenges is to have better tax collection in order to have more resources for the use of our government.  This has been going on for many decades, but basically what we’re looking for is funding for the poor and small and medium enterprises in order to be able to create a better economic situation in El Salvador.

We have to re-strengthen the productive network, and we have to have a different vision.  But we definitely cannot blame the United States for the situation that we are in.  And instead, we are looking for the United States to become a strategic partner, as President Obama so well said; not a bigger partner or a lesser partner but an equal partner and an efficient partner.

And as President Obama’s administration, we hope that there will be a good alliance and it will be a better world for us and for all — and a better administration.

PRESIDENT OBAMA:  All right, thank you, everybody.

END
4:12 P.M. EST

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