Obama:
'Russia doesn't make anything,' West must be firm with China
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[August 04, 2014]
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President
Barack Obama dismissed Russia as a nation that "doesn't make anything"
and said in an interview with the Economist magazine that the West needs
to be "pretty firm" with China as Beijing pushes to expand its role in
the world economy.
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Obama has tried to focus U.S. foreign policy on Asia, a response
to China's economic and military might. But for months, that "pivot"
has been overshadowed by a flurry of international crises, including
Russia's support for separatists in eastern Ukraine.
Russia is the world's third-largest oil producer and second-largest
natural gas producer. Europe relies heavily on Russian energy
exports, complicating the West's response to the Ukraine crisis.
Obama downplayed Moscow's role in the world, dismissing President
Vladimir Putin as a leader causing short-term trouble for political
gain that will hurt Russia in the long term.
"I do think it's important to keep perspective. Russia doesn't make
anything," Obama said in the interview.
"Immigrants aren't rushing to Moscow in search of opportunity. The
life expectancy of the Russian male is around 60 years old. The
population is shrinking," he said.
Obama told Putin last week that he believes Russia violated the 1988
Intermediate Range Nuclear Forces treaty designed to eliminate
ground-launched cruise missiles.
Speaking of Russia's "regional challenges," Obama said in the
interview: "We have to make sure that they don't escalate where
suddenly nuclear weapons are back in the discussion of foreign
policy."
Obama described U.S. tensions with China as "manageable."
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China is engaged in territorial disputes with its neighbors in the
oil-rich South China Sea, and frequently skirmishes with the West
over intellectual property issues.
"One thing I will say about China, though, is you also have to be
pretty firm with them, because they will push as hard as they can
until they meet resistance," Obama told the Economist.
"They're not sentimental, and they are not interested in
abstractions. And so simple appeals to international norms are
insufficient," he said.
Obama said he believes trade tensions will ease when China shifts
"from simply being the low-cost manufacturer of the world" and its
companies begin making higher-value items that need intellectual
property protections.
"There have to be mechanisms both to be tough with them when we
think that they're breaching international norms, but also to show
them the potential benefits over the long term," he said.
(Reporting by Roberta Rampton; Editing by Mohammad Zargham)
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