President Obama & David Cameron
Prime Minister David Cameron opening remarks
Introduction
It’s great to welcome President Obama again on his fifth visit to the United Kingdom.
Barack has been President for more than 7 years, I have been Prime Minister for nearly 6 years.
And our 2 countries have been working together through some of the most difficult and troubled global times.
We’ve faced the aftermath of the banking crisis, the need to revive growth and create jobs in our economies, new threats to our security – from Russia in the east, to the rise of Islamist terrorism in the south – and of course huge global challenges like Ebola and climate change.
And through it all, the strong and essential partnership between our nations has never been more important.
When 70 years ago last month Winston Churchill first described the special relationship, it was not merely an enduring expression of friendship, it was a way of working together.
It was about 2 nations, kindred spirits, who share the same values, and, so often, the same approaches to the many issues that we face.
And just as for our predecessors, that has been true for Barack and me, whether we’ve been working to deliver economic security, national security, or new emerging challenges.
And today we’ve been discussing all 3.
Economic security
On economic security, we have succeeded in getting our economies growing and creating jobs for our people.
The global economy still faces serious challenges but last year Britain and the United States were the 2 fastest growing major economies in the world.
And we both know just how important trade deals are in driving global growth.
So Barack and I remain among the most determined to achieve our vision of a US-EU trade deal, and we’re working hard to push this forward because it would add billions to our economies and set the standards for the rest of the world to follow.
National security
On national security, together with our partners in the EU, we have used our economic muscle to avoid the calamity of an Iranian nuclear weapon.
We have delivered sanctions against Russia in response to its aggression against Ukraine.
We have secured the first ever global and legally binding deal on climate change, being formally signed today by over 150 governments at the United Nations.
And we have transformed the way that we use our aid, our diplomacy and our military together to make progress on some of the most difficult issues of our time.
For example, in east Africa, we have helped to turn around the prospects for Somalia, for instance, thanks to an EU operation – led by Britain and supported by America – its waters are no longer a safe haven for pirates.
And in West Africa, British leadership in Europe secured a billion euros to support our efforts in helping the people of the region to defeat the outbreak of Ebola, with Britain taking the lead in Sierra Leone, and the United States in Liberia, France in Guinea.
But just as we have made important progress in all these areas, so there are many more that need a lot more work.
There is no doubt that the situation in Libya is immensely challenging.
But we now finally have a Government of National Accord with whom we can work.
Defeating Daesh
While in Syria and Iraq we are continuing coalition efforts to defeat and degrade Daesh.
More than 25,000 Daesh fighters have now been killed, over 600 in the last month alone, with the total number of Daesh fighters now estimated to be at its lowest for about 2 years.
The Iraqi Security Forces are steadily pushing Daesh out of its territory, this week, almost entirely clearing them out of the town of Hit.
And in Syria, our partners have liberated the large Kurdish areas in the north-east, and cut off the main route between Raqqah and Mosul.
We also discussed efforts to deal with the migration crisis.
This doesn’t directly affect the United States and in the UK we have maintained our borders – and will continue to do so.
But we both know the challenge this poses to our friends and our allies – and to the continent of Europe.
This is the sort of challenge that can only be tackled effectively through international co-operation.
NATO is helping to reduce the number of migrants in the eastern Mediterranean.
And Barack and I have discussed how NATO might now contribute to the EU’s efforts in the central Mediterranean too.
People smugglers
We also need to do more to break the business model of the people smugglers. So together with our EU partners and the Libyan government, we will look at whether there is more we can do to strengthen the Libyan coastguard.
Barack and I will be discussing this further when we meet with the leaders of France, Germany and Italy in Hanover on Monday.
And this will be another opportunity to show that, how working together collectively, we can better protect ourselves from the threats we face.
Emerging challenges
We also covered a number of new and emerging challenges, where it will be more important than ever that we work together with our international partners to identify problems and deal with them rapidly.
Just as we have done with Ebola, we now need the same international co-operation on dealing with the Zika virus, on the challenge of anti-microbial resistance, on cyber security, and on tackling corruption.
Britain is holding a big anti-corruption summit here in London next month, which Secretary Kerry will attend.
And Barack and I have talked today about some of the things we want it to achieve. One of the biggest problems is that if you are a country that wants to take action against corruption, you have to go all around the globe to lobby for help.
So we would like to see an international anti-corruption coordination centre to help law enforcement agencies and investigators work together right across different jurisdictions.
And if we can get international agreement on this next month – both Britain and America will contribute people to help set it up.
Conclusion
All this work we have done together at the same time, I think we’ve got to know each other very well. I’m honoured to have Barack as a friend. He’s taught me the rules of basketball, he’s beaten me at table tennis.
I remember very fondly the BBQ we had in Number 10 Downing Street, serving servicemen and women who serve our countries together, here in the United Kingdom.
I’ve always found Barack someone who gives sage advice.
He’s a man with a very good heart.
He’s a very good friend and always will be a good friend, I know, to the United Kingdom.
Let me finish by saying this.
In all the areas we have discussed today, our collective power and reach is amplified by Britain’s membership of the European Union.
Let me be clear. When it comes to the special relationship between our 2 countries, there’s no greater enthusiast than me.
I am very proud to have had the opportunity to be Prime Minister and to stand outside the White House listening to this man, my friend Barack, say that the special relationship between our countries has never been stronger.
But I have never felt constrained in any way in strengthening this relationship by the fact that we are in the European Union.
In fact, quite the reverse.
We deliver for our people through all the international groups that we are part of.
We enhance our security through the membership of NATO.
We further our prosperity through the G7 and the G20.
And, like those organisations, Britain’s membership of the EU gives us a powerful tool to deliver on the prosperity and security that our people need, and to stand up for the values that our countries share.
And now I think is a time to stay true to those values, and to stick together with our friends and allies in Europe and around the world.