As Myanmar tiptoes toward democracy, Obama - the first US president to visit the former pariah state - denied he was endorsing the government amid criticism that his visit came too soon.
US President Barack Obama, left, meets with Myanmar's President Thein Sein at the Yangon Parliament building in Yangon, Myanmar, Monday, Nov. 19, 2012. This is the first visit to Myanmar by a sitting US president.
Carolyn Kaster/AP
EnlargePresident Obama?became the first American president to visit?Myanmar?on Monday, using a six-hour trip to balance US praise for the government's progress in shaking off military rule with pressure to complete the process of democratic reform.
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Obama, greeted by enthusiastic crowds in the former capital, Yangon, met President?Thein Sein, a former junta member who has spearheaded reforms since taking office in March 2011, and opposition leader?Aung San Suu Kyi.
"I shared with President?Thein Sein?our belief that the process of reform that he is taking is one that will move this country forward,"?Obama?told reporters, with?Thein Sein?at his side.?
"I recognize that this is just the first steps on what will be a long journey, but we think that a process of democratic reform and economic reform here in?Myanmar?... can lead to incredible development opportunities here,"?Obama?said, using the country name preferred by the government and former junta, rather than?Burma, which is used in the?United States.
Thein Sein, speaking in Burmese with an interpreter translating his remarks, responded that the two sides would move forward, "based on mutual trust, respect and understanding."
"We also reached agreement for the development of democracy in?Myanmar?and for promotion of human rights to be aligned with international standards," he added.
Obama's Southeast Asian trip, less than two weeks after his re-election, was aimed at showing how serious he is about shifting the US strategic focus eastwards as?America?winds down wars in?Iraq?and?Afghanistan. The so-called "Asia?pivot" is also meant to counter?China's rising influence.
The trip to?Myanmar?highlighted what the?White House?has touted as a major foreign policy achievement ? its success in pushing the country's generals to enact changes that have unfolded with surprising speed over the past year.
Tens of thousands of well-wishers, including children waving American and Burmese flags, lined?Obama's route from the airport after his arrival, cheering him as he went by.
'Icon of democracy'
Obama?met fellow Nobel Peace Prize laureate?Suu Kyi, who led the struggle against military rule and is now a lawmaker, at the lakeside home where she spent years under house arrest.
Addressing reporters afterwards,?Suu Kyi?thanked?Obama?for supporting the political reform process. But, speaking so softly she was barely audible at times, she cautioned that the most difficult time was "when we think that success is in sight."
"Then we have to be very careful that we are not lured by a mirage of success and that we are working towards genuine success for our people," she said.
Obama?recalled?Suu Kyi's years of captivity and said she was "an icon of democracy who has inspired people not just in this country but around the world."
"Today marks the next step in a new chapter between the?United States?and?Burma," he said, using the country name that she prefers. Before he left, the two embraced and he kissed her on the cheek.
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