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Transcripts For CSPAN President 20240702 : comparemela.com
CSPAN President July 2, 2024
President biden the sun is over there. I dont need these. [laughter. ] hello, folks. Mr. Prime minister, weve been in close touch since the moment you came into office please, sit down; im sorry since you came into office, and weve met all around the world. And now its wonderful to have you by my side here at the white house and as we advance our
Alliance Even
more more than its already been advanced. Its strong now; its getting stronger. Before i get to the progress australia and the
United States
have made today, i want to say just a very few words about the situation in the middle east. The anger, the hurt, the sense of outrage that the israeli people are feeling after the brutally inflicted devastation by hamas is completely understandable. Israel has the right and, i would add, responsibility to respond to the slaughter of their people. And we will ensure israel has what it needs to defend itself against these terrorists. Thats a guarantee. We also have to remember that hamas does not represent let me say it again hamas does not represent the vast majority of the
Palestinian People
in the gaza strip or anywhere else. Hamas is hiding behind
Palestinian Civilians
, and its despicable and, not surprisingly, cowardly as well. This also puts an added burden on israel while they go after hamas. But that does not lessen the need for to operate and align with the laws of war for israeli it has to do everything in its power israel has to do everything in its power, as difficult as it is, to protect innocent civilians. And its difficult. I want to thank the israelis and the palestinian excuse me, and president sisi of egypt for working with the
United States
to make sure that food, water, and medical supplies are getting through to innocent people in gaza. The flow needs to increase, and were working very hard with our partners to make that happen. Were also working around the clock, together with our partners in the in the region, to secure the release of hostages and including american citizens behind left behind and held by hamas and the safe passage of foreign nationals out of gaza not just americans, but australians and a whole range of people who are trapped in gaza. I also want take a moment to look ahead toward the future that we seek. Israelis and palestinians equally deserve to live side by side in safety, dignity, and peace. And theres no going back to the status quo as it stood on october the 6th. That means ensuring hamas can no longer terrorize israel and use
Palestinian Civilians
as human shields. It also means that when this crisis is over, there has to be a vision of what comes next. And in our view, it has to be a twostate solution. It means a concentrated effort from all the parties israelis, palestinians, regional partners,
Global Leaders
to put us on a path toward peace. In the past few weeks, ive spoken with leaders throughout the region including
King Abdullah
of jordan, president sisi of egypt, president abbas of the palestinian authority, and just yesterday with the crown prince of saudi arabia about making sure theres real hope in the region for a
Better Future
; about the need and i mean this sincerely about the need to work toward a greater integration for israel while insisting that the aspirations of the
Palestinian People
will be part of that future as well. Im convinced one of the reasons hamas attacked when they did and i have no proof of this; just my instinct tells me is because of the progress we were making towards regional integration for israel and regional integration overall. And we cant leave that work behind. And one more word on this. I continue to be alarmed about extremist settlers attacking palestinians in the west bank that pouring gasoline on fire is what its like. They this was the deal. The deal was made, and theyre attacking palestinians in places that theyre entitled to be, and it has to stop. They have to be held accountable. And it has to stop now. Mr. Prime minister, i want to thank you for your partnership and your friendship, quite frankly, during this difficult hour. Over the past few weeks and for many months before, weve seen each other and weve seen our
Alliance Grow
more critical than ever. And we need to continue to make this important progress. In our discussions today, weve done just that. First, were pioneering new advancements in innovation that is deepening our cooperation in fields like biotechnology, advanced batteries, quantum computing, cybersecurity, and a lot more. Were also signing a new
Technology Safeguards
agreement to create more opportunities for
American Space
companies to launch vehicles from australia. And weve launched a new
Artificial Intelligence
initiative between our
National Laboratories
to drive revolutionary and responsible research on humanitys
Biggest Challenges
fighting hunger, curbing pandemics, predicting natural disasters, and ending cancer as we know it as a matter of a fact, both of our wives are over at the
Cancer Institute
right now and so much more. Second, were accelerating action on
Climate Change
. I thought we had a very good meeting this morning and with secretary kerry and your team, and were all together on that. In may, we established the climate,
Critical Minerals
, and
Clean Energy Compact
to elevate our climate cooperation alongside our defense and economic cooperation, and were already beginning to see the impacts. Weve created a
Critical Minerals
taskforce to build secure
Critical Minerals
supply chains. Were also investing in sustainable infrastructure in the pacific islands, including 65 million for a subsea communication cable to boost connectivity in the region. And were modernizing funding for small and mediumsized businesses across the indopacific to help to help the transition to clean energy. And finally, the alliance between australia and the
United States
is an anchor and i believe this with every fiber of my being an anchor to peace and prosperity in the indopacific and, quite frankly, around the world. We see this through our work of the
Quad Partners
india and japan to ensure the indopacific remains free, open, prosperous, and secure. I also see it through aukus, where, together with the
United Kingdom
, were making a generational investments in our shared security. Last week, i sent congress a budget request with commitments to boost our submarine production and maintenance capacity here in the
United States
. And i want to thank you, mr. Prime minister, for the historic
Investments Australia
has made to strengthen the submarine
Industry Base
as well. Democrats and republicans alike understand the
Strategic Value
aukus brings to our nations, and i urge congress to pass our aukus legislation this year. We also see the strength of our alliance in our unwavering support for ukraine both countries as it defends its sovereignty against putins brutality and aggression. Australia is a critical partner together with the
United States
and 50 other nations 50 other nations weve been able to put together all doing our part to support ukraine. And i want to thank you, mr. Prime minister, for the new package of military aid you recently announced, and its for ukraine. Look, australia and the
United States
also share, in my view, the commitment to upholding the
International Rules
of the road, including freedom of navigation. Just this past week, the prc vessels acted dangerously and unlawfully as our philippine friends conducted a routine resupply mission within their own exclusive
Economic Zone
in the
South China Sea
. I want to be clear i want to be very clear the
United States
defense commitment to the philippines is ironclad. The
United States
Defense Agreement
to the philippines is ironclad. Any attack on the filipino aircraft, vessels, or armed forces will invoke our mutual defense treaty with the philippines. And, mr. Prime minister, today we renewed our commitment to defend the values that are at the heart of this alliance, and we continue to stand as one to forge a
Better Future
for both of us and all the region. So i want to thank you, again for being here. Thank you for your partnership and your leadership in this critical moment. And id like to now turn it over to you. Prime minister albanese well, thank you very much, mr. President. Australia and the
United States
have stood together for more than a century. And it is indeed a great honor for me to stand alongside my friend,
President Biden
, here today. At the heart of our alliance, the enduring values that our people hold in common are faith in freedom and democracy, a belief in opportunity, a determination to build a more prosperous and more peaceful world. Those values are timeless, and they have never mattered more than right now. Thats why the relationship between australia and the
United States
has never been more important. And it, of course it has never been stronger than it is right now. We
Work Together
to promote peace and security across the indopacific, to uphold the stability which has generated unprecedented
Economic Opportunity
for the nations and the people of our region. For australia, this is about investing in our capability and investing in our relationships. Today,
President Biden
and i discussed the progress being made on australias acquisition of nuclearpowered, conventionally armed submarines, which we announced with
Prime Minister
rishi sunak in march in san diego. We are conscious that this is only the second time in history that the
United States
has shared this technology. And this fact speaks to the deep trust of our alliance and the significance of the challenge that we face together. Australia appreciates the administrations efforts to operationalize aukus and work with congress to pass the legislation needed to realize our aukus ambitions. And i certainly appreciate, once again, mr. President , your call for this legislation to be passed this year. Aukus will drive innovation and cooperation to provide the
United States
, australia, and the
United Kingdom
with improved capability to help secure peace and stability in the indopacific. Our cooperation is already unlocking transformative opportunities for jobs and skills and research, from virginia to
South Australia
to western australia. Australia and the u. S. Have a strong and growing partnership in new technology, from medical research to ai. And i join
President Biden
in welcoming microsofts 5 billion additional investment in australia, which we announced this week here in washington. The president and i agree that innovation is vital to addressing the environmental challenge of
Climate Change
and seizing the
Economic Opportunities
of clean energy. The climate,
Critical Minerals
and
Clean Energy Transformation
compact that we signed in may in hiroshima is very much central to this. Climate change and clean
Energy Becomes
a third pillar of our alliance, alongside our
Security Cooperation
through anzus and our strong economic ties with the
Free Trade Agreement
between our nations at its center. The compact lays the foundation for our two countries to advance climate and
Clean Energy Action
this decade, both at home and globally. Today, we agreed new measures under the compact to support our energy transition, including the establishment of an australian and u. S. Clean
Energy Industry
council, comprised of business and
Public Finance
leaders to advise government on clean
Energy Industry
development and cooperation. Were working closely with the
United States
to build endtoend sustainable, reliable, and transparent supply chains for
Critical Minerals
. Of course, australia has abundant supplies of these
Critical Minerals
that will drive our economies throughout this century lithium, cobalt, copper, vanadium, and rare earths. We want to connect that with american markets, investors, and technology in a way that creates new jobs and opportunities for industry and workers in both of our nations. Cheaper, cleaner energy will reduce costs for households, but it will also power a new generation of manufacturing. Our alliance is also delivering for the indopacific region bilaterally and increasingly with our partners in the quad. Australia and america are supporting the connectivity of the region, and today we announced a new funding for subsea cables in the pacific; further support for infrastructure development, including efforts to increase the pacifics access to financing; and that well
Work Together
through a new
Pacific Banking Forum
to ensure that our friends in the pacific maintain access to the
Global Financial
system. Today, we also discussed our joint position opposing russias illegal and immoral invasion of ukraine. Australia stands with ukraine. And
President Biden
welcomed the package for further assistance that i announced yesterday. This will provide ukraine with additional military assistance, utilizing the
Innovative Technology
thats produced by australias
Defense Industry
partners. Finally, of course, last night and again today, we spoke about the situation in israel and gaza. Australia unequivocally condemns the terrorism of hamas. We grieve for the loss of every innocent life, whether that be israeli or palestinian. In times of crisis, respect for
International Humanitarian
law is paramount. It is a recognition of our common humanity. And i commend the president for his leadership that he has shown and the example that he has set. Today, i announced that australia will provide an additional 15 million in humanitarian assistance for civilians in gaza this adds to the 10 million australia has already committed and will help deliver lifesaving assistance such as
Emergency Water
and medical services. The friendship between australia and the
United States
was forged in hard times. Weve served and sacrificed together in the cause of peace. Weve helped each other through natural disasters. Australians and americans share a rich history, but we always have our eye on the future. Were united by a determination to overcome the challenges that we face, and we share an ambition to seize those opportunities which lay ahead of us. Ours is indeed an alliance in which we celebrate what weve achieved up to now but we focus on the future a future of great opportunities, one thats stronger because of this alliance. President biden all right. Were going to take a few questions now. Mr. Garrison, usa today. Reporter thank you, mr. President and
Prime Minister
albanese. Welcome to washington. Mr. President , i want to ask about the conflict the war in the middle east. 24 u. S. Troops have been injured during 10 drone or rocket attacks on bases in iraq and 3 in syria over the past week. Youve told iran to, quote, be careful as your administration tries to prevent the israelihamas war from expanding into a larger middle east conflict. But should americans be worried that the war already is escalating . And after you answer that question, id like one more followup, please. President biden about one or two more, huh . Two or three. [laughter] joey, look, we have had troops in the region since 9 11 to go after isis and prevent its reasser reemergence in in both anyway, in the region having nothing to do with israel at all. My warning to the ayatollah was that if they continue to move against those troops, we will respond, and he should be prepared. It has nothing to do with israel. Reporter well, let me let me ask my followup here. I want to discuss oh, here we go yeah, your conversations with
Alliance Even<\/a> more more than its already been advanced. Its strong now; its getting stronger. Before i get to the progress australia and the
United States<\/a> have made today, i want to say just a very few words about the situation in the middle east. The anger, the hurt, the sense of outrage that the israeli people are feeling after the brutally inflicted devastation by hamas is completely understandable. Israel has the right and, i would add, responsibility to respond to the slaughter of their people. And we will ensure israel has what it needs to defend itself against these terrorists. Thats a guarantee. We also have to remember that hamas does not represent let me say it again hamas does not represent the vast majority of the
Palestinian People<\/a> in the gaza strip or anywhere else. Hamas is hiding behind
Palestinian Civilians<\/a>, and its despicable and, not surprisingly, cowardly as well. This also puts an added burden on israel while they go after hamas. But that does not lessen the need for to operate and align with the laws of war for israeli it has to do everything in its power israel has to do everything in its power, as difficult as it is, to protect innocent civilians. And its difficult. I want to thank the israelis and the palestinian excuse me, and president sisi of egypt for working with the
United States<\/a> to make sure that food, water, and medical supplies are getting through to innocent people in gaza. The flow needs to increase, and were working very hard with our partners to make that happen. Were also working around the clock, together with our partners in the in the region, to secure the release of hostages and including american citizens behind left behind and held by hamas and the safe passage of foreign nationals out of gaza not just americans, but australians and a whole range of people who are trapped in gaza. I also want take a moment to look ahead toward the future that we seek. Israelis and palestinians equally deserve to live side by side in safety, dignity, and peace. And theres no going back to the status quo as it stood on october the 6th. That means ensuring hamas can no longer terrorize israel and use
Palestinian Civilians<\/a> as human shields. It also means that when this crisis is over, there has to be a vision of what comes next. And in our view, it has to be a twostate solution. It means a concentrated effort from all the parties israelis, palestinians, regional partners,
Global Leaders<\/a> to put us on a path toward peace. In the past few weeks, ive spoken with leaders throughout the region including
King Abdullah<\/a> of jordan, president sisi of egypt, president abbas of the palestinian authority, and just yesterday with the crown prince of saudi arabia about making sure theres real hope in the region for a
Better Future<\/a>; about the need and i mean this sincerely about the need to work toward a greater integration for israel while insisting that the aspirations of the
Palestinian People<\/a> will be part of that future as well. Im convinced one of the reasons hamas attacked when they did and i have no proof of this; just my instinct tells me is because of the progress we were making towards regional integration for israel and regional integration overall. And we cant leave that work behind. And one more word on this. I continue to be alarmed about extremist settlers attacking palestinians in the west bank that pouring gasoline on fire is what its like. They this was the deal. The deal was made, and theyre attacking palestinians in places that theyre entitled to be, and it has to stop. They have to be held accountable. And it has to stop now. Mr. Prime minister, i want to thank you for your partnership and your friendship, quite frankly, during this difficult hour. Over the past few weeks and for many months before, weve seen each other and weve seen our
Alliance Grow<\/a> more critical than ever. And we need to continue to make this important progress. In our discussions today, weve done just that. First, were pioneering new advancements in innovation that is deepening our cooperation in fields like biotechnology, advanced batteries, quantum computing, cybersecurity, and a lot more. Were also signing a new
Technology Safeguards<\/a> agreement to create more opportunities for
American Space<\/a> companies to launch vehicles from australia. And weve launched a new
Artificial Intelligence<\/a> initiative between our
National Laboratories<\/a> to drive revolutionary and responsible research on humanitys
Biggest Challenges<\/a> fighting hunger, curbing pandemics, predicting natural disasters, and ending cancer as we know it as a matter of a fact, both of our wives are over at the
Cancer Institute<\/a> right now and so much more. Second, were accelerating action on
Climate Change<\/a>. I thought we had a very good meeting this morning and with secretary kerry and your team, and were all together on that. In may, we established the climate,
Critical Minerals<\/a>, and
Clean Energy Compact<\/a> to elevate our climate cooperation alongside our defense and economic cooperation, and were already beginning to see the impacts. Weve created a
Critical Minerals<\/a> taskforce to build secure
Critical Minerals<\/a> supply chains. Were also investing in sustainable infrastructure in the pacific islands, including 65 million for a subsea communication cable to boost connectivity in the region. And were modernizing funding for small and mediumsized businesses across the indopacific to help to help the transition to clean energy. And finally, the alliance between australia and the
United States<\/a> is an anchor and i believe this with every fiber of my being an anchor to peace and prosperity in the indopacific and, quite frankly, around the world. We see this through our work of the
Quad Partners<\/a> india and japan to ensure the indopacific remains free, open, prosperous, and secure. I also see it through aukus, where, together with the
United Kingdom<\/a>, were making a generational investments in our shared security. Last week, i sent congress a budget request with commitments to boost our submarine production and maintenance capacity here in the
United States<\/a>. And i want to thank you, mr. Prime minister, for the historic
Investments Australia<\/a> has made to strengthen the submarine
Industry Base<\/a> as well. Democrats and republicans alike understand the
Strategic Value<\/a> aukus brings to our nations, and i urge congress to pass our aukus legislation this year. We also see the strength of our alliance in our unwavering support for ukraine both countries as it defends its sovereignty against putins brutality and aggression. Australia is a critical partner together with the
United States<\/a> and 50 other nations 50 other nations weve been able to put together all doing our part to support ukraine. And i want to thank you, mr. Prime minister, for the new package of military aid you recently announced, and its for ukraine. Look, australia and the
United States<\/a> also share, in my view, the commitment to upholding the
International Rules<\/a> of the road, including freedom of navigation. Just this past week, the prc vessels acted dangerously and unlawfully as our philippine friends conducted a routine resupply mission within their own exclusive
Economic Zone<\/a> in the
South China Sea<\/a>. I want to be clear i want to be very clear the
United States<\/a> defense commitment to the philippines is ironclad. The
United States<\/a>
Defense Agreement<\/a> to the philippines is ironclad. Any attack on the filipino aircraft, vessels, or armed forces will invoke our mutual defense treaty with the philippines. And, mr. Prime minister, today we renewed our commitment to defend the values that are at the heart of this alliance, and we continue to stand as one to forge a
Better Future<\/a> for both of us and all the region. So i want to thank you, again for being here. Thank you for your partnership and your leadership in this critical moment. And id like to now turn it over to you. Prime minister albanese well, thank you very much, mr. President. Australia and the
United States<\/a> have stood together for more than a century. And it is indeed a great honor for me to stand alongside my friend,
President Biden<\/a>, here today. At the heart of our alliance, the enduring values that our people hold in common are faith in freedom and democracy, a belief in opportunity, a determination to build a more prosperous and more peaceful world. Those values are timeless, and they have never mattered more than right now. Thats why the relationship between australia and the
United States<\/a> has never been more important. And it, of course it has never been stronger than it is right now. We
Work Together<\/a> to promote peace and security across the indopacific, to uphold the stability which has generated unprecedented
Economic Opportunity<\/a> for the nations and the people of our region. For australia, this is about investing in our capability and investing in our relationships. Today,
President Biden<\/a> and i discussed the progress being made on australias acquisition of nuclearpowered, conventionally armed submarines, which we announced with
Prime Minister<\/a> rishi sunak in march in san diego. We are conscious that this is only the second time in history that the
United States<\/a> has shared this technology. And this fact speaks to the deep trust of our alliance and the significance of the challenge that we face together. Australia appreciates the administrations efforts to operationalize aukus and work with congress to pass the legislation needed to realize our aukus ambitions. And i certainly appreciate, once again, mr. President , your call for this legislation to be passed this year. Aukus will drive innovation and cooperation to provide the
United States<\/a>, australia, and the
United Kingdom<\/a> with improved capability to help secure peace and stability in the indopacific. Our cooperation is already unlocking transformative opportunities for jobs and skills and research, from virginia to
South Australia<\/a> to western australia. Australia and the u. S. Have a strong and growing partnership in new technology, from medical research to ai. And i join
President Biden<\/a> in welcoming microsofts 5 billion additional investment in australia, which we announced this week here in washington. The president and i agree that innovation is vital to addressing the environmental challenge of
Climate Change<\/a> and seizing the
Economic Opportunities<\/a> of clean energy. The climate,
Critical Minerals<\/a> and
Clean Energy Transformation<\/a> compact that we signed in may in hiroshima is very much central to this. Climate change and clean
Energy Becomes<\/a> a third pillar of our alliance, alongside our
Security Cooperation<\/a> through anzus and our strong economic ties with the
Free Trade Agreement<\/a> between our nations at its center. The compact lays the foundation for our two countries to advance climate and
Clean Energy Action<\/a> this decade, both at home and globally. Today, we agreed new measures under the compact to support our energy transition, including the establishment of an australian and u. S. Clean
Energy Industry<\/a> council, comprised of business and
Public Finance<\/a> leaders to advise government on clean
Energy Industry<\/a> development and cooperation. Were working closely with the
United States<\/a> to build endtoend sustainable, reliable, and transparent supply chains for
Critical Minerals<\/a>. Of course, australia has abundant supplies of these
Critical Minerals<\/a> that will drive our economies throughout this century lithium, cobalt, copper, vanadium, and rare earths. We want to connect that with american markets, investors, and technology in a way that creates new jobs and opportunities for industry and workers in both of our nations. Cheaper, cleaner energy will reduce costs for households, but it will also power a new generation of manufacturing. Our alliance is also delivering for the indopacific region bilaterally and increasingly with our partners in the quad. Australia and america are supporting the connectivity of the region, and today we announced a new funding for subsea cables in the pacific; further support for infrastructure development, including efforts to increase the pacifics access to financing; and that well
Work Together<\/a> through a new
Pacific Banking Forum<\/a> to ensure that our friends in the pacific maintain access to the
Global Financial<\/a> system. Today, we also discussed our joint position opposing russias illegal and immoral invasion of ukraine. Australia stands with ukraine. And
President Biden<\/a> welcomed the package for further assistance that i announced yesterday. This will provide ukraine with additional military assistance, utilizing the
Innovative Technology<\/a> thats produced by australias
Defense Industry<\/a> partners. Finally, of course, last night and again today, we spoke about the situation in israel and gaza. Australia unequivocally condemns the terrorism of hamas. We grieve for the loss of every innocent life, whether that be israeli or palestinian. In times of crisis, respect for
International Humanitarian<\/a> law is paramount. It is a recognition of our common humanity. And i commend the president for his leadership that he has shown and the example that he has set. Today, i announced that australia will provide an additional 15 million in humanitarian assistance for civilians in gaza this adds to the 10 million australia has already committed and will help deliver lifesaving assistance such as
Emergency Water<\/a> and medical services. The friendship between australia and the
United States<\/a> was forged in hard times. Weve served and sacrificed together in the cause of peace. Weve helped each other through natural disasters. Australians and americans share a rich history, but we always have our eye on the future. Were united by a determination to overcome the challenges that we face, and we share an ambition to seize those opportunities which lay ahead of us. Ours is indeed an alliance in which we celebrate what weve achieved up to now but we focus on the future a future of great opportunities, one thats stronger because of this alliance. President biden all right. Were going to take a few questions now. Mr. Garrison, usa today. Reporter thank you, mr. President and
Prime Minister<\/a> albanese. Welcome to washington. Mr. President , i want to ask about the conflict the war in the middle east. 24 u. S. Troops have been injured during 10 drone or rocket attacks on bases in iraq and 3 in syria over the past week. Youve told iran to, quote, be careful as your administration tries to prevent the israelihamas war from expanding into a larger middle east conflict. But should americans be worried that the war already is escalating . And after you answer that question, id like one more followup, please. President biden about one or two more, huh . Two or three. [laughter] joey, look, we have had troops in the region since 9 11 to go after isis and prevent its reasser reemergence in in both anyway, in the region having nothing to do with israel at all. My warning to the ayatollah was that if they continue to move against those troops, we will respond, and he should be prepared. It has nothing to do with israel. Reporter well, let me let me ask my followup here. I want to discuss oh, here we go yeah, your conversations with
Prime Minister<\/a> netanyahu, who, obviously, youve known for decades, and you had a very emotional trip there last week to israel. Have you sought assurances from him that he will hold off on a
Ground Invasion<\/a> into gaza until the safe release of the hostages can be assured . And, of course, those include 10 unaccountedfor americans. President biden no. What i have indicated to him is that if thats possible to get these folks out safely, thats what he should do. Its their decision, but i did not demand it. I pointed out to him, if its real, it should be done. Thank you. Reporter but arent these hostages in jeopardy if there is a
Ground Invasion<\/a> . President biden you want to make a speech . Look obviously, theyre in jeopardy. The question is whether or not theres any way of getting them out. If we can get them out, we should get them out. Reporter
Prime Minister<\/a> albanese and welcome, again, to washington
President Biden<\/a> canceled his may trip to australia because of debt ceiling talks in congress to avoid a firstever default here in the u. S. More recently, congressional action has stalled as
House Republicans<\/a> try to pick a speaker. However, it does appear, since weve been out here, that the house has elected a congressman, mike johnson from louisiana, to that role. But are you worried that grid the gridlock in washington will hold up the transfer of nuclearpowered subs to australia as part of the aukus agreement . And are you concerned, more broadly, that the dysfunction makes the u. S. A less reliable partner . Prime minister albanese i regard the
United States<\/a> as a very reliable partner. And i regard the relationship that i have with the president as second to none of the relationships that i have around the world or indeed domestically, for that matter. [laughter] its a relationship of trust, and i think this visit symbolizes that. This is the ninth visit that ive had with
President Biden<\/a>. I got to meet
President Biden<\/a> when he was vice
President Biden<\/a> just just next door here some years ago. And im very confident in the discussions that ive had with democrats and republicans that there is very broad support for the aukus arrangements, and that there will be support for the legislation going forward. And i think that would be a very good thing. It is in the interest of australia, but its also in the interest of the
United States<\/a>. And everyone that i have spoken to similarly in the
United Kingdom<\/a> across the political spectrum are all supportive of the aukus arrangements. Reporter and regarding the israelhamas war, i wanted to ask
Prime Minister<\/a> albanese well, we in australia have managed to get it so we get once question each. So reporter hey, i figured id try and ask a sec
Prime Minister<\/a> albanese yeah, good try. Reporter anyway, all right. Prime minister albanese but, channel 10 australia. President biden go get em, joe joe. [laughter] reporter
President Biden<\/a>, just staying with aukus. Aukus is in many ways your creation. Its australias largestever defense deal, and
Prime Minister<\/a>
Anthony Albanese<\/a> has gone all in. Can you give a personal guarantee that you can get all the necessary legislation through congress and lock in this deal, essentially futureproofing it, before the end of his president ial term . President biden do you know anyone in
Elective Office<\/a> who can give a personal guarantee that it happens . I wont i im not going to reporter well, wed like you to try. President biden no, im going to try, and i believe it will get done. Look, last week we requested 3. 4 billion in in supplemental funds to boost submarine production and maintenance to meet u. S. Needs and also support aukus. Australia is making a significant investment in the
United States<\/a> and its ability to produce submarines as part of this deal. And more importantly, its important that
Congress Move<\/a> quickly. And the fact is that im confident that we can get this done, because you remember when we put it the deal together . The response the democrats and republicans in the
United States<\/a> the response around the free world was, this is a very, very good thing. A very good thing. so, the question is not if but when and i and joe joe told us that they we got a new speaker or will likely have a new speaker. I hope thats true because we have to get moving. We have to get moving. And so, im i am confident that were going to be able to get the money for aukus because its overwhelmingly in our interest. When i was asked when we put together the deal, i was asked by xi jinping were we just trying to surround china. I said, no, were not surrounding china. were just making sure that the sea lanes remain open, he doesnt unilaterally be able to change the rules of the road in terms of what constitutes
International Airspace<\/a> and water space, et cetera. And so, thats what this is all about. Its about making sure we have a close and its in addition to the fact that we put together the quad, which they didnt like. The quad is a very important piece as well. Its about maintaining stability stability in the
Taiwan Strait<\/a>, the indian ocean, the whole area. And i think its going to increase the prospects for longterm peace rather than do anything else. Prime minister albanese your turn. President biden oh, i get to ask. Im going to get to okay. Pbs. Ms. Lopez. Reporter mr. President , thank you. If i may, i have a breaking news question and then an israel one. First, after 22 days,
House Republicans<\/a> just elected mike johnson of louisiana as the speaker of the house. Johnson advocated conspiracy theories about
Voting Machines<\/a> and a rigged election in 2020. He encouraged his colleagues to join a lawsuit to invalidate the results of four states. So, if you win reelection in 2024, are you worried that a speaker johnson would again attempt to overturn the election . President biden no. Reporter why not . President biden because he cant have look, just like i was not worried that the last guy would be able to overturn the election. They have about 60 lawsuits, and they all went to the supreme court, and, every time, they lost. I understand the constitution. Reporter and if i may, very quickly in the 18 days since hamas killed 1,400 israelis, the hamascontrolled
Gaza Health Ministry<\/a> says
Israeli Forces<\/a> have killed over 6,000 palestinians, including 2,700 children. Youve previously asked netanyahu to minimize civilian casualties. Do these numbers say to you that he is ignoring that message . President biden what they say to me is i have no notion that the palestinians are telling the truth about how many people are killed. Im sure innocents have been killed, and its the price of waging a war. I think we should be incredibly careful. I think well, not we the israelis should be incredibly careful to be sure that theyre focusing on going after the folks that are propagating this war against israel. And its against their interest when that doesnt happen. But i have no confidence in the number that the palestinians are using. Reporter thank you, mr. President. Prime minister albanese, youre traveling to china early next month. President biden has said china should expect, quote, extreme competition from the
United States<\/a>. do you support extreme competition with china . And what does that look like for you . Prime minister albanese well, we have strategic competition in our region. Thats a fact that we are living with. The relationship with china is one where the principle that i bring to it is to cooperate where we can, disagree where we must, but engage in our national interest. It is in australias interest, as well as china but, i believe, in the global interest for us to have a relationship where there is dialogue. And hence, i welcome the fact that i have been invited to china. Ill be traveling at the same time as we will commemorate 50 years since the first visit by an australian
Prime Minister<\/a>, gough whitlam, to china in a short period of time now. And i think that is a positive thing. It is good that various senior representatives in the u. S. Administration have had meetings with their chinese counterparts in recent times, because dialogue is always a good thing. Through dialogue comes understanding and comes a diffusion of tension. We want a peaceful and secure region, but we want one as well thats based upon the rule of law and where national sovereignty, including issues such as the
South China Sea<\/a> and the right of passage in that important waterway there the east china sea, the
Taiwan Strait<\/a> is respected. And that is australias position. We cooperate very much with the
United States<\/a> on those matters and on others. But i look forward to a constructive dialogue when i visit shanghai and beijing. President biden the context of extreme competition was not conflict. Read the whole paragraph. I talked about were going to have were going to compete with china on every way according to the
International Rules<\/a> economically, politically, and other ways but not im not looking for conflict. Prime minister albanese geoff. Reporter yeah, geoff chambers from the australian. President biden, as mentioned,
Prime Minister<\/a> albanese flies to beijing next saturday to meet the chinese president and premier. Your administration has raised deep concerns over a very long period of time about the
Chinese Communist<\/a> governments aggressive coercion and intimidation tactics;
Maritime Claims<\/a> in the
South China Sea<\/a>, as weve seen with the situation with the philippines; statesponsored cyberattacks. Last week, we heard from the spy chiefs talking about theft of intellectual property on an industrial scale and obviously, human rights abuses. What do you make of chinas reengagement with australia . Can australia trust beijing . And can australia do business with china . President biden trust but verify is the phrase. And, look, china is having their own internal and external difficulties right now. Chinas
Economic Growth<\/a> is stagnant compared to what it was. China has engaged in activities that russia and many other activities that others have engaged in in terms of intimidation and dealing with other countries. But the fact is that i have met with xi jinping more than any other world leader has. Ive had over 68 hours of private meetings, just he and i with simultaneous interpreters starting back when i was
Vice President<\/a> , because it wasnt appropriate for a president of the
United States<\/a> to be meeting with the
Vice President<\/a>. So, i traveled 17,000 miles with him. And ive subsequently in addition to that 68 hours, ive also had another they tell me they keep meticulous contact as i another, i think, 12, 15 hours of discussions, just he and i. And i think that he is realizing that there are for example, his belt and
Road Initiative<\/a> well, were going to compete on that. Were doing it a different way. The belt and
Road Initiative<\/a> has been a debt and a noose for most of the people that signed on. We are working with our g7 partners to provide infrastructure for the very nations that hes trying to deal with. We want to for example, at the g20, we were able to act on a proposal i had to bring to build a railroad all the way from riyadh, all the way through the middle east, saudi arabia, israel, up through greece, and then across the not the railroad, but pipeline across the mediterranean up into europe. Reporter so youre the more reliable partner . President biden pardon me . Reporter youre the reliable partner in terms of when you say youre going to deliver something, the u. S. And its partners deliver things. President biden well, i i hope the united not just me i hope the
United States<\/a> is a reliable partner when we act. But it wasnt just the
United States<\/a> that agreed on that. Because, look, even to this day, when my discussions with the saudis, the crown prince, was he wants to see a reconciliation take place. Its overwhelmingly in his interest. Its in saudis interest. The idea that youd have the nations of the middle east cooperating economically and politically changes the dynamics significantly. And so, i just think that it is something that its in everyones interest including, longterm, in chinas interest. Reporter i just had one for the
Prime Minister<\/a> as well. Have you had a chance to speak to
Benjamin Netanyahu<\/a> . I know theres been efforts made. Obviously, the president was was there in israel last week. Are you still endeavoring to speak to the israeli
Prime Minister<\/a> . Prime minister albanese i am. I have spoken with the israeli ambassador on a number of occasions. We continue to we understand that, obviously, mr. Netanyahu has pressures on, which at the top of the list is not is is not the discussion with the australian
Prime Minister<\/a>. We understand the pressures which are there, but we have a request for a call in. Thank you. [crosstalk] jeanpierre thank you, everybody. The press conference has now concluded. Thank you, everyone. Ortico of the white house","publisher":{"@type":"Organization","name":"archive.org","logo":{"@type":"ImageObject","width":"800","height":"600","url":"\/\/ia601807.us.archive.org\/3\/items\/CSPAN_20231026_065600_President_Biden__Australian_Leader_Hold_News_Conference\/CSPAN_20231026_065600_President_Biden__Australian_Leader_Hold_News_Conference.thumbs\/CSPAN_20231026_065600_President_Biden__Australian_Leader_Hold_News_Conference_000001.jpg"}},"autauthor":{"@type":"Organization"},"author":{"sameAs":"archive.org","name":"archive.org"}}],"coverageEndTime":"20240703T12:35:10+00:00"}