Barack Obama G20 Speech 2015 FULL Barack Obama News Conference G20 Summit Antalya, Turkey
Barack Obama G20 Speech 2015 FULL Barack Obama
News Conference G20
Summit Antalya, Turkey Barack Obama G20 Speech Antalya, Turkey FULL Barack Obama News Conference G20 Summit Barack Obama G20 Speech FULL Barack Obama News Conference G20 Summit Antalya, Turkey
U.S. President Barack Obama doubled down on his foreign policy strategy toward
Syria Monday, saying during a closing speech at the
Group of 20, or
G-20, summit in Antalya, Turkey, that the efforts in the region to combat the growing threat of the
Islamic State are accelerating but that he does not plan on altering the overall strategy. After
Russia and the
United States reached an agreement to mediate a ceasefire between Syria's opposition and ruling regime,
Obama said his administration would not put more troops on the ground in Syria.
His remarks come after a tumultuous weekend in the wake of a
Obama asked that people keep in mind that the threat posed by terrorist groups is not new, and that his administration has been worried about attacks like those that took place in
Paris Friday since he took office nearly seven years ago. On Monday, he said the threat of terrorism is difficult to approach because the enemy is willing to kill themselves during attacks.
“If you have a handful of people who don’t mind dying they can kill a lot of people. That’s one of the challenges of terrorism,” Obama said. “
It’s not their sophistication or the particular weaponry they possess, but it is the ideology they carry with them and their willingness to die.” His remarks can be seen below:
Responding to criticism in his own country, the Obama said
Republicans seeking his office when he leaves his second term in
January 2017 generally didn’t have differing strategy ideas than his. He said that they present it in a way that implies some false level of strength, which he would not do.
“What I do not do is to take actions either because it is going to work politically or it’s going to somehow in the abstract make
America look tough or make me look tough,” he said.
Obama continued to denounce the assertion by some that the conflict in the
Middle East is a war with the religion of
Islam. He repeated the message he has made before, saying that
ISIS does not represent the whole of Muslims across the globe. He invoked statements made by former
President George W. Bush, a
Republican, soon after the
9/11 attacks that the
U.S. was “not at war with Islam or Muslims.”
“
Whether you are
European or
American, you know, the values that we are defending, the values we’re fighting against [ISIS] for are precisely that we don’t discriminate against people because of their faith,” Obama said. “It is good to remember that the United States does not have a religious test and we are a nation of many peoples of different faiths. Those are the universal values we stand for. That’s what my administration intends to stand for.”
The
G-20 summit is a congregation of the leaders of the world's 20 major economies that tends to focus on economic issues, but over the past two days, leaders have focused pledging to ramp up the fight the
Islamic State group, even as they offered few precise details on a plan for doing so. They also discussed the influx of refugees into
Europe as a result of fighting in Syria and other countries.
The summit's focus on refugees and the Islamic State group, also known as ISIS or
ISIL, came after the militant group claimed responsibility for a series of attacks in Paris Friday night that left 129 dead and more than 350 injured. It also took responsibility for twin suicide bombings in
Beirut Thursday that killed at least 43 people.