HANOI, June 18 (Xinhua) -- Vietnamese State President Nguyen Minh Triet
will visit the United States from Monday to Saturday, which is expected to bring
about considerable socioeconomic gains to Vietnam.
Triet will become the first Vietnamese head of state to tour Washington
since the end of the Vietnam War in 1975. He is scheduled to hold talks with
U.S. President George W. Bush in Washington on Friday, and meet with leaders of
the U.S. Senate and the House of Representatives, and representatives of U.S.
firms and Vietnamese people living in the United States.
"I plan to discuss with President Bush and other U.S. leaders specific
measures to strengthen the effectiveness and stability in the Vietnam-U.S.
relationship. I will meet with U.S. residents as well as overseas Vietnamese who
are living in the United States in order to strengthen the friendship between
the two peoples and boost the mutual understanding and sympathy between the two
nations," he told local media on Thursday.
According to local analysts, Triet's visit has three main purposes.
First, beefing up bilateral economic and trade cooperation. During the
trip, the two sides are expected to ink a trade and investment framework
agreement (TIFA) and some economic deals. The TIFA is a platform on which they
will work to further strengthens their trade and investment ties.
The two sides are also actively preparing for signing a contract on buying
airplanes during the trip, but the results depend on negotiations between the
Vietnam Airlines and U.S. Boeing Company, Vietnamese Foreign Ministry spokesman
Le Dung said Thursday.
Concerning trade, Vietnam and the United States have seen noteworthy
improvements since the taking effect of their bilateral trade agreement (BTA) in
late 2001, a milestone marking the full normalization between the two countries,
with two-way trade soaring to 9.7 billion U.S. dollars in 2006 from 1.4 billion
dollars in 2001.
However, the United States' application of anti-dumping taxes on Vietnamese
catfish and shrimps are slowing down the local exports, and the BTA has not
created an investment boom as the two sides wished with U.S. investors having
poured and committed over 2.3 billion dollars into Vietnam so far, ranking the
8th biggest foreign investor in the country.
Therefore, the upcoming historic trip by Triet, to be accompanied by a
large number of officials and representatives from leading Vietnamese companies,
is a good chance for Vietnam to implement investment promotion and draw
investment, especially in fields in which U.S. firms have prominent strengths
like high technology.
"I welcome U.S. entrepreneurs to do business in Vietnam. The Government of
Vietnam will continue to create a favorable environment and conditions for
foreign investors to operate in the country," Triet said.
Second, speeding up process of solving issues left by the war, including
local victims of Agent Orange, and narrowing some differences, especially those
related to democracy and human rights.
The United States has agreed to help Vietnam in strengthening Agent Orange
detoxification. In February, the United States announced to fund Vietnam 400,000
dollars for dioxin detoxification in the Da Nang Airport in central Da Nang
city. "This is the first positive initial step in implementing the Vietnam-U.S.
Joint Statement signed in 2006," Le Dung said.
On June 18, the first day of Triet's visit to the United States, a federal
appeals court in New York will hear arguments on whether or not Vietnamese Agent
Orange victims are eligible for suing 32 U.S. chemical companies which produced
dioxin-containing Agent Orange" defoliant sprayed by the U.S. army in the
Vietnam War.
According to studies of U.S. scientists, the U.S. army dropped some 80
million liters of defoliants, mostly Agent Orange, which contained nearly 400
kilograms of dioxin, an extremely toxic substance, to Vietnam between 1961 and
1971, said the Vietnam Association for Victims of Agent Orange/Dioxin. Some 4.8
million Vietnamese people have so far been exposed to Agent Orange, of whom some
3 million are victims, said the association.
Third, continuing to call for the Vietnamese community in the United
States, over 1.5 million people or half of the number of Vietnamese living
abroad, to better understand the situation in Vietnam, not conducting activities
which are contrary to its interest, and to make stronger contributions to its
development.
"Thousands of overseas Vietnamese with their assets in the United States
have selected their home country for investment and business operations and they
have invested thousands of billions of Vietnamese dong (dozens of million
dollars) in Vietnam. I would like to praise those experts and academics who have
made intellectual contributions to national construction, and cooperated with
their colleagues inside the country in scientific research, training and
experience exchange," Triet told local media on Thursday.
Besides the three main purposes, some analysts said that Triet's visit also
aims to foster Vietnam-U.S. military cooperation ties which have focused on
dealing with the war's aftermath for a long time, and have recently been
expanded to a new domain of personnel training.
From narrow dimension of cooperation on humanity, Vietnam and the United
States have expanded it into such important fields as politics, economy,
healthcare, education, science and technology, and most recently - military,
anti-terrorism, drug trafficking and transnational crimes. The two countries are
showing readiness to bring their ties to a new height towards stable and
long-term cooperation, and multi-faceted, constructive and friendly partnership.
By Huang Haimin, Bui Minhlong