President Obama and President Saakashvili met in Lisbon on sideline of NATO summit on November 19, 2010. The meeting, long sought by the Georgian leader, was the first one-on-one talks between the two Presidents. Photo: White House/Pete Souza President Obama will host his Georgian counterpart Mikheil Saakashvili for a meeting in the Oval Office on January 30 to discuss issues ranging from defense cooperation to parliamentary elections scheduled in Georgia later this year. This is the first time President Obama invited President Saakashvili for an official visit and a meeting at the Oval Office. The first face-to-face meeting between the two presidents was held in Lisbon on sideline of NATO summit in November, 2010. The two presidents briefly met in January, 2011 after the two leaders attended a memorial service for a veteran U.S. diplomat Richard Holbrooke in Washington. "President Obama will underscore the importance of our defense cooperation with Georgia, including Georgia’s substantial contributions to international security operations in Afghanistan," the White House said. "The President will reconfirm U.S. support for the integrity of Georgia’s territory within its internationally recognized borders." "The President also looks forward to discussing upcoming elections in Georgia and the reforms that will ensure Georgia’s continuing transformation into a vibrant and stable democratic state." the White House said. President Saakashvili will “propose ways to enhance cooperation” with Washington in the context of U.S.-Georgia charter on strategic partnership when he meets President Obama at the White House, the Georgian president’s administration said in a statement on Wednesday. “We are very pleased this meeting has been scheduled; we’ve got a lot to talk about,” John Bass, the U.S. ambassador to Tbilisi, said on January 18. “We will also be talking about the ways that the United States can continue to support ongoing reform efforts here in Georgia so that the people of this country not only continue to have the freedom to choose their own futures, but also can do so in an environment, where they can achieve greater prosperity and have the freedom as well to choose their own future leaders,” Ambassador Bass said. U.S. Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton, is expected to visit Georgia this year. |
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