UK fights terrorism better with EU: Obama

US President Barack Obama leaves Air Force One after landing at Stansted Airport near London on Thursday..
US President Barack Obama leaves Air Force One after landing at Stansted Airport near London on Thursday..
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BBC, London :
The UK’s ability to fight terrorism will be “more effective” if it sticks together with its European allies, US President Barack Obama has said.
Writing in the Daily Telegraph, Mr Obama said being in the EU magnified Britain’s influence across the world.
The president arrived for a three-day visit of the UK late on Thursday.
But writing in the Sun, Vote Leave’s Boris Johnson said President Obama’s view was “a breathtaking example of the principle do-as-I-say-but-not-as-I-do”.
Follow live updates of President Obama’s visit to the UK
Before meeting Prime Minister David Cameron for talks later, the president and First Lady Michelle Obama will attend a private lunch with the Queen and Duke of Edinburgh at Windsor Castle – the day after the Queen’s 90th birthday celebrations.
The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge and Prince Harry will welcome the Obamas for dinner at Kensington Palace on Friday evening.
The president’s intervention in the UK’s forthcoming EU referendum on 23 June has been hotly debated and sparked claims of “hypocrisy” from those who want to leave the EU. They claim the US “would never contemplate anything like the EU for itself”.
In his newspaper piece President Obama recognised that ultimately the matter was for British voters to decide for themselves.
But he also said: “The outcome of your decision is a matter of deep interest to the United States.
“The tens of thousands of Americans who rest in Europe’s cemeteries are a silent testament to just how intertwined our prosperity and security truly are.”
In response, Mr Cameron tweeted: “The US is one of our closest allies. So it’s important to hear Barack Obama on why we should remain in the EU.”
BBC North America editor John Sopel said the president had not needed to make his intervention and could have been much more nuanced.
“That he has is a mark of the profound concern felt in Washington about the implications of a British departure from the EU,” he said.
However, BBC political editor Laura Kuenssberg said a Brexit-supporting cabinet minister had stressed that Obama’s view “was not the settled view in the USA. The Republicans don’t agree and there is disquiet at his blatant meddling in UK politics”.
The minister had suggested Ted Cruz supported Brexit, she added.
In his article, Mr Obama said that the US’s relationship with the UK had been “forged as we spilt blood together on the battlefield”.
He went on to say the UK had benefitted from being inside the EU in terms of jobs, trade and financial growth, and that it “magnifies” the UK’s global influence.
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