Czech Prime Minister Petr Fiala held talks with US President Joe Biden at the White House.
16.04.2024 / 15:25 | Aktualizováno: 16.04.2024 / 15:38
They addressed strategic, defense, and economic cooperation.
US President Joe Biden received Czech Prime Minister Petr Fiala in the Oval Office of the White House on Monday, April 15, 2024. The two leaders discussed strategic, security, defense and economic cooperation, and energy as well as support for Czech companies on the US market. They also touched upon the security situation in the world, in particular the war in the Middle East and Ukraine. In this context, the US President highly appreciated the Czech ammunition initiative.
US President Joe Biden welcomed Czech Prime Minister Petr Fiala and praised the role of the Czech Republic in the current situation. The two statesmen agreed to continue their assistance to Ukraine, which has been resisting Russian aggression for over two years. "President Biden appreciated the Czech ammunition initiative, and we also discussed the situation in the Middle East and related issues," said Czech Prime Minister Petr Fiala, who also spoke with the US President about economic relations between the Czech Republic and the United States.
"Czech companies operate on the American market, invest, and employ American citizens. We discussed ways to strengthen this cooperation. We also talked about the need for more LNG gas supplies to Europe, for example, because it helps us to get rid of our dependence on Russian gas supplies. The main topic in this case was nuclear energy," the Prime Minister said. The Czech Republic and the US intend to cooperate, for example, on small modular reactors and the restoration of nuclear capacity in Ukraine. "We agreed that negotiations on the nuclear energy cooperation agreement will continue intensively," Fiala added.
According to the Czech Prime Minister, the meeting was very friendly and several times the level of relations between the Czech Republic and the USA, which are the best in history, and the role of the Czech Republic in the current international environment were appreciated. "President Biden has repeatedly said how much he loves the Czech Republic and described his feelings 25 years ago when the North Atlantic Treaty Organization was expanded to include countries including the Czech Republic. We agreed that this was a historic moment that was absolutely crucial for the security of Europe," said the Prime Minister.
After the meeting at the White House, the Czech Prime Minister went to the residence of the Czech Ambassador to the USA, where he met with Czech compatriots and awarded the Karel Kramář Medal to Milada Horáková's daughter Jana Kánská for her support of democracy and Czech-American relations. "After the difficult fate you went through, after everything that happened to your family in communist Czechoslovakia, you did not give up on the Czech lands. Just the opposite. You were extremely active, you helped and you are still one of the protagonists of Czech-American relations. I appreciate it immensely and thank you," the Prime Minister said in his speech.
Czech Prime Minister Petr Fiala opened Monday's program with a meeting at the headquarters of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) in Langley, where he met with CIA Director William Burns together with National Security Advisor Tomáš Pojar and the directors of the Office of Foreign Relations and Information, the Security Information Service and the Military Intelligence Service to discuss the security situation in the world. "Discussions with the CIA director show a high level of confidence on the part of the United States. It is also an appreciation of the cooperation between the security services of our countries," commented Prime Minister Petr Fiala.
On the second day of his visit to the US, Petr Fiala will visit and speak at the Hudson Institute. This think tank focuses mainly on national security and foreign policy issues. He will then visit the United States Congress, where he will hold talks with Speaker of the House of Representatives Mike Johnson, Chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee Michael McCaul, and other members of Congress. In Washington, Petr Fiala will also honor the memory of Václav Havel and Tomáš Garrigue Masaryk.