President Obama Announces Plans to Lift Sanctions on Myanmar

The president wants to bring the decades-long sanctions to an end.

“The United States is now prepared to lift sanctions that we have imposed on Burma for quite some time,” the president said in the Oval Office after citing progress made in Myanmar, which he cited as “Burma.” “It is the right thing to do in order to ensure the people of Burma see rewards from a new way of doing business and a new government.”

The move comes only days after Obama's week-long trip to Asia, where he sought to highlight the benefits of his signature “Asia pivot” strategy to the region.

“There is a process of beginning to reach out and address some of the ethnic minorities including in Rakhine state that historically feel discrimination and so there is a broader process of transformation, reconciliation and hope that has emerged in a country that for decades was burdened by a military dictatorship and closed off from the world,” the president said.

Suu Kyi, a Nobel laureate who was held under house arrest in Myanmar for 15 years, told reporters she was "grateful" to the U.S. for its support, and said work is still underway in the country to revise the constitution and pull the military further from the political system.

When asked for further details on when sanctions would be lifted, Obama replied "soon."