"I'm opposed...This is not just a bilateral US-Saudi issue. This is a matter of how generally the United States approaches our interactions with other countries," Obama told CBS News.
"If we open up the possibility that individuals in the United States can routinely start suing other governments, then we are also opening up the United States to being continually sued by individuals in other countries," he said.
Obama said the 28-unreleased pages of the 9/11 report would be released soon.
"Hopefully that this process will come to a head fairly soon," he said.
"I have a sense of what's in there, but this has been a process which we generally deal with through the intelligence community and Jim Clapper, our director of national intelligence, has been going through to make sure that whatever it is that is released is not going to compromise some major national security interest in the United States," Obama said.
Earlier, White House Press Secretary Josh Earnest told reporters that, "It's difficult to imagine a scenario in which the President would sign the bill as it's currently drafted."
Meanwhile, James Kreindler, a lawyer representing the American victims of 26/11 terror attack, said the controversial legislation that would allow victims of 9/11 sue Saudi Arabia may also help American victims of the Mumbai terrorist attacks get justice.
"If JAS is passed and there is a resolution with the Saudis, it would help Mumbai victims indirectly not directly," Kreindler told
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