Reuters US President Barack Obama sought to charm Asia-Pacific leaders this week with Australian slang and memories from his childhood in Hawaii and Indonesia in his bid to boost US ties with the fast-growing region. The top goal of the nine-day trip, which took Obama away from Washington just as US budget battles were intensifying, was to cement a foreign policy “pivot” towards Asia that could open the door to more American exports and jobs. The Democratic president, struggling in the polls after bitter fights with Republicans in Congress, geared his Asia message to US voters who will decide next November whether to give him another four years in office. In Honolulu, Australia and the Indonesian island of Bali, Obama sought out every chance to talk about America's export potential, and the White House previewed Boeing and GE deals with Asia that it said could sustain 130,000 US jobs. Hitching the lackluster US economy to the world's fastest growing region could be a “win-win” for American companies and workers as well as for the increasingly affluent Asian consumers who might buy their products, Obama said. He also sharpened his tone toward China in a strategy that might help him counter criticism from Republican hopeful Mitt Romney, who has accused Obama of being willing to only “whisper” to Beijing about US trade concerns. Obama was clearly at ease in Asia, especially in Bali where he marveled at the island's development in the years since he was there writing his book “Dreams Of My Father.” He greeted leaders at a Friday dinner with “Selamat Malam,” drawing from the Bahasa Indonesia he learned as a boy in Jakarta, and was welcomed at a fundraising event in Honolulu as “Keiki o ka ‘aina” - child of the land. As he left Bali on Saturday to return to a still-divided Washington, White House officials seemed confident the messages from his Asia tour would resonate well at home. “From our perspective, we've been able to positively advance each of the key goals that we had for the course of this trip. And I think that's been in the US interest,” said Tom Donilon, Obama's top national security adviser. In addition to the trade accord, Obama also unveiled a new military partnership with Asia and seized on a diplomatic opening with Myanmar by announcing that Secretary of State Hillary Clinton would soon visit the reclusive country. Casting himself as a strong leader is fundamental to Obama's hopes for re-election a year from now. His leadership on China is a particularly potent political issue. Obama acknowledged in a meeting in Honolulu with Chinese President Hu Jintao that Americans are increasingly frustrated with what they see as an unfair approach by Beijing on currency and trade policy. Beijing seemed to find the shift jarring and it was unclear whether Obama managed to ease the tensions in conversations he had near the end of the trip with Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao. __