The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Readout of the President’s Homeland Security Council Meeting

This afternoon, the President and Vice President met in the Situation Room with the President’s Homeland Security Council to discuss the urgent humanitarian situation at the border as well as the comprehensive response that the Administration has implemented at the President’s direction. Today’s meeting took place as preliminary data show that average daily apprehensions of unaccompanied children by the Customs and Border Patrol have dropped by about half from June to July. This important decline was noted, and the Council committed to continuing aggressive efforts on both sides of the border to deter illegal migration—including by sustaining cooperation with Central American leaders—and to providing appropriate care for those apprehended at the border. Participants also discussed combating the root causes of migration and the need to secure the additional resources sought in the President’s supplemental appropriations request.

Attendees at this afternoon’s meeting included:

  • The Vice President
  • Chuck Hagel, Secretary of Defense
  • James Cole, Deputy Attorney General
  • Sylvia Burwell, Secretary of Health and Human Services
  • Jeh Johnson, Secretary of Homeland Security
  • Denis McDonough, Assistant to the President and Chief of Staff
  • John Podesta, Counselor to the President
  • Kristie Canegallo, Deputy Chief of Staff to the President
  • Amb. Samantha Power, Permanent Representative of the United States of America to the United Nations
  • Brian Deese, Acting Director of the Office of Management and Budget
  • Valerie Jarrett, Senior Advisor and Assistant to the President for Intergovernmental Affairs and Public Engagement
  • Susan Rice, Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs
  • Neil Eggleston, Assistant to the President and Counsel to the President
  • Stephanie O’Sullivan, Principal Deputy Director of National Intelligence
  • Cecilia Muñoz, Assistant to the President and Director of Domestic Policy
  • Lisa Monaco, Assistant to the President for Homeland Security and Counterterrorism
  • Katie Fallon, Assistant to the President and Director of the Office of Legislative Affairs
  • Rajiv Shah, Administrator of the U.S. Agency for International Development
  • General Martin Dempsey, Chairman, Joint Chiefs of Staff
  • Heather Higginbottom, Deputy Secretary of State
  • Craig Fugate, Administrator of the Federal Emergency Management Agency
  • Dan Tangherlini, Administrator of the General Services
  • Jeffrey Prescott, Deputy National Security Advisor to the Vice President
  • Rand Beers, Deputy Assistant to the President for Homeland Security
  • Gil Kerlikowske, Commissioner of the Customs Border Protection
  • Thomas Winkowski, Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary for Immigration and Customs Enforcement

About the Homeland Security Council:
The Homeland Security Council was created by Executive Order in 2001 and codified in statute by the Homeland Security Act of 2002. Similar to the National Security Council, which is also a statutory body, the Homeland Security Council serves to coordinate across the government on homeland security issues. In 2009, the Homeland Security Council and National Security Council were integrated under one staff, but both continue to exist by statute. Meetings of either are convened as needed. 

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Readout of the President’s Call with President Komorowski of Poland

This afternoon, President Obama spoke with Polish President Komorowski to discuss the situation in Ukraine and the upcoming NATO Summit in Wales.  The two presidents exchanged views in advance of the meeting in Warsaw tomorrow of the leaders of nine NATO members from Central and Eastern Europe.  President Obama and President Komorowski agreed on the importance of raising defense spending among European members of NATO, as well as on the importance of alliance-wide and credible contributions to NATO’s reassurance efforts in Central and Eastern Europe.  The two leaders also stressed the need for Transatlantic solidarity in responding to the tragic shoot-down of Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 and Russia’s efforts to destabilize Ukraine. 

President Obama at My Brother’s Keeper Town Hall: “America Will Succeed If We Are Investing in Our Young People”

This afternoon, President Obama visited the Walker Jones Education Campus in Washington, D.C. to participate in a town hall with youth, and to announce new commitments in support of the My Brother’s Keeper Initiative.

As the President said today, "We want fewer young men in jail; we want more of them in college. We want fewer young men on the streets; we want more in the boardrooms. We want everybody to have a chance to succeed in America. And it’s possible if we’ve got the kind of team that we set up today."

Watch President Obama answer questions during today’s town hall:

Watch on YouTube

Related Topics: Jobs, Education, Urban Policy

Staff Sgt. Ryan Pitts Receives the Medal of Honor

July 21, 2014 | 20:44 | Public Domain

President Obama presents the Medal of Honor to Staff Sgt. Ryan Pitts in the East Room of the White House.

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Remarks by the President at Presentation of the Medal of Honor to Staff Sergeant Ryan Pitts

East Room

3:11 P.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT:  Good afternoon, everybody.  Welcome to the White House.  Please be seated, please be seated.

For our forces in Afghanistan, the battle of Wanat was one of the most fierce of this entire war.  Forty-eight Americans, along with their Afghan partners, were manning their small base, deep in a valley when they were attacked by some 200 insurgents. And those insurgents seemed determined to overrun an even smaller post just outside the base -- an elevated patch of boulders and sandbags defended by just nine American soldiers. 

Soon, under the relentless fire, all nine of those men were wounded or killed.  Insurgents broke through the wire.  And that little post was on the verge of falling, giving the enemy a perch from which to devastate the base below.  Against that onslaught, one American held the line -- Just 22 years old, nearly surrounded, bloodied but unbowed -- the soldier we recognize today with our nation’s highest military decoration, the Medal of Honor, Staff Sergeant Ryan M. Pitts.

Now, I don’t want to embarrass Ryan, but the character he displayed that day was clearly forged early.  I’m told that in kindergarten, when asked what he wanted to be when he grew up, he drew a picture of a soldier.  When he was in the 5th grade, his teacher sent home a note that described Ryan in words that would be familiar to all those who knew him today -- Ryan, she wrote, is “a very special human being.” 

In Ryan Pitts you see the humility and the loyalty that define America’s men and women in uniform.  Of this medal, he says, “It’s not mine alone.  It belongs to everybody who was there that day because we did it together.”  

So I want to welcome those who were there that day -- Ryan’s brothers in arms, and those who are going to be welcoming him into their ranks -- the members of the Medal of Honor Society.  We are very proud of them and we are honored by the presence of the families of our fallen heroes as well. 

We welcome Ryan’s family, many from New Hampshire, including his wonderful wife, Amy.  I have to take a pause because they are actually celebrating -- Ryan and Amy -- their second anniversary today.  (Laughter.)  As Ryan put it, it’s going to be tough topping this one, as anniversaries go.  (Laughter.)  But let me just give you a piece of advice as somebody who now has been married for over 20 years:  You should try.  (Laughter.)  I’m just saying don’t rest on your laurels after just two years.  (Laughter.)

We welcome their gorgeous son, one-year-old Lucas, who Ryan is beginning to teach a love for all things New England -- of course, the Red Sox and the Bruins and the Celtics and the Pats.

I want you to try and imagine the extraordinary circumstances in which Ryan and his team served.  This was the summer of 2008, and this was a time when our forces in Afghanistan were stretched thin and our troops were deployed to isolated outposts.  They had just arrived in Wanat just days before and they were still building their very small base -- a handful of armored vehicles and fighting positions and foxholes and sandbags. 

Wanat, one report later concluded, had “significant vulnerabilities.”  Parts of the village sat on higher ground.  On every side, mountains soared 10,000 feet into the sky.  Heavy equipment to help build their defenses was delayed.  In the 100-degree heat the soldiers ran low on water.  And the aerial surveillance they were counting on was diverted away to other missions.

Early that morning, in the pre-dawn darkness, they spotted several men up the mountains.  But before Ryan and his team could take action, the entire valley erupted.  Machine gun fire and mortar and rocket-propelled grenades poured down from every direction.  And those 200 insurgents were firing from ridges and from the village and from trees.  Down at the base, a vehicle exploded —- scattering its missiles, back at our soldiers.  It was, said a soldier, “hell on Earth.” 

Up at their tiny post, Ryan and his team were being pounded.  Almost instantly, every one of them was wounded.  Ryan was hit by shrapnel in the arm and both legs and was bleeding badly.  Already, three American soldiers in that valley had fallen.  And then a fourth.

As the insurgents moved in, Ryan picked up a grenade, pulled the pin, and held that live grenade -- for a moment, then another, then another -- finally hurling it so they couldn’t throw it back.  And he did that again.  And he did it again. 

Unable to stand, Ryan pulled himself up on his knees and manned a machine gun.  Soldiers from the base below made a daring run, dodging bullets and explosions, and joined the defense.  But now the enemy was inside the post -- so close they were throwing rocks at the Americans, so close they came right up to the sandbags.  Eight American soldiers had now fallen.  And Ryan Pitts was the only living soldier at that post.    

The enemy was so close Ryan could hear their voices.  He whispered into the radio he was the only one left and was running out of ammo.  “I was going to die,” he remembers, “and made my peace with it.”  And then he prepared to make a last stand.  Bleeding and barely conscious, Ryan threw his last grenades.  He grabbed a grenade launcher and fired nearly straight up, so the grenade came back down on the enemy just yards away.  One insurgent was now right on top of the post, shooting down until another team of Americans showed up and drove him back.  As one of his teammates said, had it not been for Ryan Pitts, that post “almost certainly would have been overrun.” 

Even with reinforcements, the battle was not over.  Another wave of rocket-propelled grenades slammed into the post.  Nine American soldiers were now gone.  And still, the fighting raged. Ryan worked the radio, helping target the air strikes that were hitting “danger-close” -- just yards away.  And with those strikes the tide of the battle began to turn.  Eventually, the insurgents fell back.  Ryan and his fellow soldiers had held their ground. 

This medal, Ryan says, is an opportunity to tell “our” story.  “There was valor everywhere,” according to Ryan.  And so today we also pay tribute to all who served with such valor that day.  Shielding their wounded buddies with their own bodies.  Picking up unexploded missiles with their hands and carrying them away.  Running through the gunfire to reinforce that post. Fighting through their injuries and never giving up.  Helicopter pilots and MEDEVAC crews who came in under heavy fire.  Said one soldier, “Never in my career have I seen such bravery and sacrifice.” 

And so I would ask all those who served at Wanat -- on the ground and in the air -- to please stand, those of you who are here today.  (Applause.)

Most of all, Ryan says he considers this medal “a memorial for the guys who didn’t come home.”  So today, we honor nine American soldiers who made the ultimate sacrifice for us all.

The son who “absorbed love like a sponge;” the expectant father whose dream would later come true, a beautiful baby girl -- Specialist Sergio Abad.

The boy who dominated the soccer fields, and fell in love with motorcycles, and there in that remote outpost took a direct hit in the helmet and kept on fighting -- Corporal Jonathan Ayers.

The photographer whose beautiful pictures captured the spirit of the Afghan people, and who wrote to his family: “Afghanistan is exactly [where]…I wanted to be” -- Corporal Jason Bogar.

The father who loved surfing with his son; the platoon leader who led a dash through the gunfire to that post to reinforce his men -- 1st Lieutenant Jonathan Brostrom. 

An immigrant from Mexico who became a proud American soldier, on his third tour, whose final thoughts were of his family and his beloved wife, Lesly -- Sergeant Israel Garcia.

A young man of deep faith, who served God and country, who could always get a laugh with his impersonation of his commander -- Corporal Jason Hovater.

The husband who couldn’t wait to become an uncle; the adventurous spirit who in every photo from Afghanistan has a big smile on his face -- Corporal Matthew Phillips.

The big guy with an even bigger heart, a prankster whose best play was cleaning up at the poker table with his buddies and his dad -- Corporal Pruitt Rainey.

And the youngest, just 20 years old, the “little brother” of the platoon, who loved to play guitar, and who, says his dad, did everything in his life with passion -- Corporal Gunnar Zwilling.

These American patriots lived to serve us all.  They died to protect each of us.  And their legacy lives on in the hearts of all who love them still, especially their families.  Mothers. Fathers.  Wives.  Brothers and sisters.  Sons and daughters. 

To you, their families, I know no words can match the depth of your loss, but please know that this nation will honor your soldiers now and forever.  And I would ask the Gold Star families from that deployment to please stand -- including Ali Kahler, age 11, and Jase Brostrom, who this week turns 12.  Please stand.  (Applause.)        

This is the story Ryan wants us to remember -- soldiers who loved each other like brothers and who fought for each other, and families who have made a sacrifice that our nation must never forget.  Ryan says, “I think we owe it to them to live lives worthy of their sacrifice.”  And he’s absolutely right.

As Commander-in-Chief, I believe one of the ways we can do that is by heeding the lessons of Wanat.  When this nation sends our troops into harm’s way, they deserve a sound strategy and a well-defined mission.  And they deserve the forces and support to get the job done.  And that's what we owe soldiers like Ryan and all the comrades that were lost.  That’s how we can truly honor all those who gave their lives that day.  That’s how, as a nation, we can remain worthy of their sacrifice.

I know that's a view that's shared by our Secretary of Defense and by our Joint Chiefs of Staff and all the leadership here.  They’re hard lessons, but they’re ones that are deeply engrained in our hearts. 

It is remarkable that we have young men and women serving in our military who, day in, day out, are able to perform with so much integrity, so much humility, and so much courage.  Ryan represents the very best of that tradition, and we are very, very proud of him, as we are of all of you.  

So God bless you, Ryan.  God bless all who serve in our name.  May God continue to bless the United States of America.

And with that, I would like our military aide to please complete the ceremony. 

MILITARY AIDE:  The President of the United States of America, authorized by Act of Congress, March 3, 1863, has awarded in the name of Congress the Medal of Honor to

Sergeant Ryan M. Pitts

United States Army

For conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of his life above and beyond the call of duty:

Sergeant Ryan M. Pitts distinguished himself by extraordinary acts of heroism at the risk of his life above and beyond the call of duty while serving as a Forward Observer in 2d Platoon, Chosen Company, 2d Battalion (Airborne), 503d Infantry Regiment, 173d Airborne Brigade, during combat operations against an armed enemy at Vehicle Patrol Base Kahler in the vicinity of Wanat Village, Kunar Province, Afghanistan on July 13, 2008. 

Early that morning, while Sergeant Pitts was providing perimeter security at Observation Post Topside, a well-organized Anti-Afghan Force consisting of over 200 members initiated a close proximity sustained and complex assault using accurate and intense rocket-propelled grenade, machine gun and small arms fire on Wanat Vehicle Patrol Base.  An immediate wave of rocket-propelled grenade rounds engulfed the Observation Post wounding Sergeant Pitts and inflicting heavy casualtiesSergeant Pitts had been knocked to the ground and was bleeding heavily from shrapnel wounds to his arm and legs, but with incredible toughness and resolve, he subsequently took control of the Observation Post and returned fire on the enemy. 

As the enemy drew nearer, Sergeant Pitts threw grenades, holding them after the pin was pulled and the safety lever was released to allow a nearly immediate detonation on the hostile forces.  Unable to stand on his own and near death because of the severity of his wounds and blood loss, Sergeant Pitts continued to lay suppressive fire until a two-man reinforcement team arrived. Sergeant Pitts quickly assisted them by giving up his main weapon and gathering ammunition all while continually lobbing fragmentary grenades until these were expended

At this point, Sergeant Pitts crawled to the northern position radio and described the situation to the Command Post as the enemy continued to try and isolate the Observation Post from the main Patrol Base.  With the enemy close enough for him to hear their voices, and with total disregard for his own life, Sergeant Pitts whispered in radio situation reports and conveyed information that the Command Post used to provide indirect fire support. 

Sergeant Pitts' courage, steadfast commitment to the defense of his unit and ability to fight while seriously wounded prevented the enemy from overrunning the Observation Post and capturing fallen American soldiers, and ultimately prevented the enemy from gaining fortified positions on higher ground from which to attack Wanat Vehicle Patrol BaseSergeant Ryan M. Pitts' extraordinary heroism and selflessness above and beyond the call of duty are in keeping with the highest traditions of military service and reflect great credit upon himself, Company C, 2d Battalion (Airborne), 503d Infantry Regiment, 173d Airborne Brigade and the United States Army.

(The Medal of Honor is presented.)  (Applause.)

THE PRESIDENT:  That’s not bad to stand up on this one.  (Applause.)

Well, that concludes the official part of the ceremony, but we still have a big anniversary party.  (Laughter.)  The White House, I understand, has prepared some pretty good edibles and some beverages.  And so I hope everybody enjoys the reception.

I want to once again thank all who served and the families of those who served.  You make us proud every single day.  And to Ryan and Amy and Lucas -- we wish you all the very best because what an extraordinary family you have.  And the pleasures of family were hard-earned by this young man.

Thank you very much, everybody.  God bless you.  God bless America.  (Applause.)   

END
3:32 P.M. EDT

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My Brother's Keeper Town Hall

July 21, 2014 | 7:39 | Public Domain

President Obama speaks at the My Brother's Keeper town hall at the Walker Jones Education Campus in Washington, D.C.

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Remarks by the President at My Brother's Keeper Town Hall

Walker Jones Education Campus
Washington, D.C.

12:00 P.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you, everybody.  (Applause.)  Give it up for Chris Paul.  (Applause.)  Everybody have a seat.  Chris was saying he was going to be nervous, but I'd seen all those State Farm ads, so I knew he could perform.  (Laughter.)  Not to mention how he performs on the court.  And I've gotten a chance to know Chris over the last several years, and his family, and he is just the kind of person that you want in a leadership position.  We are very, very proud of him.  And I'm so grateful that he agreed to participate in this. 

Hello, everybody.

AUDIENCE:  Hello!

THE PRESIDENT:  How you all doing today?

AUDIENCE:  Good. 

THE PRESIDENT:  Doing good?  It is good to be at Walker Jones.  I want to thank all of you for being here.  I want to thank the school for hosting us.  I want to thank the outstanding members of Congress who are here.  And I want you all to know that I'm here for a simple reason, and that is I want to hear from many of you, the young people who are here today.

I just had a chance to meet with a group of young people who are being mentored through a new program we started at the White House.  In a few minutes, I'm going to have a chance to take some questions from some of the young people here today, give me a chance to hear from you about what your concerns are, what your dreams and hopes are, what your fears are, and how you think we may be able to help. 

And the reason it's important for me to be here is because when I look out at some of the young men who are here, you're where I was 40 -- 35 years ago.  (Laughter.)  I was trying to do the math in my head.  I'm not that old yet.  And I've had a chance to talk to some young people in the past, and I always say that I see myself in the young men who are coming up now. 

When I was in my teens, I didn’t have a father in the house. It took me a while to realize that I was angry about that, and I acted out in some ways.  I was raised by a single mom.  We didn’t have a lot in terms of wealth, although we had a lot of love in the house and my grandparents helped out.  But despite their best efforts, sometimes I made some bad choices.  I didn’t always take school as serious as I should have.  I made excuses sometimes for misbehavior.

The only difference between me and extraordinarily talented young men that I see all across the country is I was living in a pretty forgiving environment.  So if I made a mistake, I often had a second chance, or I often had a third chance.  And some of the costs of making mistakes, they weren’t deadly.  I wasn’t going to end up shot.  I wasn’t going to end up in jail.

And as a consequence, for the last five, six, ten years, I've constantly been thinking about how can I make sure that I'm evening out the odds a little bit for other young men who could end up being a doctor or a lawyer or a senator or an attorney general or a secretary of education.  What is it that we can do to create structures that give them support, that help them make better choices, and that, when you do make a mistake, give you a hand up so you can recover and go ahead and move on to the next phase of your lives?

So that's why, earlier this year, we launched what we call My Brother’s Keeper.  My Brother’s Keeper isn't some new, big government program.  It's actually a team effort.  It’s all about a whole bunch of folks -- educators, business leaders, faith leaders, foundations, government -- all working together to give boys and young men of color the tools that they need to succeed and make sure that every young person can reach their potential.  And so the reason that we’re here today is to announce some of the pledges that have already been made, some of the commitments that have already been made by a series of institutions that just give you a sense of the kind of progress and excitement that we’ve seen since we launched this initiative.

 Chris Paul was a hint of one of these big commitments.  The NBA and its Players Association are joining others to recruit 25,000 new mentors and to work directly with educators and schools all across our country.  We are very proud of what the NBA is doing.  And Adam Silver, the commissioner is here, as well as Chris, the Players Association president, and we want to thank them for their extraordinary involvement that they’ve made.  (Applause.)

But it’s not just the NBA that’s already stepping up.  Today, we’ve got 60 of the country’s largest school districts who are here today announcing new efforts to help boys and young men like you succeed.  The Council of Great City Schools -- these are some big city schools superintendents -- have done an extraordinary thing, pledging, making commitments to each other as well as their school districts and to their students and to parents that this is going to be a major focus for them.  And we want to thank them for the great commitment that they are making. (Applause.)

We’ve got leaders from Silicon Valley and the Emerson Collective who are today launching a $50 million competition to redesign high schools so that young people can learn in classrooms built for the 21st century, so that you know that the models that are out there of high schools that can help translate skills into successful careers, that we’re going to be rebuilding those in some cases from the ground up.  So we want to thank those leaders and Emerson Collective for the great work that they’re doing.  Give them a big round of applause.  (Applause.) 

We’ve got a bipartisan group of mayors today who are going to bring the ideas behind My Brother’s Keeper to their cities.  We’ve got the National Congress of American Indians who are going to do the same for young Native American boys and men.  So we want to thank them for the outstanding work that they’re doing.  (Applause.)

And we’ve got organizations and companies like The College Board and AT&T, UBS, JPMorgan, City Foundation, and Discovery Communications who are making big commitments of their own to help young people like you get ahead. 

So these are just a few of the businesses and organizations and cities that are stepping up today.  I’m confident that more and more are going to be joining.  One of the things that we’ve discovered -- a pleasant surprise -- has been how invested and excited the folks who we’ve talked to have been about this initiative.  People recognize that America will succeed if we are investing in our young people.  And we also know that we’ve got to make sure that boys and young men of color are part of that success.  We will not succeed unless you succeed.  And we are so proud of the commitments that have already been made, but we’re also very confident that we’re going to see a lot more commitments in the weeks and months to come.

So thank you, everybody.  And right now I want to take some questions.  But first of all, give all the folks who are participating -- give them one last big round of applause.  (Applause.) 

Let’s see if this mic is working.  Testing, one, two three. Does that work?  All right.  And somebody is going to bring out my tea so that I don’t get hoarse.  Big Marvin.  (Laughter.)  Thank you.  Marvin has the height for the NBA, but not the vertical.  (Laughter.)  But he can hit a golf ball a long way. 

So who wants to start off?  What young person has got a question or a comment?  What I really want to do is just have a conversation, because part of what we want the mayors who are here and the business leaders who are here -- we want to give them a chance to hear directly from you.  And I know it’s kind of a public event and everybody is looking all serious, but try to pretend like there are no cameras here and that I’m not the President.  (Laughter.) 

Yes, sir, this young man right here.  But what we wanted you to do is stand up.  We’re going to bring a mic.  I want you to introduce yourself, tell me where you’re from, and then make your question or your comment.

Q    Hello.  Good afternoon.  I’m Jamal.  My question is did you set goals for yourself when you were younger?

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, did everybody hear the question -- did I set goals for myself when I was younger.  Let me say, first of all, that I actually didn’t set a lot of goals for myself when I was very young.  When I got to be about your age, a lot of my goals revolved around basketball -- which were probably misplaced goals because I did not have Chris Paul’s talent.  But as I got older -- so by the time I got to be a junior or senior in high school, I realized that I did need to go to college, and that required me to buckle down a little bit. 

And then, when I got to college, my first two years I was still kind of enjoying myself a little bit too much and was still a little bit too casual about my studies.  And it wasn’t probably until I was about 20 that something happened inside me where I really said, you know, if I want to be serious, if I want to make a contribution, if I want to be proud of myself looking back on my life, then I’m going to have to change how I do things. 

And sometimes -- initially, I didn’t know how to do that.  But that’s where the goal-setting came in.  Because you’d start small.  I’d say to myself, all right, my goal is to read a certain number of books a month, or my goal is to boost my GPA in college this much, or my goal is to interact with my peers a little differently than I had been doing in terms of how often I went out.  So it could just be simple goals initially, and over time, those goals became more ambitious. 

And the truth is I still set goals every day.  Every morning, I’ve got a checklist of here are the things that I need to get done.  And it starts off with big goals -- so let’s just take My Brother’s Keeper.  My goals is to make sure that every young person in America, if they’re putting in the effort, they can succeed, and they’ve got ladders of opportunity to take them where they want to go regardless of what their talents or interests are.  So that’s a big goal.  That’s a 40,000-foot goal.

But if I just stay there, I’m not going to get it done, right?  So then I’ve got to break it down into, well, what are the component parts of that?  Well, number one, I’ve got to make sure the school system works well.  So then I’m going to talk to my Secretary of Education and I’m going to say, what are our goals this year in terms of improving whether it’s early childhood education, or making sure that young people can read at grade level by the time they’re in 3rd grade, or what have you. 

But then it’s also there’s a criminal justice component to it, because I’m trying to figure out how do we get more young men into college and fewer of them into jail, which means that I’ve then got to talk to the Attorney General, Eric Holder, and I’ve got to say, what are our goals for trying to revamp how we think about the interaction between law enforcement and young men of color.

So I’ll break it down into those parts.  But that’s still not at the best level, because now I’ve got to say, what’s our specific plan to do it and what am I going to be doing this week, what am I going to be doing this month, and what am I going to be doing this year to get that done.  And so you keep on breaking it down from the very general down to the specific.  And ideally, what I’m producing then is every day when I wake up I’ve got a checklist of here are the specific things I’m going to do today to achieve my goal.

But you don’t get there right away.  So you can’t -- if you decide -- what do you want to be?  You want to be a lawyer, okay. And what year are you in now in school?  You’re a senior this -- so you’re a rising senior.  Okay, so your first goal is you got to go to college to be a lawyer.  So that means right now your focus should just be on what do I need to do to get into the best college with the least debt when I graduate from college as possible.  Right?  That’s going to be your top priority.  (Applause.)

But then you can start breaking into different goals.  You can start saying what lawyers do I know where I could maybe have a summer internship at a law firm, and how do I talk to that -- how do I meet somebody who’s a lawyer who can give me a sense of what it’s like to be a lawyer.  And I’ve got to think about what kind of law do I want to practice, and what kind of classes should I take once I get to college to prepare me for law school. So there are a whole range of things that you can start breaking down into their component parts.

But if you don’t set a target, it’s just like -- I’ll probably end up using a lot of NBA analogies here today just because I’ve got a lot of ballers here.  You can’t make a shot if you don’t aim.  I mean, that’s pretty straightforward.  The first goal is to know where it is that you’re trying to put the ball.  And if you don’t have a clear sense of direction, a clear objective, then it doesn’t matter how much talent you have, you’re not going to get there.

It’s a great question, though.  All right, who else?  Young man -- who already tried to invite himself to Camp David.  (Laughter.)  We were talking -- we were doing this mentorship program, and he said, well, when am I going to get to come to Camp David?  (Laughter.)  That’s a good goal.  It’s a little unrealistic right now.  (Laughter.)  But who knows -- you keep on working on it.  Go ahead.

Q    You said when you were younger your father always wasn’t around.  How did you learn how to become a good father?

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, that’s a good question.  It wasn’t just that my father wasn’t always around.  I only met him for a month my entire life.  He wasn’t there otherwise.  So I didn’t know him at all until I was 10.  He came for a month, and then I never saw him again.

But I had this mom who just loved me a lot, and I had grandparents who loved me a lot.  And to all the heroic single moms out there, we appreciate you for what you accomplish and what you do.  (Applause.)  Because she was going to school and she was working and having to raise me and my sister, and my grandparents gave us a lot of help, but it was hard.  It was hard on her.  And she was young when she had me; she was 18.

And now I -- the other day I was in Minnesota and I saw a group of young teenage moms --

AUDIENCE MEMBER:  Yay!

THE PRESIDENT:  That was the Minnesota superintendent of schools who just -- (laughter.)  And I just looked at them and I thought, well, you’re just children.  And I thought about my mother and how she ever managed that.  It’s unbelievable.

But to your question, I think that two things happened.  One is the values my mother taught me, I thought to myself, well, those are values that any parent should have.  So it doesn’t matter whether you’re the dad or the mom -- loving your child, being responsible for your child, teaching them how to be honest and how to be responsible themselves, and how to treat other people with kindness and how to respect themselves but respect others, how to work hard -- those weren’t values that were just for moms to teach, those were values for dads to teach as well, right? 

So some of it is me trying to remember what did my mom do for me and how can I do that for my daughters.  And the second thing was just a commitment to being there -- which is part of the reason why this mentorship program is so important.  Some of you have dads in your lives even if your parents are divorced, and that's great, because it's hard to replace a dad, and fathers can make this unbelievable contribution.  For those who don't have that, having an adult in your life -- and then for boys, especially, an adult male in their lives -- just to talk to and to have an interaction with and to kind of model off of, even if sometimes it's not that explicit but you're kind of watching folks and seeing, all right, how do they carry themselves, how do they treat other people -- that makes a difference. 

For me, though, it was just really important to be there.  And one of the things you discover being a father is you get out of it at least as much as you are putting into it.  When I talk to young people who are thinking about parenthood or thinking about families, I try to describe, there is no greater joy than being in your children’s lives and then seeing them turn out well, seeing them happy and succeeding and focused and just being good people.  It's the single most important thing you do in your life.  And I was lucky -- I think precisely because I didn’t have that -- to say to myself I'm going to make sure that I experience that.

It also helps marrying a good women.  I should add that.  (Laughter and applause.)  So that always helps. 

All right, who else?  Just because that green is something, I've got to call on you.  (Laughter.)  Just because that's an outfit right there.  That looks sharp.  (Laughter.)  What’s your name?

Q    My name is Gray Smith (ph) and I'm from D.C.  And my question is how do cope with judgment and how people see you?

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, that's an interesting question.  Because people do have a lot of judgment about me, don't they?  (Laughter.)  That's a great question.  When you grow up, when you're young it is natural to care about what your peers think of you.  That's just human.  And there’s nothing wrong with that.  That's part of how young people get socialized, is they are looking at how people are responding to them and taking it in.  And when they get positive reinforcement, they do more of that.  When they get negative reinforcement, they do less of that.  And that's just how we are.  We're social animals.

But I do think that as you get older part of what you have to determine is what’s important to you -- who are you, how do you want to live, what are the principles that you abide by, what are the kind of fixed foundations, what’s the North Star that steers you -- so that when things happen that aren't always according to plan, and when you have tough times and when you are struggling, what is it that's going to keep you going and keep your bearings. 

And I think through trial and error and mistakes and self-reflection, over time I've sort of figured out who I am and what’s important to me and what I care about.  And I try to stay focused on that.  And that can come about in a lot of different ways.  Some people come at it through their faith and God centers them.  And some people come at it through their work and they determine, this is what I think is important in terms of my work. There are different paths to it, but at some point, to be a man or a woman, to be an adult, to be a full-grown person, you have to move beyond just what other people think and you have to make a determination about what do you believe in. 

Not just what’s your opinion are any given day -- because folks have opinions about everything, and I change my mind about issues.  There are times where I think one way, and then I get more evidence, new information comes in, and I say, oh, maybe I wasn’t right about that, let me rethink this.  So there’s nothing wrong with changing your mind.  But that's different from losing your sense of who you are and what’s important, or just changing your mind because it's easier or expedient. 

And what I try to do is be open-minded to new facts but stay pretty fixed in terms of what I think is important.  I think, for example, it is really -- this sounds corny, but I think it's really important to treat other people with kindness.  So that's a basic principle that I've got.  Now, I've got to translate that sometimes in very abstract ways.  All right, well, what does that mean if you’ve got suffering children halfway across the world -- what are my responsibilities to them and how does that translate into policy? 

And sometimes I've got tough choices because, on the one hand, I may want to help those children; on the other hand, I've got a bunch of young people I need to help here.  And if I want to help those children I may need to, then, deal with bad people who are hurting those kids, but that may involve the United States in the kind of conflicts that ultimately hurt some of our young men and women who I might have to send there.  So there are complexities to it.  It’s hard.  But I don’t lose track of the fact that I think treating somebody with kindness, that’s a core value of mine. 

And then I just don’t watch TV.  That’s the other thing.  (Laughter and applause.)  That also helps.  That’s not entirely true, I was teasing about that.

But I do think that one of the things, as you grow up you start trying to figure out, is who gives you constructive criticism because they’re invested in the same things you are but maybe can see some things you can’t, versus folks who are just -- what did somebody say -- hating, somebody just hating, just haters -- I won’t go there, but -- (laughter) -- but people who maybe are providing less constructive criticism where I can’t really use it because no matter what I do, there may be something else that they’re criticizing.  The object of it is not to advance a goal. 

And so one thing you should learn is if somebody is being constructive in their criticism, usually they’re not criticizing you, they’re criticizing your actions and what you do, and are giving you something specific.  So if a coach is coaching Chris and just says, you’re a buster, you can’t play -- that’s not constructive criticism.  If they say, Chris, right now you’re dribbling too much and you need to move the ball around because then five guys are going to touch it and we’ll have more motion  -- that becomes constructive criticism.  

Well, that’s true in your lives as well.  So you can usually tell -- if somebody is being constructive, they’re telling you something specific that you can change, that you can test to see if it’s going to make things better.  And if they can’t, if all they’re saying is you’re not worth nothing, then that’s probably not something that you want to pay a lot of attention to.  Does that make sense?  All right. 

Young man right here.

Q    Hi.  My name is Wayne Welker (ph) and I’m assistant crew leader and PowerCorps PHL and I’m from Philadelphia.  And my question is I heard about the Iftar that you had at the White House.  Any of our members -- all of our members, we’ve got some of our members who are working in the sun and they’re fasting, and they’re pushing through one of the initiatives to make the city greener.  We wanted to know if -- I wanted to know if we could come out, if we were invited to the Iftar at the White House.

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, maybe next year.  I only do it once a year.  But we appreciate you.  What we try to do -- for those of you who aren’t familiar, the Iftar is the breaking of fast during the month of Ramadan, which is a holy time for those of the Muslim faith.  In the same way that we do Christmas celebrations and Hanukkah celebrations, every faith, what we try to do is to recognize that what makes this country great is we may have different faiths but we all come together as one American family.

And so we hosted a dinner just -- was it last week?  It was last week.  I lost track of time these days because this is what happens when you get older, young men, so -- (laughter.)  But next year, we’ll see if we can have somebody from your organization.  It was a wonderful dinner.  The only problem is, is that in most areas where the Muslim faith evolved, sunset is a lot earlier.  When you start getting up north, these poor folks, it’s nine o’clock, they’re starving.  (Laughter.)  So it gets dark late. 

Yes, young man right here.  Yes.

Q    I’m from the great state of Montana. 

THE PRESIDENT:  It’s a beautiful state.

Q    My question for you, Mr. President, is how is the United States government helping American Indian people revitalize their language and culture?  Because so many of our young men and boys don’t know who they are because they’ve lost their culture and language, and the United States government has tried so hard for the past 200 years to destroy that.

THE PRESIDENT:  Look, it’s a great question.  As you may be aware, I was at an Indian reservation in South Dakota recently.  And I met with a group of young people -- this is young men and women -- wonderful young men and women.  Just extraordinary.  And I won’t share with you exactly what they told me about their lives because it was private and they really opened up.  But I can tell you that it was heartbreaking to hear some of the stories, in part because you got a sense of what the history of the interaction between the United States government and Native American peoples had done to the culture.

The Bible says without vision a people will perish.  And what happens when you start losing your language and you start losing your culture and you don’t have a sense of connections to ancestors and those memories that date back generations is you start feeling adrift.  And if you’re living in a society that devalues that, then you start maybe devaluing yourself and internalizing some of those doubts.

Now, the good news is what we started seeing -- for example, at the pow-wow that existed at the reservation, there was a Lakota language school for little kids, starting very early.  They were learning math and science and all the subjects, but they were also in an immersion school, essentially, in their own language to empower them.

And part of what I’ve been talking to Secretary Duncan about and Sally Jewell, who is the head of the Department of Interior, about is how do we incorporate more effectively into the school curriculums, into social programs, et cetera, a recognition of the distinct cultures of these native peoples.  Because if young people come up proud of their past, then they’ll have a more powerful sense of direction going forward.

Now, one thing I have to just say about all this, though, is the world is what it is.  It is a global world.  We live in the 21st century.  When I was up at the reservation everybody had a cellphone.  Everybody wanted to take selfies, like they always do.  People were texting.  And so you can’t ignore what’s happened.  You can’t just live in the past; you also have to look to the future -- which means that all the young Native Americans are also going to have to learn math, science, computer sciences, engineering.  There has to be an adaption to what is increasingly a world culture, even as you are also then connecting it back to your roots.  And sometimes that’s hard.

And part of what’s great about America is the way that we all take these different cultures and we make one culture out of it.  And we shouldn’t lose that.  That is -- we’re not just a collection of Jews and Irish and Native Americans and black -- we’re also Americans, so we have a common culture that binds us together.  There’s no contradiction between knowing your culture -- the traditional cultures out of which your families come, but also being part of the larger culture.

And I think that one of the things -- this is true not just for Native Americans, but it’s also true for African Americans.  Sometimes African Americans, in communities where I’ve worked, there’s been the notion of “acting white” -- which sometimes is overstated, but there’s an element of truth to it, where, okay, if boys are reading too much, then, well, why are you doing that? Or why are you speaking so properly?  And the notion that there’s some authentic way of being black, that if you’re going to be black you have to act a certain way and wear a certain kind of clothes, that has to go.  (Applause.)  Because there are a whole bunch of different ways for African American men to be authentic.

If you look at Michele, she grew up South Side.  And her mom still lives in a neighborhood where gunshots go off, and it can be rough where Michelle grew up.  But she’ll talk proper when she needs to.  Now, you also don’t want to get on her wrong side, because she can translate that into a different vernacular.  (Laughter.)

But my point is, is that you don’t have to act a certain way to be authentic.  You just have to be who you are -- and to go back to the values that you care about -- are you kind, are you responsible, do you work hard, can you delay gratification.  Well, the same is true in the Native American context.  We want to get past the idea that there’s a certain way of being Native American.  You need to know your culture, but you can also be part of this larger world. 

And there are some cultures, frankly, who’ve done this better than others.  I do think, for example, Jewish culture has been very powerful.  If you look in our society, the ability to transmit traditions through synagogues and the Torah and bar mitzvahs and bat mitzvahs, so that people have a sense of 2,000 years of history, but everybody is still part of today and America and the world.

In many Asian American cultures, when they are part of -- first-generation immigrant, they might have a whole separate set of classes on weekends or after school where they’re learning their native tongues, the mother tongue, but they’re still focused, when you’re in school this is how you’re doing things.

So I think this is something that we have to spend some time thinking about -- making sure that we understand there’s a way of knowing your history, knowing your culture, being proud of it, using it as a strength, but not thinking that there’s just one way of you then having to act.  I think that’s very important.

Let me take a look here.  How many more questions can I take, by the way?  We got one or two?  All right, one or two.  Let’s see -- I’m just looking around.  You all look good, everybody looks good.  I just want to make sure that everybody gets a chance.  This young man in the corner here with the glasses.

Q    Hi.  I’m representing the Asian American League today. And my question, what is your opinion on D.C. statehood?

THE PRESIDENT:  On D.C. statehood?

Q    Yes. 

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, that’s -- I’m in D.C., so I’m for it. (Laughter and applause.)  No, look, I think I’ve long believed that D.C. pays -- folks in D.C. pay taxes like everybody else.  They contribute to the overall well-being of the country like everybody else.  They should be represented like everybody else. And it’s not as if Washington, D.C. is not big enough compared to other states.  There has been a long movement to get D.C. statehood and I’ve been for it for quite some time.  The politics of it end up being difficult to get it through Congress, but I think it’s absolutely the right thing to do.

All right, that was an easy one.  Who else has got something?  Let’s see here.  See, I know that -- it’s tempting for me to call on a young woman.  You know what, I’m going to call on -- maybe she has a perspective that nobody else has.  This young lady right here.  Didn’t you have your hand up?  Okay, I wanted to make sure.  Go ahead.

Q    My name is Jakesha Gray (ph) and my question was --

THE PRESIDENT:  Why don’t you give her the mic because it’s hard for her to reach -- but you’re promising you’ll give it up.

Q    I promise.  (Laughter.)

THE PRESIDENT:  Okay.

Q    Because you don’t have any biological sons, what is the likelihood of you mentoring one of the young men in the program?

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, it’s not just one of the young men -- we’ve got a whole mentor program that we’re bringing -- I’m going to be spending time with all of them because I’m going to spread myself a little thin with all of them. 

The problem for just me taking one is obviously then all the other guys who are part of the program would be like, man, how did you get the President?  (Laughter.)  So that would not be fair.  So I’m going to be spending time with all the guys who are mentoring in the White House. 

These have both been short questions so I’m going to take a couple more.  This young man in the blue shirt right here.  This is one of our soon-to-be mentees at the White House.

Q    My name is Jonathan.  I’m from Burke, Virginia.  My question is, what advice can you give us so that we can achieve our goals?

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, I’m going to be giving you a whole bunch of advice so this won’t be an exhaustive list, but I’ll just start with a couple of things.  Number one is:  Work.  It’s a pretty simple concept.  There is nothing worthwhile where it just falls in your lap.  I mean, maybe once in a while somebody wins the lottery, but for the most part, everything you do that’s worthwhile requires work. 

We’ve got -- you guys are all too young to remember, but we’ve got -- Otis Birdsong here used to have one of the best jumpers in the NBA.  He looks like he could still play.  Otis, how many shots, when you were playing, how many shots would you take just, I don’t know -- thousands of shots, right?  I mean, if you talk to Chris or Steph Curry or Ray Allen or any great shooter, they are taking thousands of shots a day, so that when the time comes to make a big shot, it is just muscle memory.  It’s all burned in.  They have talent already, but they’ve worked.

It’s interesting -- you talk to young people about basketball and they kind of understand that.  They get that when it comes to sports.  But for some reason, you think the same doesn’t apply to school.  There is no reason why you should think that you will be a good reader if you don’t read a lot, and read books that are hard, as opposed to just books that are easy.  There is no reason to think that you will be good at mathematics if you are not doing math problems, and pushing yourself and trying math problems that are hard, not just ones that are easy. (Applause.)  There’s no reason why you should think that you’ll be well-informed about world events if you aren’t actually taking the time to read a newspaper once in a while and study what’s happening around the world.  So nothing you will do, if it’s going to be worthwhile, doesn’t involve some work. 

And that includes, by the way, being good parents.  Because I’ve got some friends who have still got young kids, and I’d forgotten -- I was watching -- my brother in law has got a -- my nephew -- a two-year-old and a five-year-old.  We call him Chairman of the Old Dads Club.  He started again.  And I’m watching them run around and it’s just exhausting.  (Laughter.)  No, small children are tiring.  And being loving and attentive and staying focused on what’s good for them, and disciplining them when necessary, that’s hard work. 

So work is number one.  Number two is figure out what it is that you care about passionately, something that you think is important to you.  Because if nothing is important to you, you’re not going to put in the work. 

Now, everybody has got different talents and everybody has got different passions.  And sometimes -- part of the goal of My Brother’s Keeper is to expose you to more things so that you don’t think that the only thing you can be passionate about is what you’re seeing on TV.  And part of the problem with young men of color is oftentimes the only thing they see to be passionate about is basketball or rap.  And we want to make sure you get exposed to graphic design, or you’re exposed to engineering, or you’re exposed to being a lawyer, so that maybe you will be passionate about that.

But the point is those two things go hand in hand.  If you find something you really care about, then that’s also what you’re going to really be willing to put a lot of work into and that’s what you’ll end up being good at.  So that’s goal number two. 

And goal number three -- or third thing -- and I’ve got a longer list, but here’s the third thing that’s pretty important  -- understand that you will not achieve by yourself, which means that you’ve got to be able to invest in relationships with other people who you can learn from, who will support you, who you will support in turn.  And if you learn how to be somebody who is a good teammate, who is connected and is thinking not just about yourself but about others as well, and they then respond to that by wanting to help you because you’ve shown yourself to be reliable or trustworthy or having somebody else’s back, you then build a network for yourself.  And that increases your capacity to get things done.

There are a handful of people who can do things on their own.  But even geniuses, even folks who are the best of the best at whatever they do, generally speaking, when you look at it you find out there’s a whole bunch of people behind them that have allowed them to succeed the way that they have.  And that’s part of what My Brother’s Keeper needs to be -- is just one more tool that you have to expand your network of people who can support your, give you ideas, buck you up when you’re down, open doors for you. 

Of course, the flip side is, though, you can’t just take -- you’ve also got to give.  So you’ve got to show enthusiasm. You’ve got to want to be involved.  You’ve got to be curious.  You’re going to have to ask questions.  If you have a mentor, you’ve got to show up on time.  If somebody is putting time into you, you’ve got to show appreciation for it and do your hardest to achieve. 

Same thing with teachers.  I don’t care how bad your school is, there’s a teacher in there somewhere who, if you went up to her or him and said, I really want to learn, can you help me, that teacher would snatch you up in a second, because they want to feel like they’re doing a good job.  (Applause.)  But if you’re just sitting in the back of the class slouching and complaining about how bad the school is, well, then you may be right to be angry that you don’t have enough school supplies, or the building is bad, or what have you, but it’s not going to help you.  You’re not going to learn. 

So you’ve got to be able to give as well as to take.  And if you learn that, those three things -- work, have a passion about something, and learn how to give and take with people so that you’re part of a broader team -- that’s a good place to start.  Then I’ll give you the other 20 things that you’ve got to do.  (Laughter.) 

Everybody, I’ve got to get going.  I want to say to everybody who’s been involved -- the school administrators who are here, the mayors who are here, the NBA, the companies, the mentors and businesses who have already set up mentorship programs, and most of all, the young people -- I am very excited about this.  I am proud of this.  This is not something that is just a one-off that’s going to happen one time and then we’re done.  This is a movement that we’re trying to build over the next year, five years, ten years, so that we can look back and say we were part of something that reversed some trends that we don’t want to see. 

We want fewer young men in jail; we want more of them in college.  We want fewer young men on the streets; we want more in the boardrooms.  We want everybody to have a chance to succeed in America.  (Applause.)  And it’s possible if we’ve got the kind of team that we set up today.

Thank you, everybody.  God bless you.  God bless America.  (Applause.) 

END< br /> 12:51 P.M. EDT

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The President Gives an Update on Ukraine and Gaza

July 21, 2014 | 7:39 | Public Domain

President Obama makes a statement on the current situation in Ukraine, as well as the situation in Gaza.

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Statement by the President on the Situation in Ukraine and Gaza

South Lawn

11:16 A.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT:  Good morning, everybody.  I want to make a brief statement about the tragedy in Ukraine.  Before I do, though, I want to note that Secretary Kerry has departed for the Middle East.  As I’ve said many times, Israel has a right to defend itself against rocket and tunnel attacks from Hamas.  And as a result of its operations, Israel has already done significant damage to Hamas’s terrorist infrastructure in Gaza.  I’ve also said, however, that we have serious concerns about the rising number of Palestinian civilian deaths and the loss of Israeli lives.  And that is why it now has to be our focus and the focus of the international community to bring about a cease-fire that ends the fighting and that can stop the deaths of innocent civilians, both in Gaza and in Israel.

So Secretary Kerry will meet with allies and partners.  I’ve instructed him to push for an immediate cessation of hostilities based on a return to the November 2012 cease-fire agreement between Israel and Hamas in Gaza.  The work will not be easy.  Obviously, there are enormous passions involved in this and some very difficult strategic issues involved.  Nevertheless, I’ve asked John to do everything he can to help facilitate a cessation to hostilities.  We don’t want to see any more civilians getting killed.

With respect to Ukraine, it’s now been four days since Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 was shot down over territory controlled by Russian-backed separatists in Ukraine.  Over the last several days, our hearts have been absolutely broken as we’ve learned more about the extraordinary and beautiful lives that were lost -- men, women and children and infants who were killed so suddenly and so senselessly.

Our thoughts and prayers continue to be with their families around the world who are going through just unimaginable grief.  I’ve had the opportunity to speak to a number of leaders around the world whose citizens were lost on this flight, and all of them remain in a state of shock but, frankly, also in a state of outrage. 

Our immediate focus is on recovering those who were lost, investigating exactly what happened, and putting forward the facts.  We have to make sure that the truth is out and that accountability exists. 

Now, international investigators are on the ground.  They have been organized.  I’ve sent teams; other countries have sent teams.  They are prepared, they are organized to conduct what should be the kinds of protocols and scouring and collecting of evidence that should follow any international incident like this.  And what they need right now is immediate and full access to the crash site.  They need to be able to conduct a prompt and full and unimpeded as well as transparent investigation.  And recovery personnel have to do the solemn and sacred work on recovering the remains of those who were lost.

Ukrainian President Poroshenko has declared a demilitarized zone around the crash site.  As I said before, you have international teams already in place prepared to conduct the investigation and recover the remains of those who have been lost.  But, unfortunately, the Russian-backed separatists who control the area continue to block the investigation.  They have repeatedly prevented international investigators from gaining full access to the wreckage.  As investigators approached, they fired their weapons into the air.  These separatists are removing evidence from the crash site, all of which begs the question -- what exactly are they trying to hide?

Moreover, these Russian-backed separatists are removing bodies from the crash site, oftentimes without the care that we would normally expect from a tragedy like this.  And this is an insult to those who have lost loved ones.  This is the kind of behavior that has no place in the community of nations.

Now, Russia has extraordinary influence over these separatists.  No one denies that.  Russia has urged them on.  Russia has trained them.  We know that Russia has armed them with military equipment and weapons, including anti-aircraft weapons.  Key separatist leaders are Russian citizens.  So given its direct influence over the separatists, Russia and President Putin, in particular, has direct responsibility to compel them to cooperate with the investigation.  That is the least that they can do. 

President Putin says that he supports a full and fair investigation.  And I appreciate those words, but they have to be supported by actions.  The burden now is on Russia to insist that the separatists stop tampering with the evidence, grant investigators who are already on the ground immediate, full and unimpeded access to the crash site.  The separatists and the Russian sponsors are responsible for the safety of the investigators doing their work.  And along with our allies and partners, we will be working this issue at the United Nations today. 

More broadly, as I’ve said throughout this crisis and the crisis in Ukraine generally, and I’ve said this directly to President Putin, as well as publicly, my preference continues to be finding a diplomatic resolution within Ukraine.  I believe that can still happen.  That is my preference today, and it will continue to be my preference.

But if Russia continues to violate Ukraine’s sovereignty and to back these separatists, and these separatists become more and more dangerous and now are risks not simply to the people inside of Ukraine but the broader international community, then Russia will only further isolate itself from the international community, and the costs for Russia’s behavior will only continue to increase. 

Now is the time for President Putin and Russia to pivot away from the strategy that they’ve been taking and get serious about trying to resolve hostilities within Ukraine in a way that respects Ukraine’s sovereignty and respects the right of the Ukrainian people to make their own decisions about their own lives.

And time is of the essence.  Our friends and allies need to be able to recover those who were lost.  That's the least we can do.  That's the least that decency demands.  Families deserve to be able to lay their loved ones to rest with dignity.  The world deserves to know exactly what happened.  And the people of Ukraine deserve to determine their own future. 

Thanks.

END
11:25 A.M. EDT

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The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Press Briefing by Press Secretary Josh Earnest, 7/21/2014

James S. Brady Press Briefing Room

1:28 P.M. EDT

MR. EARNEST:  Good afternoon, everybody.  I apologize for the delay today.  We’re going to try to do better on the timing, but there are always going to be those days that a delay can’t be avoided, and unfortunately today was one of those days, so I apologize.

I do have a quick announcement at the top of the briefing before we get started.  This afternoon, the President will convene a meeting of his Homeland Security Council.  That includes the Vice President, Secretaries Johnson, Burwell and Hagel, among others, to discuss the situation at the border and the comprehensive whole-of-government response that the President has directed be put in place.

This meeting is taking place in an important context that I wanted to make sure that you are aware of.  In June, Customs and Border Patrol apprehended an average of around 355 unaccompanied children per day in the Rio Grande Valley.  According to preliminary data tracking the first two weeks of this month, CBP apprehensions have dropped to an average of around 150 unaccompanied children per day in the Rio Grande Valley, and some of those days have been as low as around 110 to 115 children per day.

Now, while the reasons for the reduction in the number of unaccompanied children and adults traveling with children apprehended by CBP cannot be attributed to any one factor, we do believe that the administration’s response and efforts to work with Central American leaders to publicize the dangers of the journey and reinforce that apprehended migrants are ultimately returned to their home countries in keeping with the law, as well as seasonal flows, have all played a part. 

That all being said, that support for the administration’s strategy and supplemental appropriations request, including efforts to support deterrence, address the root causes of migration, and build our capacity to provide the appropriate care for unaccompanied children and adults traveling with children, all remains critical to managing the situation this year and making longer-term progress in stemming the flow of Central American migrants across the border.  We want to make sure that we do not find ourselves in a similar situation in the years to come.

So I wanted to make sure that you’re aware of that addition to the President’s schedule today.

So, Julie, do you want to get us started?

Q    Thanks, Josh.  The Malaysian Prime Minister says that he’s reached a deal with the rebels in Ukraine to allow safe access to the crash site and to hand over the plane’s black boxes.  Is the U.S. aware of the circumstances around this deal?  Do you believe it’s legitimate?  And does it meet the conditions that the President outlined in his statement this morning?

MR. EARNEST:  I’ve seen those reports about the custody of the black boxes.  I’m not in a position to comment on them from here.  These are relatively late-breaking reports. 

What I will say is that what the President is calling for is unfettered access for professional international investigators to get access to the scene.  And this is important because there should be a professional, transparent investigation conducted into what exactly happened.  And that will not be able to occur if we continue to see what we’ve seen in recent days, which is Russian-backed separatists preventing those investigators from getting access to the site.  There were reports that some of these separatists were wielding weapons, even firing them into the air. 

So this is a situation that we’re pretty concerned about.  You heard the President talk about this directly a couple of hours ago.  There is an opportunity for President Putin to use the significant influence that he has with these Russian-backed separatists to comply with the request of investigators for access to the scene.  As the President described, that’s the least they could do. 

Q    Can you say what specifically the U.S. is hoping the Europeans do this week in terms of additional costs against Russia?  There’s a meeting tomorrow in Brussels.

MR. EARNEST:  Well, as you know, Julie, the United States has been in regular consultation with our partners in Europe about isolating Russia and putting pressure on Russia to use their influence to try to find a diplomatic resolution to the instability we see in Ukraine right now.

In the last several months, Russia has not used that influence to encourage the separatists to abide by a cease-fire.  In fact, we have actually seen Russia take steps that could be considered proactive steps that are actually contributing to the instability in that area.

So what we have sought is to work in coordination with our partners in Europe to put pressure on President Putin to change course, to change his strategy.  And those talks among European leaders will continue.  And in the context of those talks, senior administration officials will be in touch with their European counterparts about steps they could take.

Now, I’m not going to lay out those steps in advance, as we’ve discussed a few times.  It would be counterproductive for us to talk in detail about what those steps would be.

Q    But it seems like you could at least -- I mean, do you want the Europeans to at least get to the point where their sanctions match the sanctions that the President outlined last week?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, the President did outline some steps last week that we were going to take unilaterally to impose some costs on Russia.  In coordination with those announcements, the Europeans made clear that they’re putting in place the kind of legal framework that’s necessary to put in place additional sanctions for their own part as well.

So we certainly want to continue to mobilize the international community, as we’ve already done, to put pressure on Russia and on Putin to contribute to a solution in Ukraine.  And those efforts continue.  I think in light of this terribly tragic situation, the stakes for resolving the situation quickly have been laid bare.  There are consequences, and in this case dire consequences, for the failure of the Russian leader to use his influence in the region to deal with this situation. 

And now that, as the President described, the international community’s collective head has snapped to attention in terms of focusing on this situation, we anticipate that the increased pressure will be something that President Putin finds more persuasive.  But time will tell.

Q    Is the President willing to act unilaterally to impose U.S. sanctions against broad sectors of the Russian economy that go beyond what he did yesterday?  Or does he feel like those measures have to happen in coordination with the Europeans?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, Julie, as you pointed out in your previous question, the sanctions regime that was announced last week was put in place one day before the downing of this jetliner.

Q    But obviously that has changed the circumstances there.

MR. EARNEST:  It has certainly changed the circumstances there.  That previous sanctions regime was put in place based on actions that Russia had already taken to destabilize the situation. 

It is clear that Russia has not changed course, and that is why additional sanctions or additional costs remain on the table and will continue to be considered by this administration to focus pressure on the Russians.

Q    Does that include unilateral sector sanctions, broad sector sanctions?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I’m not going to telegraph any specific strategy that we have, but it is accurate to say that additional steps are being contemplated by this administration as necessary to put additional pressure on President Putin to use his influence to contribute positively to resolving the situation in Ukraine.  So far, their contributions have been almost entirely negative, and we would like to see the Russians pursue a different course, to change their strategy, and pursue the kind of diplomatic solution that we know is capable of resolving the conflict there.

Jeff.

Q    Josh, would the United States like to see President Putin excluded from the G20 meeting that will be held in Australia at the end of this year?

MR. EARNEST:  I don’t have any steps like that to announce at this point.

Q    Is that something that the President has discussed with Prime Minister Abbott during their couple different conversations over the last week?

MR. EARNEST:  I don’t have any more details in terms of their conversations to read out at this point.

Q    On a different subject, the President and Secretary Kerry both appear to be fed up with Israel, or the number of civilian casualties in Gaza.  Accepting what the President said about Israel’s right to defend itself against rocket attacks, is that a fair characterization to say that the President is losing patience over this?

MR. EARNEST:  I think the way that I would characterize it is simply that the President is concerned about the violence that we’ve seen experienced by civilians on both sides of the border.  There are reports of Israeli casualties and many more reports of Palestinian casualties.  Our thoughts and prayers are with the families of those who have been killed.  Our condolences are with the Palestinian people and the Israeli people for the losses that they have suffered.

What is unacceptable, though, is for Hamas to continue firing rockets aimed squarely at Israeli civilians.  That is not a situation that any country could tolerate, and it is why the Israeli political leadership has the right to use their military might to defend their people.  At the same time, the Israelis say that they uphold high standards in terms of ensuring that those operations take into account the safety and well-being of innocent civilians.  What this escalation in violence makes clear is that Israel must take greater steps to meet its own standards for protecting civilians from being killed.  And we’ll continue to send that message directly to the Israelis.

Q    So does that mean that the United States does not feel it is maintaining those standards and being as careful as it should be in those attacks?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I think what we would like to do is we would like the Israelis to take even greater steps to ensure the protection of innocent civilians, including Palestinians. 

As I pointed out, and as the President alluded to in his statement this morning, Israel does face a significant threat from Hamas.  That is apparent from the barrage of rocket attacks that have been fired off by Hamas.  That’s apparent from the infrastructure of tunnels that Hamas has used to carry out acts of violence. 

What’s also clear is that this Israeli offensive has made progress in dismantling this infrastructure.  And again, it is within Israel’s right to take those kinds of steps.  At the same time, we also want to make sure that Israel is doing everything that they can to live up to their own standards related to protecting the welfare and well-being of innocent civilian bystanders.

Jim.

Q    Thanks, Josh.  It seems just judging by the last statement that the U.S. would like to see the Israelis take greater steps, that the U.S. believes that the Israelis have gone a little overboard in this tunnel operation.  Is that a fair assessment?

MR. EARNEST:  That’s not the way that I would describe it, Jim.  What I would say is that the Israelis have the right to defend themselves, and they have taken steps to do exactly that.  We’ve seen their population subjected to repeated volleys of rocket fire.  What distinguishes the Hamas actions from the Israeli actions is that Hamas is squarely targeting their rocket fire at innocent Israeli civilians.  The Israeli military, on the other hand, does have standards for trying to protect the life of innocent civilians, even innocent Palestinian civilians.

What we would like to see, however, is we would like Israel to take greater steps to ensure that they’re living up to those standards.  So that is the clearest enunciation that I can provide of our view of the situation.

Q    And getting back to Flight 17, the Russians appear to have their own version of events.  There’s a Russian News Service report that officials there believe that a Ukrainian warplane was flying near Flight 17 before it crashed.  What’s the White House take when you hear those kinds of statements being made by the Russians?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, Jim, I’m not in a position to offer a specific intelligence assessment.  That’s certainly possible that we may be in a position to do that in the days ahead.  But there are some facts that have been widely reported and that are well known.  The first is that, for months now, the Russian government has been actively supporting the separatists in eastern Ukraine.  In fact, some of those separatist leaders are Russian citizens.

We also know -- and we actually announced in the context of the sanctions regime that we were putting in place on Wednesday -- that Russia continues to provide heavy weapons to these separatists by moving heavy weapons from Russia across the border into Ukraine.  We also know that the Russians are actively engaged in training separatists to use those weapons, including some anti-aircraft weapons.  In fact, the separatists have claimed some success on this front.  They have boasted in the last several weeks of shooting down three different Ukrainian aircraft.  So there’s a track record here.

We also know, according to social media reports, that separatists last week had access to an SA-11 system, the kind of system that is capable to reaching aircraft at high altitudes.  We also know that the missile that downed Malaysia Flight 17 was fired from a separatist-controlled area.  We know that the Ukrainian military was not operating anti-aircraft weapons in that area at that time.  We’ve seen social media accounts of that SA-11 system moving from Ukraine back across the border into Russia.  And we’ve seen social media accounts of the separatists talking about the shoot-down of the plane.

So what’s clear is that there is a picture that’s coming into focus.  And Russian claims, to the contrary, are getting both more desperate and much harder to believe.

Q    Later this week -- or actually, tomorrow, the President is going to be heading out West for a series of fundraisers -- Seattle, San Francisco, Los Angeles.  Are you concerned about the image that the President is going to be sending later this week that he’s on fundraising trips while these two crises are going on at the same time?  Have you given any consideration to perhaps curtailing that fundraising travel schedule for later this week?

MR. EARNEST:  The President’s top priority and the top priority of the staff here at the White House is making sure that the President is able to do his job in terms of managing the United States’ involvement in these crises.  As was demonstrated last week when the President was on the road and two of these crises flared up, the President was able to fulfill his responsibilities as Commander-in-Chief and as the leader of this country from the road. 

When the President travels, he travels with an array of staff and advisors and communications equipment that allows him to do his job from wherever he happens to be.  And that will be the case this week when he’s traveling later this week.  We want to make sure that the President has everything that he needs to fulfill his responsibilities as the Commander-in-Chief.  And if it becomes clear that there’s a need for him to come back to the White House in order to fulfill those functions, then we’ll make a change in his schedule.  Right now it’s not apparent that that’s the case.

Q    At this point, you’re not changing the schedule.

MR. EARNEST:  That’s correct. 

Let’s move around the room a little bit.  Olivier.

Q    Josh, the President today in his statement talked about evidence-tampering by Russian-backed separatists.  Could you give us a couple of examples and tell us what that allegation rests on?  Are we talking about open source comments, or does the United States have intelligence into the activities on the ground?

MR. EARNEST:  What I can comment on is specifically the open press reports that we’ve seen.  And most of this is driven by the refusal of Russian-backed separatists to allow international investigators, professional investigators to get unfettered access to the scene.  And there are widespread reports through social media and through more formal media outlets that indicate that parts of the plane are being moved around.  There are reports that Russian-backed separatists are handling the bodies in a way that is not in line with generally accepted standards.

Not only is that an added insult and source of pain to the families of those who have already lost so much, it also is tampering with evidence of this terrible tragedy.

So there are a number of published reports and social media reports that give us concern about the way that that scene is being handled right now.

Q    I understand that.  But the President is putting his credibility behind the social -- effectively putting his credibility behind the social media reports and media reports.  What I’m trying to get at is, when you talk about moving parts of the plane around, that could refer to a whole lot of different activities.  And I’m trying to figure out whether this is tampering with evidence, or if they’re moving wreckage to get bodies.  I can’t tell from these public comments what’s going on.

MR. EARNEST:  The President’s priority is that this investigation should be conducted by an international set of investigators that don’t have an agenda beyond getting to the truth.  We want to make sure that those who are conducting this investigation aren’t just neutral arbiters, but are also trained; that these are professionals who are conducting these investigations, people that have experience in dealing with these kinds of matters.

That is the focus of the President’s immediate concern right now.  And that is why we believe that President Putin should take the steps that are necessary to use his influence to ensure that those international investigators can have access to the scene so we can get to the bottom of what exactly happened.  That should be, frankly, in everybody’s interest.  And as I pointed out, and as the President mentioned earlier, it seems like the least that the separatists could do.

Alexis.

Q    Josh, can I follow up on what Olivier was asking?  The President today asked the question -- what are they trying to hide?  And I guess to follow on what Olivier was asking, is the President confident that even without the evidence on the ground or with the tampering or the movement of material in the region, that intelligence sources and the information already obtained in the United States and by allies will be enough to make the transparent case that he is urging?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I’ll say a couple of things about that.  The first is that I’m not going to be in a position to deliver an intelligence assessment on this matter from here today.  There is a pretty good case that I walked through before, based on public reports and based on some intelligence assessments that had previously been released, that paint a pretty clear picture about what’s happened and who is culpable.  It also paints a pretty clear picture of how the Russians have contributed to this tragedy.  And it is why we are hopeful that the pressure of the international community can be brought to bear in a way that will force Russia and President Putin to contribute to a solution to the situation in Ukraine.

And the investigation that we would like to see on the ground would only add to the body of evidence that’s already been assembled and reported about what exactly happened last Thursday morning in eastern Ukraine.  So everybody that is interested in the truth and getting to the bottom of what actually happened will be strongly supportive of ensuring that these international, impartial, professional investigators have unfettered access to the scene so that they can determine exactly what happened and why it happened.  That would only lay on top of what is already a pretty compelling body of evidence.

Q    One other question on a different subject.  The Washington Post report this weekend about the information available to the administration about the border and expectations of a surge at the border.  Can you comment on whether the administration was advised, and then overlooked or disregarded the information that was available to DHS and the White House?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, Alexis, I’d first point out that you’re asking about a story that’s based entirely on anonymous sources.  So that should be reflected in the record.  The second is, if you do take a look at what this administration’s response has been not just in the last couple of months, but over the last few years, you’ve seen that this administration has repeatedly sought additional resources to deal with this specific problem at the border.  That if you look at the trajectory of the budget from Fiscal Year 2011 to the 2012 to 2013 to 2014, that there has been a steady increase in the amount of resources requested to deal with this precise problem.  That is a pretty good indication that this is something that we’ve been watching carefully and preparing for.

What also happens to be true is that there are a number of steps that were taken by this administration in the months before, or at least in the weeks before this became the media sensation that it has been over the last several weeks, that there were repeated visits by the Secretary of Homeland Security to the border and to facilities that were used and have been used to detain unaccompanied minors. 

There were steps taken by the President to direct the FEMA Administrator to coordinate the activities of DHS and the Department of Defense, and Health and Human Services, to coordinate the response for detaining these children and these families in a humanitarian way.

So this is something that the administration has been focused on for quite some time.  And we have seen, as I mentioned at the top of the briefing, the tide at least start to turn over the last couple of weeks.  But we’re not going to turn our attention away from that; in fact, the President is having a meeting on this today, because he believes that this is the kind of significant problem that merits sustained attention.

Peter.

Q    Can I follow up on that?

MR. EARNEST:  Go ahead, Peter.

Q    As you may have heard, Texas Governor Perry is expected to deploy 1,000 Texas National Guard troops the border; he obviously has the authority to do that.  The President has declined to do that on the federal level so far.  What do you think the impact of this state action will be?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I’m not sure exactly what the long-term impact of that will be.  I know that Governor Perry is hopeful that it will have a -- send an important symbol.  What we’re focused on is making sure that we have the necessary resources at the border to deal with this problem on a sustained basis; that by nature, a National Guard deployment is temporary.

Now, I will say that we haven’t received the formal communication that you typically get from a state official when they make a request like this.  So we’ll see if Governor Perry follows through on his public announcement with the communication that’s necessary to begin this kind of deployment.  What I would say is that if this deployment does move forward, it is the kind of step that we would like to see be coordinated and integrated with the ongoing response there.

And the President, after meeting with Governor Perry a couple of weeks ago in Texas, signaled his openness to this kind of proposal.  The President and this administration does not see it in any way as a substitute for the kind of more enduring response that this administration has sought both through the supplemental appropriations request, but also through comprehensive immigration reform.

Again, Governor Perry has referred repeatedly to his desire to make a symbolic statement to the people of Central America that the border is closed.  And he thinks that the best way to do that is to send 1,000 National Guard troops to the border.  It seems to me that a much more powerful symbol would be the bipartisan passage of legislation that would actually make a historic investment in border security and send an additional 20,000 personnel to the border.  So by a factor of 20, we could, according to Governor Perry’s analysis, significantly multiply the symbol that we’re sending about the security to the border.

So what we’re hopeful is that Governor Perry will not just take these kinds of steps that are generating the kind of headlines I suspect he intended, but will actually take the kinds of steps that will be constructive to solving the problem over the long term.  And to be specific, that means that we hope that Governor Perry will support the supplemental appropriations request that this administration put forward a few weeks ago, and that Governor Perry will use his influence with congressional Republicans in Congress and urge them to stop blocking comprehensive bipartisan legislation in the House of Representatives that would make an historic commitment to border security and address so many of the problems that are plaguing our broken immigration system. 

Q    Are you saying you’re concerned about the militarization of the border with this move?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, what I’m saying is that we haven’t seen the kinds of communication that you’d ordinarily see from a governor when they want to make a deployment like this.  And we would hope that any additional resources that are added to the border would be integrated and coordinated with the significant ongoing efforts that are already in place.

Mara.

Q    Can I follow up on that?

MR. EARNEST:  Sure.

Q    You’ve been asked several times, like, why would this situation not have happened if the comprehensive bill had been law.  And you’ve referred -- and again, you did today -- to the fact that there would be 20,000 more agents on the border; that border security would be beefed up.  My understanding is that these kids are not sneaking past border agents, they are giving themselves up to border agents.  So why would having more border agents stop them from coming?  I’m confused. 

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I think this would be a great question for Governor Perry.  So hopefully your interview request of Governor Perry is forthcoming, because I think that’s the question that he’s laying out, right?

Q    You keep on saying border security, but isn’t it because families would be reunified, and the mothers would be legalized so they wouldn’t have to be separated from their kids?

MR. EARNEST:  The context in which I raised it, Mara, was with Governor Perry’s assertion that the way to solve this problem is through symbolism; that symbolic actions placing additional security assets to the border is a way to solve this problem.  And what I’m saying is that if Governor Perry actually feels this way, that we would expect him to be an enthusiastic supporter of not adding 1,000 boots on the ground on the border, but rather of 20,000 boots to the border; that if that’s the case that Governor Perry wants to make, we would expect him to be strongly supportive of comprehensive immigration reform.

We have described this legislation as a compromise piece of legislation all along.  The President is supportive of adding additional resources to the border to further augment our efforts to secure the border.  But there are a number of other things that are included in that legislation that would be beneficial to the economy, that would reduce the deficit, that would actually make it easier for businesses who are trying to hire workers.  Right now, there’s this perverse set of incentives in place for businesses to hire undocumented workers because they can do so more cheaply.  What this legislation would do is it would level the playing field and enforce the law in a way that would require all businesses to abide by the rules, to do the right thing, and do that in a way that makes the most business sense.

So there are a whole host of reasons why anyone, Democrats and Republicans, and why we’ve seen so many Democrats and Republicans all across the country come out and strongly support comprehensive immigration reform.

Q    But I want to ask the question again:  What in the bill that was passed by the Senate would specifically have prevented these kids from flowing over the border?

MR. EARNEST:  There are a number of things in this piece of legislation that would contribute to alleviating this problem.  The first is, we would have a -- part of the investment that’s included in this immigration reform proposal is a streamlined legal immigration process.  And having a legal immigration process that functions more effectively would stem the tide of illegal migration.  Those who are desperate to enter this country would understand that there is actually a legitimate path for them to do so legally.

The other thing that would -- again, if you listen to Republican arguments about the causes of this situation that we see along the border, they say that there’s a lot of -- a lack of clarity about the immigration system.  There’s no doubt that there are a lot of consequences of our broken immigration system that are difficult to explain.  And making sure that people understand the facts is complicated.  Putting in place this common-sense proposal that was passed in bipartisan fashion by the Senate would make it much clearer to everybody, both people in this country and people in other countries, what exactly the rules are for immigrating to this country.  That would have an impact on stemming the tide of illegal migration. 

I’m not suggesting that if -- well, let me just say it this way:  This problem at the border is something that has existed for quite some time, and would likely exist in the future.  The question is, are we going to make sure that the federal government has the kinds of resources and has a reformed law in place that effectively governs our immigration system so that we can deal with these difficult challenges. 

J.C.

Q    The President obviously feels that there’s so much now at stake that he has asked John Kerry once again to get on another plane, and this one to Cairo, to meet with Ban Ki-moon, Mr. Abbas and other leaders in the region.  Specifically, what has the President charged the Secretary to do, and what deliverables is he willing to offer to bring back the cessation of the hostilities back to November ‘12?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, specifically, that was what the Secretary of State was charged with doing -- is going to the region and putting back in place the agreement that was reached around the cease-fire in November of 2012.  And that is going to require some difficult diplomacy, but he’ll be, as you pointed out, meeting with both Israeli and Palestinian leaders.  He’ll also be talking to his Egyptian counterpart as well as the President of Egypt, Mr. el-Sisi.  He’ll also be talking to other interested leaders in the region who can play a constructive role in trying to resolve this crisis.

So that is his specific charge, which is to go back and get this cease-fire in place as soon as possible.  As long as this fighting continues, we continue to see innocent civilians caught in the crossfire.  And our hearts go out to those who have lost so much in this violence, and that’s why we want to see this violence end as soon as possible.

Q    Can I follow up on that?

MR. EARNEST:  Go ahead, J.C.

Q    May I just finish?  Has the President -- will the President, through Mr. Kerry, offer anything in a sense of deliverables to assure that this will happen?  In other words, everything is on the table.

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I don’t want to read out any of the Secretary’s meetings before he arrives in Cairo, or before he begins his meetings in Cairo.  But this is an important priority, and there are lives at stake.  And we are hopeful that all sides will engage in a constructive conversation and try to find the diplomatic resolution that’s necessary to put an end to the violence, and bring -- and take a lot more civilians out of direct harm’s way.

Jared.

Q    Josh, you mentioned the homeland security meeting for later in the afternoon.  Is the Texas governor’s proposal included or excluded on the table for that meeting?  Will they be discussing state efforts to boost the National Guard?

MR. EARNEST:  I don’t know exactly what they will discuss in the context of that meeting.  I wouldn’t be surprised if it came up, though.

Q    And on the Israel topic, what was the inciting incident that the President deemed it necessary to go from strongly urging Israel and Palestinians to avoid civilian casualties to demanding an immediate cease-fire?  What was that line for the President?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I’m not sure I entirely understand the formulation of your question.  I don’t -- we didn’t want the cease-fire that was established in 2012 to break in the first place, and that cease-fire was broken when Hamas continued -- stepped up its barrage of rocket fire that was, again, targeted squarely at innocent Israeli civilians.

We have seen the Israeli political leadership make a decision to respond militarily to try to provide for the safety and well-being of their citizens.  That is entirely within their rights; some would even make the case it’s within their responsibilities to do so.  What we would like to see them do is to live up to their own standards for trying to safeguard the Palestinian population while they are conducting those counterterrorism efforts to disrupt the infrastructure that Hamas has put in place.

Nadia.

Q    Just to follow up, the Egyptians are saying that they are willing to alter the plan for the cease-fire to include opening the border crossing left in the siege on Gaza.  Is that something that the White House or Secretary Kerry will be endorsing?  And are you willing to accept the Security Council resolution 1860, which is going back to 2009 basically, which is basically enforcing -- applying the same thing, which is lifting the siege of Gaza and opening the border crossing, which is a demand by Hamas?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, what we have said about the situation, Nadia, is we certainly welcome the constructive engagement of the Egyptians to try to broker a cease-fire agreement between Israel and Hamas.  I’m not in a position to negotiate the terms of that cease-fire from here.  Secretary Kerry will be doing that directly with the Israelis and Palestinians and the Egyptians in the region. 

But we certainly welcome the constructive suggestions of interested observers.  The U.N. has, as you point out, traditionally played an important role in trying to broker these kinds of agreements.  I’m not in a position to say right now what’s acceptable or what’s not, what’s on the table or what’s not.  But I am in a position to say that Secretary Kerry has traveled to the region at the direction of the President with one specific goal in mind, which is to end the violence that right now is putting so many lives -- innocent lives -- at risk. 

Q    The U.N. was describing the humanitarian situation in Gaza as dire -- 100,000 Palestinians have been made homeless and they have no place to go except U.N. schools.  Is the White House helping in any kind of humanitarian aid, whether directly to the U.N. agency, UNRWA, that works there, or through USAID?

MR. EARNEST:  I don’t have that information in front of me.  I’d encourage you to check with the State Department.  But the United States is very concerned about the urgent humanitarian situation that does exist in Gaza right now.  Again, that humanitarian situation, at least in the short term, can be most importantly addressed by putting in place a cease-fire so that we don’t see these innocent civilians caught in the crossfire. 

Major.

Q    Is the White House comfortable with the idea that the Malaysian Prime Minister negotiated this deal with separatists that the administration regards as illegitimate and criminal occupiers of a certain part of Ukraine, a sovereign nation?  I mean, separate from the details, are you comfortable with that entire approach, instead of going through some other means?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I’m not in a position to comment specifically on this announcement.  It broke right before I walked out.  But let me just say this:  I can certainly understand the sense of urgency that the Malaysian Prime Minister is feeling about this situation.  So one of his -- this government-owned airline was shot down.  There were a number of Malaysian citizens that were on board.  So his active engagement and sense of urgency on this issue is entirely understandable.

We’ve been very clear about what it is we would like to see, and we’d like to see a coordinated international effort to investigate what exactly happened.

Q    And does this in any way go toward legitimizing these separatists who control this territory in an extra-governmental way?

MR. EARNEST:  Not one bit.

Q    I asked this question last week and you answered it, so I hope you’ll do it again today, because there’s been a lot more that’s happened since then.  Does the administration believe anything the Israeli government has done in relationship to its military operations in Gaza have been disproportionate or a violation of international law, or a war crime?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, what this administration believes is that we are -- what this administration believes is that the Israeli government has the right to defend their citizens.  And they have chosen to take some military action to try to provide for the protection of their citizens, and that military action is being conducted against a network of tunnels that Hamas has constructed to try to give them access to Israeli civilians.  It’s also being conducted against a range of rocket-firing sites that are used to aim rockets at innocent Israeli civilians.

So there is a clear case for the right that Israel is exercising the right to defend their citizens.  In terms of the consequences of those steps, we do want Israel to live up to their stated standards of ensuring as much as possible the safety and welfare of innocent civilians, including innocent Palestinian civilians.

It’s clear that a number -- a large number of innocent Palestinian civilians have died.  Our condolences are with the Palestinian people because of those deaths.  They are a tragedy.  The way to resolve this situation, however, is for both sides to agree to a cease-fire and, most importantly, for Hamas to stop firing rockets that are aimed squarely at civilians.

What’s important to understand is that the Israeli military has protocol in place to try to protect innocent bystanders, even as they’re conducting their operations.  On the other hand, Hamas is directly targeting innocent bystanders through their operations.

So we’re very concerned about this violence, and we are hopeful that Secretary Kerry will have some success in working with both sides and with the international community to try to bring about a cease-fire.

Q    When I asked you that question last week, your one-word answer was “no.”  So that was a much longer formulation today.  So it sounds to me as if the administration believes the Israeli government has been -- or is either closer to being disproportionate or has already been disproportionate in its military response.

MR. EARNEST:  I was just attempting to give you a as-detailed-as-possible understanding of our thinking about this situation.

Q    Well, can you give it a “yes” or “no” now?

Q    I offered you the opportunity to give me the same “no” that you gave me last week.  If you want to take it, don’t, but I’m offering you the exact same question, and last week your answer in one word was “no.”

MR. EARNEST:  Well, our position on this hasn’t changed, but it’s important for people to understand exactly what our thinking is and the way that we see this situation.  And it’s longer than just a one-word answer.

Q    Understood.  British Prime Minister David Cameron has said he opposes, and he thinks the French government ought to reconsider immediately its scheduled sale of two large front-line first-class amphibious launch vehicles -- vessels to the Russian government.  Does the United States government agree?

MR. EARNEST:  Major, I have not -- I know that this has been the subject of some discussion between the President and the French leader, but I’m not in a position to convey our current views on that military transaction at this point.

Q    Why not?

MR. EARNEST:  Just because I don’t have that answer in front of me.

Q    Well, the context --

MR. EARNEST:  I’m happy to have somebody on my staff follow up with you.

Q    The Prime Minister said this changes many, many things -- the downing of Malaysia Air Flight 17 -- and that it would be unconscionable for any European country concerned about this to press on with a military transaction of this magnitude.  The United States doesn’t have an opinion on that?

MR. EARNEST:  We probably do, I just don’t have it in front of me.  So I’ll have to follow up with you on that.

Roger.

Q    Thank you.  You mentioned earlier that there are additional sanctions that are on the table under consideration.  Senator Toomey this morning said that the U.S. should do additional sanctions, but one of them ought to be a financial sanction that personally affects Putin.  Is there such a thing on the table, among others?  And what is the administration’s feeling about that?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, we have, Roger, as you pointed out last week, put in place sanctions against some entities that operate in the defense, financial and energy sectors of the Russian economy.  We do anticipate that those sanctions will serve to impose some economic costs on Russia for the actions that they have taken in Ukraine so far.  And as Julie pointed out, that actually predates the downing of Malaysia flight -- Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 by Russian-backed separatists. 

So the point is, there are significant steps that we’ve already taken as it relates to a sanctions regime to impose costs on Russia.  Those sanctions were put in place even before this recent tragic turn of events.

There are additional sanctions that are on the table, and the President will continue to be in touch with his European counterparts as we contemplate additional steps.

Q    Do they include ones that personally affect Putin?

MR. EARNEST:  It would be unwise for me, strategically, to talk about specific contemplated actions.  Again, to talk in detail about a specific sanctions regime before we put it in place would only allow the target of that sanctions regime to try to evade those sanctions that are put in place.

So I don’t want to send a signal one way or the other about what we’re contemplating.  But it is accurate to say that additional sanctions remain on the table, and imposing additional costs on Russia are an option.

Q    And a separate subject.  Ed Miliband, the Labor Party leader in the UK, is he at the White House today?

MR. EARNEST:  I’m not aware of his precise schedule, but we can check on that for you.

Jon.

Q    Back to Malaysian flight -- Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 -- the President’s Ambassador to the United Nations, Samantha Power, said, “We must stop at nothing to bring those responsible to justice.”  Does the President agree, I assume, with his U.N. Ambassador?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, the President certainly agrees that those who are responsible for this should be brought to justice.  There’s no doubt about that.  And that’s part of why it’s so important for us to have a thorough, transparent investigation to what exactly happened.

Q    So what does that mean, bringing those responsible to justice?  I assume you’re not simply talking about additional sanctions, you’re talking about bringing the perpetrators to justice.  How?  In what way?

MR. EARNEST:  Again, this is a terrible tragedy that the international community is involved in and is involved in addressing.  So that’s why the first step here will be an international investigation into what exactly occurred.  And ultimately, there will be an opportunity for the international community to make a determination about who exactly was responsible and how they should be held accountable.

Q    But I’m asking the “what.”  So what happens?  Are we talking about bringing the perpetrators before a tribunal?  Are we talking about a -- what kind of a response are you talking about?  “Bringing to justice,” it’s a very powerful statement.  I just wonder, what does it mean?

MR. EARNEST:  It is a powerful statement.  The first step, though, needs to be conducting an investigation into what exactly happened, then we can start to get down to who exactly is individually responsible and what sort of justice they deserve.

Q    But am I right in assuming that when you talk about bringing somebody to justice -- that sounds like something beyond sanctions.  Is that a correct interpretation?

MR. EARNEST:  I don’t want to foreshadow what that might be.  Your interest in this I think is understandable, but it’s a couple of steps ahead of where we are right now.  What we’re focused on right now is making sure that those who are responsible for investigating this situation can get the access that they need to the crash site so they can conduct that investigation, determine what exactly happened, why it happened, and then we can get down the path of figuring out who is responsible.

Q    And why is it that the President’s Ambassador to the U.N. has seemed to be much more forceful on this than the President himself?  I mean, even today, the President’s line which was, “We have to make sure the truth is out and accountability exists,” as opposed to “the perpetrators must be brought to justice” --why is there a difference, at least in the tone, between the President and his ambassador?

MR. EARNEST:  Jon, I’ll leave it to you to analyze to communication styles of different members of the President’s team.  I think the President and his U.N. Ambassador have delivered a very forceful and direct message to the Russians that it’s time for them to play a constructive role in ending this crisis.

Q    On the warnings that were not given to civilian aircraft flying over there, I’m just wondering, has there been any look-back?  The United States government had clear indication that anti-missile systems were being moved into rebel areas; that Russian systems were being moved in a month before this happened.  Why wasn’t there a general aviation warning given out to say civilian commercial aircraft should not fly over this region?

MR. EARNEST:  It’s my understanding that the FAA did actually issue a notice to airmen about the conflict in that region as early as April, I believe.  Ultimately, it’s the responsibility of individual carriers to make decisions about these flight plans, and to make the decision to fly along these routes.

Q    Was the FAA warning for the area of Crimea or the area of where this happened?

MR. EARNEST:  I don’t have the specific language in front of me.  I believe it applied to this broader region, but we can check on that for you, or you can check with the FAA.

Q    And just one other thing.  You’ve had a few days to look back.  Was it a mistake to have the President continue on his schedule, even going in -- before making his first statement about this, go in ordering cheeseburgers at the Charcoal Pit up in Delaware and continue on a campaign schedule -- what looked like a campaign schedule, including fundraisers in New York?  Was that a mistake in hindsight?

MR. EARNEST:  It was not.  Again, what the President is looking at and what his team is looking at is, does he have what he needs to do his job.  And over the course of that day, you saw the President make calls to the Ukrainian President.  He made calls to the Malaysian Prime Minister --

Q    But only after he first went to the Charcoal Pit, right?  I mean, he went on his -- I mean --

MR. EARNEST:  Again, what the President is focused on is his ability to do his job.  And what we saw is the President make calls to the Ukrainian President, to the Malaysian Prime Minister, to the Dutch Prime Minister.  He called his Secretary of State.  And he convened a secure call with his national security team to talk about both the situation in Gaza and the situation in Ukraine. 

So the President had all the tools at his disposal that were necessary to fulfill the responsibilities of the Commander-in-Chief, and that is what we were focused on.  And if there were a requirement for the President to change his schedule so that he could attend to this urgent priority and fulfill his responsibilities as Commander-in-Chief, we would have not hesitated to make that change.  But in this case, the President was able to continue his schedule and ably fulfill his responsibilities as Commander-in-Chief.  And I would anticipate that that’s what the President will do over the course of this week as well.

Ed.

Q    Josh, on Jon’s question about bringing folks to justice -- is there any evidence that the sanctions so far have deterred Vladimir Putin?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, there have been a number of signals that President Putin has sent about his involvement in this region.  We’ve talked about them over the course of the last several weeks -- that there have been situation where we’ve seen one or two steps forward and then one or two steps back.

So it is clear that President Putin, at a minimum, is sensitive to the isolation that he’s feeling from the international community, but we have not seen President Putin take the kinds of steps that we would like him to see in terms of using his influence in this region to encourage Russian-backed separatists to put an immediate halt to the violence in that area.

Q    You remember in 2012 the President was overheard talking to President Medvedev about, after the election -- tell Vladimir after the election I’ll have more flexibility.  Why didn’t that pan out?  That was specifically about missile defense.  But there was a suggestion that after the election he’d be able to work with President Putin.  Why didn’t that pan out?

MR. EARNEST:  I think you’d probably have to ask President Putin about that.  What we have seen is -- you’ve seen this President work with leaders throughout Europe and the international community to focus pressure and attention on President Putin’s actions in a way that I think has not served President Putin very well. 

We have -- if you’ll just sort of think back to how we got into this situation in Ukraine in the first place, there was essentially a puppet of the Putin regime that was ruling Ukraine six months ago.  And over the course of that six months we’ve seen a Ukrainian leader that actually reflects the will of the Ukrainian people elected.  We’ve seen that Ukrainian leader actually sign a cooperation agreement with Europe which was part of the uprising that was prompted in the first place. 

So if President Putin’s goal was to exercise greater influence and control over the nation of Ukraine as a whole, not only has he failed to accomplish that mission, I think he’s actually seen Ukraine sort of gravitate back into a way that he says that he’s not uncomfortable with.  Now, it’s the view of this administration and I think of the broader international community that there’s no reason that the nation of Ukraine can’t have a solid working relationship with their partner in Russia while at the same time having strong economic ties to Europe.  Those two things aren’t mutually exclusive.

But if Vladimir Putin was determined to try to bring Ukraine into his orbit on that aspect, at least over the course of the last six months, he’s failed miserably.

Q    Two other quick ones.  You mentioned the new Ukrainian President.  I believe he did an interview today and told Christiane Amanpour that he wants the U.S. to put these separatists on a U.S. terror list.  Is that something being considered?  Do you think that could be an effective tool to put more pressure on these separatists short of some sort of military action against them or something?  Could you put them on a list?  Could you target them?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I know a number of them have already been targeted for sanctions, and some of them are subject to serious sanctions already.  In terms of a terrorist list, I’d encourage you to check with our national security apparatus for the criteria for adding someone to a list like that.

Q    Last one.  Secretary Kerry’s trip -- did he go there in part at the invitation of Prime Minister Netanyahu?  Did the Prime Minister express support for this in his phone call with President Obama?  There were some suggestions on the ground in Israel that Israel wants the U.S. to stay out of the way right now.

MR. EARNEST:  Well, the Secretary and President Obama have been on the phone and in regular communication with Prime Minister Netanyahu over the last couple of weeks because of the urgent situation there.

Q    Communication.  But did he support the Secretary going -- Secretary Kerry going now and intervening, or does he want more time?

MR. EARNEST:  You’d have to check with Prime Minister Netanyahu specifically about that.

Q    But he was on the phone with the President, right?

MR. EARNEST:  He was, and they spoke about this quite a bit.  I think the President, for reasons I think that are entirely understandable to everybody in this room and even to the international community, sent Secretary Kerry to try to broker a cease-fire because the continued violence that we’re seeing there is not in the best interest of people on either side of that conflict.

Michelle from the Wall Street Journal.

Q    I want to go back to the language that Ambassador Power used earlier this week, where she said that the U.S. will “stop at nothing” to bring these rebels to justice.  What does “stop at nothing” mean?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, Michelle, I mean, in terms of what the Ambassador had in mind, I’d encourage you to check with her.  I think what she was articulating, though, is a commitment on the part of the United States to do a couple of things.

The first is ensure that there is a thorough international investigation conducted into this incident.  The second is to ensure that the international community is in a position to hold responsible those who perpetrated this terrible act.  The third thing is to focus international attention on President Putin to get him to finally act in a constructive way to try to deescalate the conflict in that region.

It’s clear now that the impact of that instability has not just had negative consequences for the people of Ukraine, it’s not just had negative consequences for people in Eastern Europe, it’s had negative consequences for countries around the globe that lost citizens in the downing of that jetliner.  So we’re hopeful that this renewed international pressure will prod President Putin to actually act in a constructive fashion and try to destabilize the conflict in Ukraine and bring about a diplomatic resolution to resolve the differences.

Q    But is this administration considering taking any further diplomatic or military action to force an international investigation to go ahead?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, we do believe that it is an important priority that an international investigation be conducted, and that international investigators who have professional training at reviewing crash sites like this get the kind of unfettered access that they need to determine what exactly happened.  That’s something that we consider to be a top priority.

Q    And one more question for you about the border crisis.  President Obama plans to meet with Central American leaders on Friday, I believe.  What action does he hope will come out of that meeting?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, there are a couple of things.  As you know, this is part of a long series of engagements between senior administration officials and Central American leaders.  The Vice President was traveling in the region in the last few weeks.  The Secretary of State was just there a couple of weeks ago.  I know that there are some phone conversations between the Secretary of Homeland Security and the leaders of these countries.

We’re encouraging them to do a couple of things.  The first is, we want to make sure that they understand and communicate to their citizenry that parents in their country should not entrust their children in the hands of criminals to make the dangerous journey to the border with the United States.  The reason for that is quite simple, is that even if those children survive that long, dangerous journey, they will not be welcomed into this country with open arms; that this administration is committed to enforcing the law. 

We'll certainly evaluate the asylum claims of those children if they have them, and they will be subject to due process.  But it is our expectation that after going through that due process that the majority of those children will be returned to their home country.  That is -- so there are any number of reasons to ensure that kids shouldn’t make that journey and we want the Presidents, the leaders of those countries to make that clear to their population. 

At the same time, the United States is interested in partnering with these countries to try to address some of the root causes of the desperation that so many of these people are feeling.  And there are a whole range of security cooperation agreements through the Department of Justice and development activities through USAID and the State Department that can be used to try to meet some of the needs of these populations.  We obviously want to administer these programs in close coordination with the Central American leaders and that will be part of those discussions.  I do anticipate we'll have a readout of those meetings when they’re concluded on Friday.

Chris.

Q    Just a couple more things on Flight 17, because the President said at the top of his remarks today that it's been four days; clearly Vladimir Putin has not taken the action that either the President or the international community wants him, and I assume that with every passing day, maybe every passing hour, the anguish of these families increases, the usefulness of the physical evidence which is being mishandled decreases.  How much patience is there for diplomacy to work?  Is the clock ticking, and how loudly?

MR. EARNEST:  Patience is running out with the Russian separatists who are blocking access to the site.  We're talking about neutral, international, professional investigators who can look at the wreckage, who can examine the bodies, ensure that they’re treated well, and draw some conclusions about what exactly happened.  Everybody who has any interest in getting to the truth, in getting to the bottom of what exactly happened should be supportive of these international investigators getting the kind of access that they need. 

I understand that the Ukrainian government has actually put in place for their part a cease-fire for that region of the conflict to ensure that international investigators can do their work safely.  We’d like to see a corresponding step from the separatists be announced that would allow those investigators to have the safe, unfettered access they need to determine what exactly happened.

Q    But given the sensitivity both on the side of the families and on the side of the evidence, are we talking days?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, we're hoping that this access will be granted immediately. 

Q    But in terms of the patience of -- before some sort of action is announced?

MR. EARNEST:  Patience is wearing thin.  And again, I think for obvious reasons -- and I think that was evident from the President’s statement earlier --

Q    Well, the President did speak on Friday, preceded by Samantha Power, followed by Secretary Kerry multiple times, and then again today.  Was there a new message?  If so, what was it and targeted to whom?

MR. EARNEST:  Right now, the message that the President delivered today was targeted to those Russian-backed separatists who are preventing access to the site.  It's very clear what they should do -- the President even described it as the least that they could do -- which is to allow those international investigators unfettered access to the site. 

Q    But no different than the message from Friday or Sunday?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, we have not seen the kinds of -- in fact, I'm not even sure investigators were on the scene on Friday, at least in the numbers that they are now.  What is true now is that there are international investigators from around the world in the region, including investigators from the United States, by the way, who are eager to play a cooperative role in ensuring that there’s an impartial investigation conducted into what exactly happened.  And anybody that has any interest in the truth should be supportive of the effort to ensure that those investigators get the access that they need.  And we hope that that access will begin immediately.

Q    So the additional comments today were prompted by the frustration that now that there are people on the ground, that they’re being denied access?

MR. EARNEST:  They are being denied access -- that we've seen situations where Russian-backed separatists have fired weapons in the air to try to intimidate these investigators.  And there are a whole range of investigators with a lot of different capabilities -- some of them have forensic experience; some of them have experience in evaluating wreckage; others have experience in ensuring the proper handling of the bodies of those who lost their lives.  So we're talking about a wide range of investigators and experts who are on the scene.  And we need the thugs who are toting guns, who are backed by the Russians, to give them the access they need to do their job.

Anita, I'll give you the last one.

Q    I just wanted to get back to the meeting on Friday, since we won't actually see you here for briefings before then. The message you said that the President was going to convey to the leaders in Central America, isn't that the same message that the Vice President conveyed whenever that was -- a few weeks ago? Or has something changed?  Clearly, things have changed in this country politically.  People are talking more about the border crisis.  But the message is still the same, correct?  And if so, why is it so important that they’re coming here?  The Vice President was just there.

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I think it's important because it demonstrates the continued engagement in solving this problem.  It also demonstrates our willingness to coordinate with these local countries to try to address some of the root causes of this illegal migration that we're seeing.  A lot of families out there are responding to an increased feeling of desperation, to try to find some respite or some oasis from the violence that is pervasive in their communities.  So having a meeting with the President of the United States and having the President inform the leaders of those countries that the United States is committed to putting in place these programs that would address these challenges, and work with them cooperatively to implement these programs I think is an important statement, and I think it demonstrates the willingness of this administration to try to resolve this problem.

There are some things that have changed.  I mentioned the numbers at the top.  We have seen a reduction, at least for now, in the flow of individuals from the Central American countries to the border.  We have seen a stepped-up campaign from Customs and Border Patrol in Spanish-language media in Central America to try to make clear why parents should not put their kids on this dangerous journey.  So there are a number of things that we have implemented even since the Vice President was last there.  But I think this kind of follow-up at the presidential level sends a pretty important signal about how serious we are.

Q    It’s stronger when it comes from the President?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I think it's a stronger message and I think it's also part of our commitment to sort of sustained engagement. 

As I alluded to in a previous answer, this is the kind of situation that we were closely following before it was so prominently covered in the media.  And I anticipate that we are going to remain engaged in addressing this problem even when there are other things that are grabbing headlines.

Q    Okay, you’re starting to say the same thing.  So there will be a readout?  There’s no public event on Friday?  We won't hear statements from the leaders?

MR. EARNEST:  No, I think that you’ll at least hear from the President as he meets with them.  We're still working through the details, but I would anticipate that you’ll hear from him.

Q    Okay.  And finally, just because this matters to us -- you mentioned The Washington Post story before.  They’re not here right now. 

MR. EARNEST:  Yes, they’re not.

Q    That story did not just --

MR. EARNEST:  I noticed that, too.

Q    -- have anonymous sources.  It had both in it.  And I'm not --

MR. EARNEST:  I'm not sure that that's true.  I'm happy to

--

Q    That is true.  People have been tweeting it.  Okay, beyond The Washington Post story, I just want to point out --

MR. EARNEST:  Well, hold on a second.  I'm not saying that there aren't people quoted on the record in the story.  There are people quoted on the record in the story.  Cecilia Muñoz from the White House is quoted in the story.  But the lead of that story is hooked entirely to anonymous sources.  That's a fact.

Q    Okay.  Well, I'll let the folks deal with whatever --

MR. EARNEST:  If they choose to show up they can defend themselves.

Q    Okay, forget that story and I'll just say more broadly something that you know that we always say, which is you criticize anonymous sources, but we have anonymous sources from you all every day.  I think we have a call today.  I mean, how can you criticize that when that's what you basically give us every day, except for the briefing?

MR. EARNEST:  Except for the briefing.  Except for the fact I've been standing here for an hour answering all of your questions --

Q    We have anonymous sources every single day.

MR. EARNEST:  -- which is an important practice.  And this is a symbol that we're committed to.  The President is traveling tomorrow; I'm going to do a briefing tomorrow.  We are committed to this process.  And that's why we do this briefing on the record. 

Q    You’re also committed to anonymous sources.  I'm just saying. 

MR. EARNEST:  Well, we've had this discussion a couple of times in this forum and we can have that conversation. 

Q    Yes, and I just wanted to point it out.

MR. EARNEST:  I did point it out.  Here’s what -- again, here is what I will point out and this is what I think is important.  I'm not suggesting that they shouldn’t run their story.  It's not my place to suggest that.  The people who represent that empty seat right there can make their own decisions about what stories to run.  They’re entirely entitled to doing that.  What I think is important is that greater weight should be granted to those who are willing to put a face and a name with specific claims. 

Cecilia Muñoz, who is the President’s top immigration advisor, is in that story conveying exactly the White House position.  And I spent the last hour in here talking to all of you because I'm putting my face and my name with this administration’s positions.  And in the course of reporting, I think it's important -- based on my own personal view -- for those kinds of quotes and those kinds of stories to be given greater weight than just anonymous sources. 

So what that means is if you have anonymous sources at the White House who are telling you something and you're going to say to them, that anonymous source, look, I'm going to give your side of the story a little less weight right now because you're telling me this anonymously -- that would be an entirely credible thing for you to do.  To suggest that somebody who is willing to put their name and their face and their title and their position along with a story that they want to tell -- that deserves some added weight as people are reporting on individual stories.

And I think this is the case that I hear from journalists as they’re evaluating whether or not to report based on anonymous sources here at the White House.  I think that is a credible claim.  The problem and the frustration that I might be showing just a little bit right now is that there are times when there are anonymous outside voices, as is the case with The Washington Post story, that are given greater weight than on-the-record sources from the White House when it pertains to information about what’s happening at the White House.  And that is the source of frustration that is occasionally expressed, even occasionally expressed from this podium. 

Q    So, Josh, would you guys commit then when we have situations like today’s call, which is people specifically picked by the White House to roll out a policy of the White House, would you commit to have those people speak on the record if there doesn’t seem to be a reason to put them on background and have it be anonymous?

MR. EARNEST:  What I will commit to is a case-by-case evaluation of the background -- or the ground rules of each of these kinds of calls and a commitment to an open dialogue with you about the ground rules that will serve your interests and the White House interest the best.

Q    And consistency in the weighting that you just described?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I think the weighting decisions that I have described are actually decisions that are made by reporters -- as they should be. 

Q    And you can make them as well.

MR. EARNEST:  What do you mean?

Q    You can make a weighting decision consistent with the benefit of having people with names, titles and positions on background calls to articulate White House policy.

MR. EARNEST:  Well, no, I think what I'm saying is that if you participate in a background call that's hosted by the White House and you say, well, we're going to give that a little less weight because it's anonymous sources, I think that is a much easier position for you to defend than it is for other stories when you're reporting information from the White House where a greater weight --

Q    We're not interested in -- 

MR. EARNEST:  Well, that is the position that Anita was defending, because The Washington Post wasn’t here to defend themselves.  They didn’t show up today, so --

Q    Separate issue.  White House calls --

Q    I'm not to blame --

MR. EARNEST:  I'm not blaming you.  I'm just -- I'm not blaming you.

Q    Separate issue -- White House calls on White House policy should be on the record.

MR. EARNEST:  Well, again, we'll evaluate that on a --

Q    -- based on the weighting as you just described --

MR. EARNEST:  The weighting as described was a journalistic decision that is, as it should be, made by independent journalists. 

So, with that, I hope you all have a wonderful afternoon.  And enjoy the afternoon call today.

Q    Well, we know how it started, that's for sure.  (Laughter.) 

MR. EARNEST:  Absolutely.

END
2:39 P.M. EDT

The President Signs an Executive Order on LGBT Workplace Discrimination

July 21, 2014 | 8:03 | Public Domain

President Obama signs an Executive Order prohibiting federal contractors from discriminating on the basis of sexual orientation or gender identity.

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Remarks by the President at Signing of Executive Order on LGBT Workplace Discrimination

East Room

10:39 A.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT:  Welcome to the White House, everybody.  I know I'm a little late.  But that's okay because we've got some big business to do here. 

Many of you have worked for a long time to see this day coming.  You organized, you spoke up, you signed petitions, you sent letters -- I know because I got a lot of them.  (Laughter.) And now, thanks to your passionate advocacy and the irrefutable rightness of your cause, our government -- government of the people, by the people, and for the people -- will become just a little bit fairer.

AUDIENCE MEMBER:  Amen.  (Applause.) 

THE PRESIDENT:  It doesn’t make much sense, but today in America, millions of our fellow citizens wake up and go to work with the awareness that they could lose their job, not because of anything they do or fail to do, but because of who they are --  lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender.  And that’s wrong.  We’re here to do what we can to make it right -- to bend that arc of justice just a little bit in a better direction. 

In a few moments, I will sign an executive order that does two things.  First, the federal government already prohibits employment discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation.  Once I sign this order, the same will be explicitly true for gender identity.  (Applause.)   

And second, we’re going to prohibit all companies that receive a contract from the federal government from discriminating against their LGBT employees.  (Applause.)    America’s federal contracts should not subsidize discrimination against the American people. 

Now, this executive order is part of a long bipartisan tradition.  President Roosevelt signed an order prohibiting racial discrimination in the national defense industry.  President Eisenhower strengthened it.  President Johnson expanded it.  Today, I'm going to expand it again. 

Currently, 18 states have already banned workplace discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity.  And over 200 cities and localities have done the same.  Governor Terry McAuliffe is here; his first act as governor was to prohibit discrimination against LGBT employees of the Commonwealth of Virginia.  (Applause.)  Where did Terry go?  Right back here. 

I’ve appointed a record number of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender public servants to positions across my administration.  They are ambassadors and federal judges, special assistants, senior advisors from the Pentagon to the Labor Department.  Every day, their talent is put to work on behalf of the American people.

Equality in the workplace is not only the right thing to do, it turns out to be good business.  That’s why a majority of Fortune 500 companies already have nondiscrimination policies in place.  It is not just about doing the right thing -- it’s also about attracting and retaining the best talent.  And there are several business leaders who are here today who will attest to that. 

And yet, despite all that, in too many states and in too many workplaces, simply being gay, lesbian, bisexual or transgender can still be a fireable offense.  There are people here today who’ve lost their jobs for that reason.  This is not speculative, this is not a matter of political correctness -- people lose their jobs as a consequence of this.  Their livelihoods are threatened, their families are threatened.  In fact, more states now allow same-sex marriage than prohibit discrimination against LGBT workers.  So I firmly believe that it’s time to address this injustice for every American. 

Now, Congress has spent 40 years -- four decades -- considering legislation that would help solve the problem.  That's a long time.  And yet they still haven’t gotten it done.  Senators Terry [Tammy] Baldwin and Jeff Merkley are here.  They have been champions of this issue for a long, long time.  We are very proud of them.  I know they will not stop fighting until fair treatment for all workers is the federal law of the land.  Everyone thanks them for that.  (Applause.)   

But I’m going to do what I can, with the authority I have, to act.  The rest of you, of course, need to keep putting pressure on Congress to pass federal legislation that resolves this problem once and for all.

AUDIENCE MEMBER:  Amen!

THE PRESIDENT:  Amen.  Amen.  (Applause.)  Got the “amen” corner here.  (Laughter.)  Well -- (sings) -- (laughter.)  You don't want to get me preaching, now.  (Laughter.)

For more than two centuries, we have strived, often at great cost, to form “a more perfect union” -- to make sure that “we, the people” applies to all the people.  Many of us are only here because others fought to secure rights and opportunities for us. And we’ve got a responsibility to do the same for future generations.  We’ve got an obligation to make sure that the country we love remains a place where no matter who you are, or what you look like, or where you come from, or how you started out, or what your last name is, or who you love -- no matter what, you can make it in this country. 

That’s the story of America.  That’s the story of this movement.  I want to thank all of you for doing your part.  We've got a long way to go, but I hope as everybody looks around this room, you are reminded of the extraordinary progress that we have made not just in our lifetimes, but in the last five years.  In the last two years.  (Applause.)  In the last one year.  (Applause.)  We're on the right side of history. 

I’m going to sign this executive order.  Thank you, everybody.  (Applause.)

(The executive order is signed.)

END
10:47 A.M. EDT

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President Obama Presents the Medal of Honor to Staff Sergeant Ryan M. Pitts

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At a ceremony at the White House this afternoon, President Obama presented the Medal of Honor to Staff Sergeant Ryan M. Pitts for his unwavering courage in one of the fiercest battles of the Afghanistan war.

In the summer of 2008, when our forces in Afghanistan were stretched thin across isolated outposts, Ryan was serving alongside 48 American soldiers charged with using little resources to defend a post with significant vulnerabilities. Mountains stood sky-high on every side of the village of Wanat, diverting aerial surveillance and delaying the heavy equipment they needed for their defense. 

In the pre-dawn darkness of one fateful July morning, while manning this small, unfinished base, Ryan and his fellow soldiers were attacked by 200 assailants who were determined to take their post. “Those 200 insurgents were firing from ridges and from the village and from trees,” President Obama said. “Down at the base, a vehicle exploded—scattering its missiles, back at our soldiers. It was, said a soldier, ‘hell on earth.’”

Related Topics: Defense

What They’re Saying: President Obama Signs Executive Order on LGBT Workplace Equality

President Barack Obama delivers remarks before he signs an executive order regarding further amendments to Executive Order 11478

President Barack Obama delivers remarks before he signs an executive order regarding further amendments to Executive Order 11478, Equal Employment Opportunity in the Federal Government, and Executive Order 11246, Equal Employment Opportunity, to protect LGBT employees from workplace discrimination, in the East Room of the White House. (Official White House Photo by Amanda Lucidon) July 21, 2014.

Earlier today, President Obama signed an Executive Order that prohibits federal contractors from discriminating on the basis of sexual orientation or gender identity. The Order also ensures that federal employees – who are already protected on the basis of sexual orientation – will now formally be protected from discrimination based on gender identity as well.

In response to the President's actions today, many national organizations dedicated to LGBT equality, civil rights, and religious freedom expressed their support.

Anthony Romero, Executive Director, ACLU:

This is one of the most important actions ever taken by a president to eradicate LGBT discrimination from America's workplaces. By signing this order, President Obama is building on a bipartisan tradition, dating back over 70 years, of barring discrimination without exception when taxpayer dollars are involved.

Related Topics: Civil Rights