Welcoming our Troops Coming Home from Iraq

August 17, 2010 | 4:06 | Public Domain

The Vice President and Dr. Jill Biden visit Fort Drum in upstate New York to welcome home the 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 10th Mountain Division, from Iraq. One of the most deployed brigades in the U.S. Army, the 2nd Brigade Combat Team has participated in three deployments to Afghanistan and four deployments to Iraq. The Vice President speaks off stage about the end of the combat mission in Iraq, and the future of the American mission in that country.

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Office of the Vice President

Readout of Vice President Biden’s Video Teleconference with British Deputy Prime Minister Nicholas Clegg

Vice President Biden spoke with British Deputy Prime Minister Clegg today via video teleconference as part of ongoing close U.S.-U.K. consultations.  The two leaders discussed our governments’ responses to the severe flooding in Pakistan and agreed on the need for the international community to redouble efforts to assist the people of Pakistan.  They also discussed NATO ISAF efforts in Afghanistan and our mutual interest in the prompt formation of an inclusive government in Iraq that meets the needs and aspirations of all Iraqi people.  The Vice President reiterated to the Deputy Prime Minister the Administration’s support for the U.S.-U.K. Defense Trade Cooperation treaty.  The Vice President also updated Deputy Prime Minister Clegg on the United States’ efforts to advance peace in the Middle East, including support for direct talks between the parties. 

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Office of the Vice President

Vice President Joe Biden issues statement on the passing of former Senator Ted Stevens

"My thoughts and prayers go out to Catherine and all the Stevens children, as well as to the families of those also lost today in Alaska. Jill and I had genuine affection for Ted. As Senators, he and I bonded over shared similar family tragedies, but we also celebrated life's great moments together too, like the births of our daughters a few days apart. We served together for more than 30 years, but more than that, he was my friend and I will miss him."

Photostream: Behind the Scenes in July

The White House Photo Office just released a new batch of photos from second part of July on the Official White House Flickr. Where else are you going see the President take a hike along the coastline, sign the hood of a Chevy Volt and joke with the Chicago Bulls? View the July slideshow right here.

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Honoring Our Troops Coming Home from Iraq, in Words & Deeds

This morning the President speaks at the national convention of Disabled American Veterans in Atlanta, Georgia.  As the end of combat operations in Iraq draws near, it is a time to salute those who have sacrificed their lives, and to honor those who have come back – both through words and through a renewed commitment to ensure they are given all the benefits they are due.  

Vice President Biden and Dr. Jill Biden Take Photos at Welcome Home Ceremony at Fort Drum in New York

Vice President Biden and Dr. Jill Biden welcome home the 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 10th Mountain Division, from Iraq at Fort Drum in New York July 28, 2010. (Official White House Photo by David Lienemann)

Vice President Biden was joined by Dr. Jill Biden last week at a Welcome Home Ceremony for the 2nd Brigade Combat Team from Iraq at Fort Drum in New York.  One of the most deployed brigades in the U.S. Army, the 2nd Brigade Combat Team has participated in three deployments to Afghanistan and four deployments to Iraq.  He placed today’s veterans squarely in the proud tradition of America’s military, saying “today’s warriors are worthy successors to that proud legacy. Our conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan—and the demands we have placed on our soldiers and their families—are unlike any that came before.”  He also reminded us that there are others who should be honored as well:

Related Topics: Veterans, Georgia, New York

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Office of the Vice President

Statement by the Vice President on New Recovery Act Recipient Reports

Later today, the Recovery Accountability and Transparency Board will post on Recovery.gov quarterly reports required from some recipients of Recovery Act funding.  The recipient reports provide more detailed information about a portion of Recovery Act activity during the second quarter of 2010.  The Vice President issued the following statement:

“Preliminary totals provided to my office provide encouraging news about the Recovery Act recipient reports.  These reports will show over 750,000 jobs were directly funded by the Recovery Act in the most recent quarter – the highest total so far.   This record number reflects the early impact of our surge in projects across the country as part of “Recovery Summer.”

“Given that these 750,000 jobs were funded by just 17 percent of funds paid out so far – or about $80 billion, today’s reports are another indication that the Recovery Act is on-track to create or save 3.5 million jobs overall by the end of this year.   They reinforce a similar finding reported this week by independent economists Mark Zandi and Alan Blinder.

“Because these reports provide real-time data directly from the recipients themselves, they are not perfect or complete.  But, in keeping with our unprecedented commitment to transparency and accountability, the reports provide the American people with a never-before-seen look at how their taxpayer dollars are being put to work creating jobs in their community.”

Consumer Protection and the Middle Class

July 29, 2010 | 22:04 | Public Domain

Vice President Joe Biden hosts a meeting of The Middle Class Task Force where new rules to protect consumers from debt relief services and other consumer protection measures are discussed.

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Office of the Vice President

Remarks of Vice President Biden at the Welcome Home Ceremony for the 2nd Brigade Combat Team from Iraq

Welcome Home Ceremony for the 2nd Brigade Combat Team from Iraq
Fort Drum, New York
Wednesday, July 28, 2010

As Prepared for Delivery—

Good afternoon and thank you all for coming. It is an honor to be back up here in the North Country, with some the Army’s finest soldiers and your outstanding leaders, Major General Terry and Sergeant Major Greca.

I want to thank my wife, Dr. Jill Biden, for introducing me today, and for all of the work she is doing on behalf of military families like yours, who are heroes in every sense of the word.

Many of you recently returned from Iraq. Before I go any further, let me just say, on behalf of the American people you have served so courageously: Welcome home! You are the best of us, the best America has. We honor you and we thank you. Welcome home.

Jill and I understand how your families must feel at a time like this. The day that our son Beau came back from a yearlong tour in Baghdad was one of the proudest of our lives.

While he was gone, we came to appreciate what the poet John Milton meant when he said: “they also serve who only stand and wait.”

Some of you are still waiting. Our troops in harm’s way—including about 900 members of the 2nd Brigade Combat Team due home from Iraq in the coming days—remain, as ever, in our thoughts and prayers.

This is Fort Drum’s 25th year as home to the 10th Mountain Division.

As you know, your Division’s proud history goes back much farther. Formed at the height of World War Two, the 10th Mountain is the largest unit in the Army focused on fighting in harsh terrain, a mission epitomized by the motto: “climb to glory.” 

Your predecessors helped defeat the German Army along the snowy peaks and riverbeds of the Italian Alps.

One of them, Pfc. John D. Magrath, won a Medal of Honor for taking out three machine gun nests and several other positions before he was struck down.

Another was a young platoon leader severely wounded by enemy fire, who went on to become a great United States Senator: my friend and longtime colleague Bob Dole.

Since that time, the 10th Mountain has earned a reputation as one of the army’s most frequently deployed units, with tours in Somalia, Haiti, Bosnia and Kosovo, and almost everywhere in between.

And today’s warriors are worthy successors to that proud legacy. Our conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan—and the demands we have placed on our soldiers and their families—are unlike any that came before.

Soldiers like Jared Monti —who died while trying to rescue a wounded comrade in Afghanistan, and was later awarded the Medal of Honor—have taken their place alongside heroes who came before.

And the unforgiving battlefields where you’ve fought and bled—from the Afghan Hindu Kush to Iraq’s Triangle of Death—are as much a part of Division lore as Riva Ridge and the Po River Valley.

More than seven years ago, our military was given a mission in Iraq as complex and challenging as any it has ever attempted.

A warzone with no safe havens and no front lines. An invisible threat from explosives that turned highways into death traps. And an enemy that used suicide as a devastating weapon, requiring split-second decisions that could save soldiers’ lives or cause the death of innocents.

More than one million American service members have deployed in support of that effort.

You and your colleagues persevered and succeeded. With your help, Iraq’s leaders and security forces persevered and succeeded. And therefore those who sought to make chaos and destruction a hallmark of the new Iraq have failed.

I’ve been looking forward to this day for a long time. One month from now, as President Obama pledged, America’s combat mission in Iraq will end.

By August 31, from more than 145,000 troops on the ground when this Administration took office, 50,000 will remain.

Our remaining troops will focus on advising and assisting Iraqi forces, on counter-terrorism in partnership with their Iraqi colleagues, and on protecting our civilian and military personnel and facilities.

By the end of 2011, all of America’s forces will leave Iraq, and its security will be wholly in the hands of its government and its people.

I have visited Iraq many times, including four trips as Vice President, most recently for the July 4 holiday, when Jill came with me. I have seen firsthand what you have sacrificed and what you have accomplished.

You and your families have endured multiple deployments—four to Iraq and three to Afghanistan for the 2nd Brigade Combat Team alone. You have felt the strain of missing anniversaries and holidays, and even the arrival of a newborn child.

You have enabled the Iraqi people to replace a tyrant with a new constitution, a new parliament, and two national elections conducted freely, fairly, and, by-and-large, safely.

And perhaps most important, you have prepared Iraq’s security forces to safeguard their future as a sovereign, stable and self-reliant country. Now it is up to them.

All of this is critical to American interests, because a stable Iraq is important for stability in the Middle East, and because Iraq will be a valuable ally in this vitally important region for years to come.

The soldiers in this audience don’t need me to tell them how important it is for Iraq to be able to stand on its own.

As you recall, for this recent deployment, your commanders wisely defined success as enabling Iraq’s transition to autonomy.

They knew that unlike in other wars, winning would not be marked by a four-star general receiving the enemy’s surrender, but by an Iraqi jundi leading a combat patrol, and rival political factions settling their differences at the ballot box.

With that vision in mind, over the past nine months, you helped safeguard an election; transferred 13 bases to Iraqi forces; and established two new training academies that graduated more than 500 police and soldiers.

And you have now been sent home three months early, having achieved every one of your goals.

Iraqi forces now run those academies you built. After learning from—and fighting alongside—the world’s greatest military, they are in the lead. Thanks to you, they are ready to do the job long after we’re gone.

Earlier this year, an operation that Iraqis led, based on intelligence they developed, resulted in the death of the top two leaders of Al Qaeda in Iraq. And over a three-month period, 32 of the top 42 al Qaeda commanders were killed or captured.

That is a major part of why Iraq is a far safer and more secure country, with violence at its lowest level in years.

Anyone who last spent time in Iraq in 2006 or 2007, would hardly recognize it. Back then, the country veered towards civil war; mass casualty bombings were daily events; and the Baghdad morgue was overwhelmed by the bodies of those executed only for their faith or ethnicity.

Although Al Qaeda and other extremists continue their efforts to disrupt Iraq’s progress, they have been unsuccessful.

Today, in an Iraq once mired in sectarian conflict, politics has broken out. Party leaders are engaged in the difficult but essential process of forming a government, not by violence and intimidation, but through negotiation.

And while challenges remain, the Iraqi people have overwhelmingly rejected the ugly face of Al Qaeda and the other violent extremists who have sought to tear their country apart.

Iraqis had to take that step themselves, and they have. But you made it possible. You gave them that chance—the chance to freely choose their own government, the chance to choose peace over violence.

Now their political leaders must fulfill their responsibility and get on with the business of governing.

As we gather today, nearly 80,000 troops have come home since 2009, including 2,700 members of the 2nd Brigade Combat Team in recent weeks. We’ve moved countless tons of vehicles and equipment. Thousands of square miles of terrain and many dozens of military bases have been handed over.

This epic movement of manpower and machinery may not get the attention it deserves. But the fact that it has gone so smoothly is itself a remarkable achievement, confirming once again the old maxim that amateurs talk tactics and professionals talk logistics.

At the same time, there is another transition taking place. Rather than disengaging from Iraq, we will shift the focus to a civilian-led effort to transfer the skills and expertise that will enable Iraqis to unleash their country's great potential. 

We will pursue close cooperation in diplomacy and commerce and help Iraq reestablish its rightful role in the region and the broader community of nations.

Meanwhile, we will continue the important work of facilitating the return and reintegration of displaced Iraqis who choose to go home, while protecting those who remain in danger, a priority for us and for the international community.

President Obama began preparing for these changes before he took office.

As a candidate he vowed to responsibly end the war he would inherit. After the election, but before Inauguration Day, he sent me to Iraq and Afghanistan to assess the situations on the ground.

On his first full day on the job, he ordered a comprehensive review of our strategy in Iraq. And a month later, at Camp Lejeune, he described how we would move forward.

We have followed that plan every step of the way, and we will continue to follow it until our last troop comes home next year.

You have paid a heavy price for our success.

Each of you in this audience knows exactly what I am talking about. Before your most recent deployment, your buddy, Specialist Robert Riekhoff, re-enlisted and returned to Iraq for his third tour.

Known to most of you, and to his family, as “Bubba,” he emailed his mother almost every day he was gone, just to let her know he was okay. On March 18, no email came. While he was on guard duty in a watchtower that morning, insurgents attacked with rocket-propelled grenades. He left behind his young son Tyler, and daughter Katrina.

The most sacred obligation this government has is provide for those we send into harm’s way, and to care for the families of those who don’t return. We owe you.

That is why President Obama insisted we support the family members serving as caregivers for wounded warriors when they come home. It’s why we launched a post-9-11 G.I. Bill for military veterans that will also benefit their spouses and their children. And it is why, while we can never compensate you enough for all you have done, we increased pay for active duty service members. 

Jill and First Lady Michelle Obama are spearheading an unprecedented government-wide initiative to support military families and take every opportunity to remind our citizens of the sacrifices a small percentage of them making on behalf of us all.

Jill and I try to do our small part by hosting veterans at Thanksgiving, and spending Christmas Day at Walter Reed Army Medical Center with some of those engaged in a new and incredibly difficult fight simply to return to normal life.
 
But there is little comfort we can give to the families of the fallen angels who make their final trip home to Dover Air Force Base in my home state of Delaware. They have paid a price few of their fellow citizens can fathom.    

Ladies and gentlemen, we are at the dawn of a new era in Iraq. Our combat mission is nearly complete. As President Obama vowed at Camp Lejeune:

“[W]e will leave the Iraqi people with a hard-earned opportunity to live a better life – that is your achievement; that is the prospect that you have made possible.”

Iraqis from Basra to Erbil have also made great sacrifices to reach this moment. God-willing, and with your help, the worst of their struggles are now behind them. And it is now up to their political leaders to match the courage their citizens have shown and deserve to see in return.

The final chapters of our Iraq endeavor remain unwritten. But there is one thing we know already: the Americans that went to war in Iraq served their country as well as any generation of fighting men and women in our remarkable history.

You have climbed to glory and returned to a proud and grateful nation. Welcome home Second Brigade Combat Team. God Bless America. And God Bless all of our troops.

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Vice President Biden, Administration Officials, Continue Travel Across the Country Holding “Recovery Summer” Events, Project Site Visits

Vice President Biden Visits Yellowstone and Grand Canyon National Parks; Other Officials Visit FL, NV, CO, WI, DC

WASHINGTON, DC – This week, Vice President Biden and Administration officials are continuing to hold “Recovery Summer” events and visit Recovery Act project sites as part of a focus on the surge in Recovery Act projects underway across the country this summer.  The Recovery Act has already funded tens of thousands of projects and put about 3 million Americans to work, but this summer is the most active Recovery Act season yet, with thousands of new projects breaking ground that are helping to create more jobs for American workers and economic growth for businesses large and small. 

Week Ahead:

Tuesday, July 27
Vice President Biden
Vice President Biden will meet workers and deliver remarks at Grand Canyon National Park in Arizona. Grand Canyon and Yellowstone – where the Vice President traveled on Monday – received $25 million in Recovery Act funding that is creating jobs and jump-starting previously-deferred construction and maintenance projects. Overall, there are 800 Recovery Act projects underway at National Parks across the country this summer – eight times as many as there were last summer.

Department of the Treasury
Treasurer of the United States Rosie Rios will attend a groundbreaking for the Vida Senior Residences at Brightwood, a 36-unit affordable housing development for low-income senior citizens in Washington, DC.  The project received $6.8 million in Recovery Act Funds which were leveraged to attract other investments and help the project move forward. An estimated 55 construction workers will complete the job.

Small Business Administration
SBA Administrator Karen Mills will visit A. Harold and Associates where owner Andy Harold received two Recovery loans and has created 10 new jobs in Jacksonville, Florida. Harold is a service disabled veteran and current reservist who runs a technology, education, engineering, training and management service for both public and private sectors.  Thanks to the fee eliminations provided for in the Recovery Act, Harold saved over $33,000 in waived loan fees. Under Recovery Act loan enhancements, SBA has supported nearly 70,000 recovery loans, providing more than $30 billion in much needed capital to help small businesses drive economic growth and create jobs.

Wednesday, July 28
Department of Housing and Urban Development
HUD Secretary Shaun Donovan will participate in the groundbreaking of Gibson Plaza Apartments in Washington, DC.  Gibson Plaza was awarded a $2.1 million Recovery Act Green Retrofit Program grant to do substantial “green” rehabilitation. The rehabilitation will create dozens of quality jobs in the DC area, while transforming Gibson Plaza from an aging 1970s inefficient structure into a LEED certified building with, among other improvements, a new handicapped accessible elevator, Energy Star roof and windows, and an energy efficient HVAC system.  The Secretary will be joined by DC Mayor Adrian Fenty, Congresswoman Holmes Norton, and other local elected officials.

Department of Agriculture
Rural Business Service Administrator Judith Canales will host a Recovery Summer event with the Delaware YWCA in Harrington, DE. The Delaware YWCA received $41,000 in Recovery Act funds from the Rural Business Enterprise Grant Program. The funds are being used to provide technical assistance for the Women’s Entrepreneurship Center’s Business Plan Development series.  The event will take place at Ocean Fresh Seafood, where one of the program participants works as a seafood broker, connecting retail stores and restaurants with local products.

Thursday, July 29
Department of Transportation
DOT Secretary LaHood will join Governor Jim Doyle in Watertown, WI, for a visit to the site of the future high-speed rail corridor that will connect Milwaukee and Madison.  The corridor, which will operate at speeds of up to 110 mph, will eventually extend from Milwaukee to Minneapolis.  Wisconsin is slated to receive more than $800 million from the Recovery Act for the development of high-speed rail.

Department of Housing and Urban Development
HUD Deputy Secretary Ron Sims will travel to Pueblo, CO to visit a Pueblo Housing Authority project that is using $1.7 million in Recovery Public Housing Capital Funds to make much needed improvements and bring the project to ADA compliance.  Deputy Secretary Sims will be joined by Pueblo Housing Authority Executive Director Frank D. Pacheco and other local elected officials. They will tour the project, meet with workers and discuss how this transformative project is creating jobs and stimulating the local economy.

Highlights of Recent Events:

Vice President Biden
Vice President Biden visited Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, where Recovery Act projects are creating jobs, generating economic activity, and preserving the life of the park. The Vice President met workers at the Recovery Act-funded construction site of the Madison Wastewater treatment facility, then delivered remarks outside the Madison Junior Ranger Station, joined by Director of the National Park Service Jonathan Jarvis. Overall, there are 800 Recovery Act projects underway at National Parks across the country this summer – eight times as many as there were last summer.

“Biden began a two-day tour highlighting Recovery Act projects in Yellowstone and Grand Canyon national parks by speaking to about 100 park workers, contractors and their families in the scenic Madison Valley, where the famous Madison River is formed in the shadow of 7,500-foot National Park Mountain. He said some $750 million in stimulus money has gone to about 800 national park projects, which have created jobs in tough times. But, he added, the projects would have been necessary even if the economy was good to protect the parks and reduce man's footprint there. ‘For too long our nation's crown jewels have been neglected,’ Biden said. ‘Everything we're doing in this park is worthwhile and needed to be done anyway, whether times were good or bad.’" [AP, 7/26/10]

President Obama and Vice President Biden’s Daily Public Schedules Now Online

Starting today, the President and the Vice President’s daily public schedules are now available online. You don’t have to come to WhiteHouse.gov to find out what the President and Vice President are up to each day – you can subscribe to their schedules via RSS or even add their schedules to your own Outlook, iCal, Google calendar, or any other calendar service that’s compatible with an iCal feed.  Just click here to download the iCal feed and add it to your calendar today.  Your calendar will be automatically updated as new events are added to the President and Vice President’s schedule.