THE WHITE HOUSE
 Office of the Press Secretary
 --------------------------------------------------------------------
For Immediate Release                                 April 10, 2009
REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
AFTER MEETING WITH FED CHAIRMAN BEN BERNANKE
AND FDIC CHAIRWOMAN SHEILA BAIR
Roosevelt Room
 11:53 A.M. EDT
THE PRESIDENT:  Well, first of all, Happy Easter and Happy Passover.  I'm sorry that you guys, like us, are working today.
We just had a terrific conversation with Ben Bernanke, Sheila Bair, and our entire regulatory group to talk about progress that we're making on the economy.  And I wanted to just give you a little bit of a sense of the efforts that we've been making in stabilizing the financial markets.
And I want to thank SEC Chair Mary Shapiro, as well as Comptroller of the Currency John Dugan, for joining us.  They weren't with us the last time we met.
We discussed ongoing stabilization of the financial system and the steps that have already been taken.  I spoke yesterday about the progress that's been made in the housing market.  As a consequence of some excellent work by Ben and some coordinated activities between the various agencies, what we've seen is mortgage interest rates go down to historic lows and we've seen a very significant pick-up in refinancings.  That has the effect of not only putting money in the pockets of people but also contributing to stabilization of the housing market.
We discussed the public-private investment mechanisms that we have set up so that we can start getting some of these toxic assets off the books.  And all the agencies here have been involved in further refining the ideas and making them work effectively, and we feel confident that even as we're dealing with the problems within the banking system, that we're also addressing some of the problems in the non-bank financial system that was such a huge proportion of our credit flow when it came to things like auto loans and credit cards and so forth. 
We feel very good about the progress that we're making in unlocking lending in some particular markets, for example the small business area.  Some of you will recall that a couple of weeks ago we made a presentation about how we were going to help thaw lending to small businesses, and I'm pleased to discover that because of our actions we've seen a 20 percent increase in the largest SBA loan program in the last month alone. 
And what that means is that small businesses are starting to get money that allows them to keep their doors open, make payroll, and that is going to contribute to our overall economic growth, as well as help make sure that people are able to keep their jobs. 
And we have also seen this month people starting to get their first checks in terms of the tax cuts that were initiated through the recovery package.  And when you combine it with the other efforts that are being made across the country for infrastructure projects, for the kinds of innovative energy programs that were part of the recovery package, what you're starting to see is glimmers of hope across the economy.
Now, we have always been very cautious about prognosticating and that's not going to change just because it's Easter.  The economy is still under severe stress and obviously during these holidays we have to keep in mind that whatever we do ultimately has to translate into economic growth and jobs and rising incomes for the American people.  And right now, we're still seeing a lot of job losses, a lot of hardship, people finding themselves in very difficult situations either because they've lost their home, they've seen their savings deteriorate, and they're still at risk of losing their jobs.
So we've still got a lot of work to do.  And over the next several weeks you will be seeing additional actions by the administration.  What I just wanted to emphasize today, and I think that Ben Bernanke and Sheila Bair and our economic team as a whole would agree, we're starting to see progress.  And if we stick with it, if we don't flinch in the face of some difficulties, then I feel absolutely convinced that we are going to get this economy back on track.
All right?  Thank you very much, guys.
Q    Is it still going to get worse before it gets better?
THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you, guys.  Appreciate it.
Q    Sir, are you saying the recession is abating?
THE PRESIDENT:  I'm saying we're seeing progress.
Q    You're saying what?
THE PRESIDENT:  I've said that we're seeing progress. 
Okay, thank you, guys.  Have a wonderful holiday.
Q    Thank you, sir.
Q    When is the dog coming?
THE PRESIDENT:  Oh, man, now, that's top secret.  (Laughter.)  That's top secret.
Q    Exactly.
THE PRESIDENT:  Oh, no, no, this is tightening up.  Any of you going to be at the Easter Egg Roll?
Q    Oh, yes.
THE PRESIDENT:  That's big.  (Laughter.)  That's big.  So we look forward to seeing you on Monday.  Thanks, guys.
Q    Thank you.
END                                  
12:02 P.M. EDT
 
 THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the First Lady
__________________________________________________
For Immediate Release                      April 9, 2009

REMARKS BY THE FIRST LADY
AT WHITE HOUSE GARDEN PLANTING

South Lawn
3:15 P.M. EDT

MRS. OBAMA:  Well, hello!  Hi, Sam, how are you?  Wow, look at this.  This is a big difference.  How are you guys doing?

CHILDREN:  Fine!

MRS. OBAMA:  Well, welcome to the White House -- the White House Kitchen Garden.  This is pretty exciting, right?

CHILDREN:  Yes!

MRS. OBAMA:  Well, who -- how many of you were here the last time to help us?  Oh, you guys were all here.  I thought I saw some familiar faces.  So you know what we're doing -- this is part two.  What are we going to do today?

CHILDREN:  Planting.

MRS. OBAMA:  We're going to plant the seeds.  And I want to introduce you to Secretary Vilsack, who is the head of the Department of Agriculture.  He's going to talk in a minute about some of the programs he's going to do for your school lunches. 

But first, one thing I want to let you know -- I don't know if you were paying attention, but the President and I, we went on this long trip.  We were in many, many countries -- we were in Europe.  And the number one question I got as the First Lady from world leaders -- they were all excited about this garden. 

Every single person, from Prince Charles on down, they were excited about the fact that we were planting a garden, because in many countries they really believe in the importance of planting and growing your own food.  So they were fascinated and grateful to all of you for helping make this possible.

So what I want to ask again -- why do you -- why is this so important?  Why do you think it's important for us to plant this garden? 

Yes.

CHILD:  Because it's been since -- a long time since Roosevelt planted --

MRS. OBAMA:  That's a good -- we have a historical perspective.  It's been a very long time since a garden was planted, since the time of Roosevelt.  This is a young historian here.  That's true. 

What about you, young lady?  What do you think?  Why is this important?

CHILD:  So you can be healthy.

MRS. OBAMA:  So you can be healthy.  So why do you think fruits and vegetables are important to health?  Yes.

CHILD:  (Inaudible.)

MRS. OBAMA:  Fruits and vegetables have nutrients and vitamins, yes. 

CHILD:  Energy?

MRS. OBAMA:  Energy.  Energy, absolutely.  Any other?  You, young man.

CHILD:  It can make you strong.

MRS. OBAMA:  It can make you strong -- yes, absolutely.  This is one of the main reasons we're doing this, is that what I've learned as a mom, in trying to feed my girls, is that it is so important for them to get regular fruits and vegetables in their diets, because it does have nutrients, it does make you strong, it is all brain food.  And when you go to school, it is so important for you to have a good breakfast, to make sure in your lunches that you have an apple or an orange or a banana, that you have something green when you eat any meal, lunch or dinner. 

And we're looking to you guys to help educate the country, not just in your own homes, but other people as they think about how to plan their meals for their kids, to think about the importance of making sure that we have enough fruits and vegetables.  And doing this garden is a really inexpensive way of making that happen. 

Do you know how much -- I mean, look how big this garden is.  Do you know how much it costs to just do this?  And we're going to have carrots and spinach and herbs and berries.  We're going to have a ton of stuff in this garden.  How much do you think it costs to do this garden?  How much?

CHILD:  Over $100,000. 

MRS. OBAMA:  Over $100,000.  (Laughter.)  My husband would go crazy -- (laughter) -- if he thought we were spending that kind of money.  No, a little lower than that.  How much do you think?  You.

CHILD:  I think $5,000?

MRS. OBAMA:  $5,000?  No, a little lower.  Yes.

CHILD:  $1,000?

MRS. OBAMA:  $1,000?  No.

CHILD:  $200.

MRS. OBAMA:  $200 -- it doesn't -- it hasn't cost us more than $200 to plant this.

CHILD:  $100?

MRS. OBAMA:  It's about $100 -- it's between $100 and $200.  So it's not a lot of money.  And this garden can not only feed my family, but it's going to feed all the staff at the White House.  We're going to use these vegetables to help feed you guys.  We're going to serve it at some State Dinners.  So with this little plot of land -- and this is a big plot; you don't even have to plant this much -- we can produce enough fruits and vegetables to feed us for years and years to come -- for just a couple of hundred dollars.  Now, isn’t that amazing? 

So we're looking to you guys to help us make it happen.  So we're going to plant the seedlings today.  And then in a few months, hopefully right around the time you get out of school, you can come and help us harvest the fruits and vegetables, and come into the White House with all of our chefs and start doing a little cooking.  How does that sound?

CHILDREN:  Good.

MRS. OBAMA:  Well, thank you guys for coming back again.  I hope you had fun the first time.  You guys are weather producers because you have brought another perfect day.  Thank you for that.  And now I'm going to turn it over to Secretary Vilsack, who is going to talk a little bit about some of the programs he's doing especially for school lunch programs.

Secretary Vilsack.  (Applause.)

END
3:20 P.M. EDT
 

White House Kitchen Garden Fact Sheet
LOCATION
The White House Kitchen Garden measures approximately 1100 square feet and is located on the west side of the South Lawn.  It is visible from E Street, with a perfect southern exposure which provides a great deal of sun light.

SOIL
The soil was tested and was found to be in good shape, including trace elements.  Amendments have been made to enrich the soil and rock dusts of lime, green sand, crab meal sourced from the Chesapeake Bay and White House compost have been added to improve the macro and micro nutrient balance.  Only organic fertilizers and insect repellants will be used and lady bugs and praying mantises will be introduced to naturally control other insect populations.  A honey bee hive has been set up nearby for pollination purposes.

PLANTS
The four-season herb, fruit and vegetable garden will feature 25 varieties of heirloom seeds planted in slightly raised beds using succession planting methods. 

Perennial Herbs:
Mint, Garlic Chives, Chives, Thyme, Oregano, Anise hyssop, Sage, Rosemary, Marjoram, Chamomile

Annual Herbs:
Parsley, Basil, Thai basil, Cilantro, Dill, Fennel 

Vegetables:
Lettuces (Green Oak Leaf, Red Romaine, Butterhead, Speckled), Spinach, Onions, Shallots, Chard, Snap Peas, Shell Peas, Carrots, Black Kale, Rhubarb, Arugula, Tomatoes, Tomatillos, Peppers (sweet and hot), Beans, Cucumbers, Okra, Sweet Potatoes

Fruits:
Blueberries, Raspberries

Additionally, The Monticello Foundation and head gardener Peter Hatch have donated seeds and sprouts that originated in Thomas Jefferson’s garden.  Plantings will include Brown Dutch and Tennis Ball lettuces, Savoy Cabbage, and Prickly Seed Spinach, all reportedly Jefferson’s favorites, and a favorite fig plant, the Marseille Fig, will be planted in a raised bed with Mint. 

MAINTENANCE
The garden will be tended by Dale Haney, Grounds Superintendent for the White House, and the White House kitchen staff, including Sam Kass, Assistant White House Chef and Food Initiative Coordinator.  Students from Bancroft Elementary in Mount Pleasant, Washington, DC will participate in the groundbreaking, planting and harvesting of the garden.

HARVEST
Produce from the garden and honey from the hive will be available to the White House Chefs for preparing meals for the First Family, for official functions and donations will be made to Miriam’s Kitchen, a soup kitchen near the White House. 

COSTS
The cost for the seeds and amendments is approximately $200. 

SOUTH GROUNDS - Chronology

1791-1792
President George Washington receives transfer of land for the new federal city.  In 1792, he moves slightly to the west the site which Maj. Pierre L'Enfant had selected for the President's House and construction begins under architect James Hoban.

1800
John Adams, as the first President to occupy the White House, orders a vegetable garden.  Probably laid out to the northeast of the building, it was not planted after Adams left office in March 1801.

1801-1809
Thomas Jefferson plants trees on about eight acres of the construction-scarred grounds that he encloses within a wooden fence.  In 1808, the south side fence is replaced with a stone wall. The origin of the hillocks on each side of the South Lawn, long called the "Jefferson Mounds," is disputed.

The grounds are more fully divided north (public) and south (private) by the construction of east and west terraces (1805-1808) by Benjamin Latrobe after design sketches by President Thomas Jefferson (planned length of each abbreviated in 1806).

On the southeast side, at the western end of Pennsylvania Avenue, Benjamin Latrobe erects in 1808 a gateway in the form of a classical triple-arched brick triumphal arch (removed in 1857).

1824
South Portico is constructed for James Monroe by James Hoban.

1825
John Quincy Adams develops the first flower garden (southeast of the East Terrace, as sited by Thomas Jefferson).  In 1827 he wrote of two acres covered with at least one thousand "forest and fruit-trees, shrubs, hedges, esculent [edible] vegetables, kitchen and medicinal herbs, hot-house plants, flowers, and weeds."

1835
Andrew Jackson creates the White House orangery (hothouse for citrus fruit trees, roses, and camellias) in an east side structure never attached to the East Terrace.  He also adds more trees to the grounds, possibly including the "Jackson magnolia" to the west of the South Portico.

1857
The garden and orangery on the east side (expanded in 1853 by Franklin Pierce) are demolished for the expansion of the Treasury Department.  The first of several greenhouses is constructed atop the West Terrace.

1866, 1871
East and West Executive Avenues are built as public ways on each side of the White House.

1871
Ulysses S. Grant extends the grounds south beyond the perimeter originally defined in 1801 by Thomas Jefferson’s fence.

1875
South Fountain is created near the south end of the enlarged South Grounds, a broad pool replacing a smaller fountain (c.1857) nearer the South Portico.

1878-80
Hundreds of trees are planted under Rutherford B. Hayes, who begins the tradition of commemorative trees.

1902
The conservatory is removed during the Theodore Roosevelt renovation of the White House, exposing again the Jeffersonian West Terrace to which is attached a new office building (later called the "West Wing").  Edith Roosevelt plants a "colonial garden" beside the terrace.

1909
The first tennis court - built in 1903 beside the West Wing - is rebuilt on its current site further south on the South Grounds during the William Howard Taft expansion of the West Wing.

1913
Ellen Wilson replaces the colonial garden on the west with a formal rose garden and a new East Garden is created.

c.1933
Playground equipment -  slide, jungle gym, and tree-mounted swing - is installed near the mound on the east side of the South Lawn for Franklin D. Roosevelt’s grandchildren, Sistie and Buzzie Dall.

1935
Under Franklin D. Roosevelt, renowned landscape architect, Frederick Law Olmsted Jr., prepares a plan for the grounds.  The South Grounds are to be a park-like grove of trees cut through by a broad southward vista.

1937-38
The current fence is completed around the South Grounds with a taller iron fence, similar to the 1818 north fence, replacing the low Victorian style fence around the east, south, and west sides of the grounds.  The installation includes new gates and stone piers at the east and west entrances to the South Grounds.

1954
Putting green is created on the west side of the South Lawn for Dwight D. Eisenhower (removed 1971, rebuilt on original foundations 1995).

1961
John F. Kennedy has the Rose Garden redesigned to serve presidential functions and places management of the White House grounds under the National Park Service.

1961
Playground equipment - swing set and jungle gyms- is installed on the west side of the South Lawn for Caroline and John F. Kennedy, Jr.

1964
Lady Bird Johnson has the East Garden redesigned and named in honor of Jacqueline Kennedy.

1969
Lady Bird Johnson adds the Children’s Garden, an intimate area adjoining the tennis court on the South Grounds.

1975
Gerald R. Ford installs the first outdoor swimming pool at the White House, the 1933 indoor pool in the West Terrace having been covered over in 1970 beneath the new Press Room.

1977
Tree house designed by Jimmy Carter is installed for daughter Amy on the ground beneath the low-hanging branches of a tree near the west mound on the South Lawn.

1989
Horseshoe pitch is created beside the swimming pool for George H.W. Bush (removed 1993, rebuilt 2001).

1991
Basketball half-court is created beside the National Park Service maintenance building on the southwest of the South Grounds.

1993
Jogging track is created around the inside of the south driveway for Bill Clinton (removed 2008).

2009
Playground set is installed for Malia and Sasha Obama south of the West Wing.

2009
First Lady Michelle Obama plants White House Kitchen Garden on west side of lower South Lawn.

Office of the Curator
March 2009

WH_Kitchen_Garden_Diagram_04-09-09.pdf

THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
_________________________________________________________________
For Immediate Release                               April 9, 2009
REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
ON IMPROVING VETERANS’ HEALTH CARE
Dwight D. Eisenhower Executive Office Building
Room 450
11:54 A.M. EDT
THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you, John, for your outstanding service, and your friendship is greatly appreciated.  I want to thank my two outstanding Secretaries who are behind me -- Bob Gates, who is doing just an extraordinary job over at the Pentagon, and General Shinseki, now Secretary Shinseki, who has served our country with extraordinary valor.
I also want to acknowledge all the wounded warriors and veterans and all those who care for them who are here today.  You make us very, very proud.
To the VSO and MSO leaders who work hard on behalf of those who serve this nation, thank you for your advocacy and your hard work.  As I look out in the audience, especially seeing these folks in their uniforms, I am reminded of the fact that we have the best fighting force in world history, and the reason we do is because of all of you.  And so I'm very grateful for what you've done to protect and serve this country.
It is good to be back.  We've had a productive week working to advance America's interests around the world.  We worked to renew our alliances to enhance our common security.  We collaborated with other nations to take steps towards rebuilding the global economy, which will revitalize our own. 
And before coming home, I stopped to visit with our men and women who are serving bravely in Iraq.  First and foremost, I wanted to say "thank you" to them on behalf of a grateful nation.  They've faced extraordinary challenges, and they have performed brilliantly in every mission that's been given to them.  They have given Iraq the opportunity to stand on its own as a democratic country, and that is a great gift.
You know, we often talk about ideals like sacrifice and honor and duty.  But these men and women, like the men and women who are here, embody it.  They have made sacrifices many of us cannot begin to imagine.
We're talking about men like Specialist Jake Altman and Sergeant Nathan Dewitt, two of the soldiers who I had the honor to meet when I was in Baghdad.  In 2007, as Specialist Altman was clearing mines so that other soldiers might travel in safety, he lost his hand when an IED struck his vehicle.  And at Walter Reed, he asked to relearn the skills necessary to perform his duties with a prosthetic so that he could rejoin his old battalion.  Sergeant Dewitt was severely injured in an attack last September, but he refused to let his injuries stop him from giving first aid to his wounded comrades.  Today, they're both back alongside their fellow soldiers in their old units.
And we're talking about women like Tammy Duckworth, who I think is here -- Tammy, where are you?  There you are -- a great friend who lost her legs when a rocket struck the Black Hawk helicopter she was piloting over Iraq.  And when she returned home, she continued to serve her country heading the Department of Veterans Affairs in Illinois, and she serves her country still as my nominee for Assistant Secretary of the Department of Veterans Affairs.
We're talking about heroes like all the service members and veterans of the United States Armed Forces, including the veterans who've joined us here today -- many who gave up much yet signed up to give more; many with their own battles still to come; all with their own stories to tell.
For their service and sacrifice, warm words of thanks from a grateful nation are more than warranted, but they aren't nearly enough.  We also owe our veterans the care they were promised and the benefits that they have earned.  We have a sacred trust with those who wear the uniform of the United States of America.  It's a commitment that begins at enlistment, and it must never end.
But we know that for too long, we've fallen short of meeting that commitment.  Too many wounded warriors go without the care that they need.  Too many veterans don't receive the support that they've earned.  Too many who once wore our nation's uniform now sleep in our nation's streets.
It's time to change all that.  It's time to give our veterans a 21st-century VA.  Over the past few months we've made much progress towards that end, and today I'm pleased to announce some new progress.
Under the leadership of Secretary Gates and Secretary Shinseki, the Department of Defense and the Department of Veterans Affairs have taken a first step towards creating one unified lifetime electronic health record for members of our armed services that will contain their administrative and medical information -- from the day they first enlist to the day that they are laid to rest.
Currently, there is no comprehensive system in place that allows for a streamlined transition of health records between DOD and the VA.  And that results in extraordinary hardship for a awful lot of veterans, who end up finding their records lost, unable to get their benefits processed in a timely fashion.  I can't tell you how many stories that I heard during the course of the last several years, first as a United States senator and then as a candidate, about veterans who were finding it almost impossible to get the benefits that they had earned despite the fact that their disabilities or their needs were evident for all to see.
And that's why I'm asking both departments to work together to define and build a seamless system of integration with a simple goal:  When a member of the Armed Forces separates from the military, he or she will no longer have to walk paperwork from a DOD duty station to a local VA health center; their electronic records will transition along with them and remain with them forever.  (Applause.)
Now, this would represent a huge step towards modernizing the way health care is delivered and benefits are administered for our nation's veterans.  It would cut through red tape and reduce the number of administrative mistakes.  It would allow all VA sites access to a veteran's complete military medical record, giving them the information they need to deliver high-quality care.  And it would do all this with the strictest and most rigorous standards of privacy and security, so that our veterans can have confidence that their medical records can only be shared at their direction.
Now, the care that our veterans receive should never be hindered by budget delays.  I've shared this concern with Secretary Shinseki, and we have worked together to support advanced funding for veterans' medical care.  What that means is a timely and predictable flow of funding from year to year, but more importantly, that means better care for our veterans.  And I was pleased to see that the budget resolution passed by the Senate supports this concept in a bipartisan manner.
I'm also pleased that the budget resolutions adopted by both houses of Congress preserve priorities that I outlined in my budget -- priorities that will go a long way towards building that 21st-century VA that we're looking for.  The 2010 budget includes the largest single-year increase in VA funding in three decades.  And all told, we will increase funding by $25 billion over the next five years.
This budget doesn't just signify increased funding for the VA health care program; it significantly expands coverage so that 500,000 more veterans who have previously been denied it will receive it, and it strengthens care and services across a broad range of areas.
Because the nightmares of war don't always end when our loved ones return home, this budget also meets the mental health needs of our wounded warriors.  Untold thousands of servicemen and women returning from Iraq and Afghanistan suffer from Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder or other serious psychological injury.  The growing incidence of suicide among active military returning veterans is disturbing.  Sometimes the deadliest wounds are the ones you cannot see, and we cannot afford to let the unseen wounds go untreated.  And that's why this budget dramatically increases funding for mental health screening and treatment at all levels.  It increases the number of vet centers and mobile health clinics, expanding access to this needed care in rural areas.  And it helps reduce the stigma of seeking care by adding mental health professionals to educate veterans and their families about their injuries and their options.
And because thousands of Iraq and Afghanistan veterans have suffered from Traumatic Brain Injury, one of the signature injuries of these wars, this budget improves services for cognitive injuries.  And many with TBI have never been evaluated by a physician.  And because such injuries can often have long-term impacts that only show up down the road, this funding will help ensure they receive the ongoing care they need.
Because we all share the shame of 154,000 veterans going homeless on any given night, this budget also funds a pilot program with not-for-profit organizations to make sure that veterans at risk of losing their homes have a roof over their heads.  And we will not rest until we reach a day when not one single veteran falls into homelessness.  (Applause.)
Finally, this budget recognizes that our veterans deserve something more -- an equal chance to reach for the very dream they defend.  It's the chance America gave to my grandfather, who enlisted after Pearl Harbor and went on to march in Patton's Army.  When he came home, he went to college on the GI Bill, which made it possible for him and so many veterans like him to live out their own version of the American Dream.  And now it's our turn to help guarantee this generation the same opportunity that the greatest generation enjoyed by providing every returning service member with a real chance to afford a college education.  And by providing the resources to effectively implement the Post-9/11 GI Bill, that is what this budget does.
And even as we care for veterans who've served this country, Bob Gates has helped us design a budget that does more for our soldiers, more for their families, and more for our military.  It fully protects and properly funds the increase to our Army and Marine force strength and halts reductions in the Air Force and Navy, allowing fewer deployments and more time between each.  It builds on care for our wounded warriors and on our investments in medical research and development.  It deepens our commitment to improve the quality of life for military families -- military child care, spousal support, and education -- because they're deployed when their loved one gets deployed.
On my visit to Baghdad this week, I was inspired all over again by the men and women in our armed services.  They're proud of the work they're doing.  And we are all deeply proud of them.  And through their service, they are living out the ideals that stir something deep within the American character -- honor, sacrifice, and commitment to a higher purpose and to one another.
That, after all, is what led them to wear the uniform in the first place -- their unwavering belief in America.  And now we must serve them as well as they've served us.  And as long as we are fortunate to have leaders like Secretary Gates and Secretary Shinseki, and as long as I am Commander-in-Chief, I promise that we will work tirelessly to meet that mission and make sure that all those who wear this nation's uniform know this:  When you come home to America, America will be there for you.
Thank you very much, everybody.  (Applause.)
END                    
12:06 P.M. EDT
 
THE WHITE HOUSE 
Office of the Vice President
___________________________________________________________
For Immediate Release                      April 9, 2009
 
OPENING REMARKS BY THE VICE PRESIDENT
AT THE ECONOMIC RECOVERY IMPLEMENTATION
 CABINET MEETING
Ceremonial Office
Dwight D. Eisenhower Executive Office Building
  
11:37 A.M. EDT
            THE VICE PRESIDENT:  Well, I want to thank you all for being here again.  I think this -- our once-a-week effort to try to make sure this Recovery Package stays on track is working.  As my grandfather would say, God willing and the creek not rising, things are moving. 
     But I think we have good news again today to announce:  A little more than seven weeks since we passed the Recovery Act we're already making good progress on repairing our economy.  And I think we're doing a good job of making life a little better for average Americans out there. 
     Today I'm proud to make an announcement about the Department of Health and Human Services, and it's making a lot happen out there.  First of all, we're going to announce today that $2.3 billion will be made available to care for our nation's children and improve our public health. 
Across the country, parents are worried about finding a job, or just keeping the job they have.  And when doing that, they shouldn't have to worry about finding affordable, quality day care.  A lot of parents who have jobs are -- that's their -- that's their major concern.  And those who are looking are trying to figure out how they can do both, get a job and be able to care for their children.  And there should never have to be a choice between heading off to work and leaving your child in anything other than competent and good hands.
     Today we'll make $2 billion available in Recovery Act funding for child support programs across the country.  And these funds -- with these funds, states can provide vouchers families can use at child care centers and -- or contact directly with centers who serve children for working families.  These funds will give more children the day care they need, competent day care, and a competence the parents need -- as many of you recording this know how hard it is to make sure when you walk away in the morning, that you think your child is in good hands.  And we’re going to give working parents the piece of mind that they need. 
This week also marks the National Public Health Week, and I want to mention one Recovery Act investment that I believe is going to make our nation both safer and healthier.  President Obama has said time and again that if we're going to fix the health care system we have to focus on preventing, preventing disease and illness before it happens.  And that starts making sure that more Americans get the vaccines they need.
Today the administration is announcing that we will make $300 million available in Recovery Act funds to purchase and distribute vaccines, support innovative initiatives to protect more Americans, and help ensure that more Americans learn just how important it is to get vaccinated.  Vaccines stop illnesses before they happen, eliminate long hospital stays, cut health care costs, improve public health, and flat out save lives.  So simply, they make life a lot better for everyone in this country. 
And just like everything else we've done in the Recovery Act, that's our only goal:  Raise the living standard for average Americans out there; put them in a better place.  Americans, I think, are, to state the obvious, counting on all of us around this table and the President of the United States and the Congress to step up to the ball.  I think that's what we're doing.  And now it's time for us to get back to work. 
Again, to the press, we've been doing this on a weekly basis.  And I've been meeting by telephone conference once a week with somewhere between 10 and 20 governors and mayors, because we want to make sure this practically -- practically happens.  And where I began before you all came in, I have a -- my staff was a little concerned when I started saying, especially Ed was a little concerned, that we'd be on the phone talking to a governor or mayor, ask a question, I said, I'll get you the answer in 24 hours.  And if we don't have an answer in 24 hours, we'll personally call you and tell you we don't have an answer and when we're going to get the answer.  And these are all the answers coming.  (Laughter.)
So I want to thank you all.  I'm serious, people are  -- I mean, this is the ultimate constituent service here.  And I want to thank each of the Cabinet heads here, and those representing the Cabinet Secretaries, for the way in which we responded.  Because I hope when this is all over, and the economy is back and roaring again, that what we're doing here sets a precedent for how from this moment on we handle the distribution of federal funding, cutting through bureaucratic red tape, having more accountability and transparency.  And so that's a secondary goal to the ultimate goal, primary goal of making sure people get some help. 
Thank you all for coming on in.  And we're going to get to work.
END                                                                            
11:42 A.M.EDT
 
THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
____________________________________________________________
For Immediate Release                               April 9, 2009 
REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
AFTER HOUSING REFINANCE ROUNDTABLE
Roosevelt Room
 10:00 A.M. EDT
THE PRESIDENT:  Well, thank you so much for taking time to join us.  We are here with a wonderful group of homeowners. 
And I think for so many people around this country, the essence of the American Dream is owning your own home, being able to have that piece of property that is yours, that allows you to raise your kids, that represents your single biggest investment. And obviously one of the triggers of the financial crisis and now the economic crisis that we've suffered is that because in some areas housing values got way overheated, in some cases you had a lack of regulation that allowed all sorts of complex financial instruments take advantage of homeowners.  We have seen a collapse in the housing market, a precipitous drop in values, and that led to a lot of the problems in the financial markets.
Here's the good news.  At the beginning of this administration we said we are -- we were going to tackle directly the problems that homeowners were experiencing and figure out ways in which we could provide them assistance in reducing their interest rates, modifying their loans so that they would be in a position to stay in their homes and reduce their monthly payments.  And around the table here you see some wonderful families who have taken advantage of what are now historically low mortgage rates, brought about in part by some extraordinary actions by the Federal Reserve, but also brought about by the housing plan that Tim Geithner and Shaun Donovan helped to design.
What you've seen now is rates are as low as they've been since 1971.  Three-quarters of the American people get their mortgages through a Fannie Mae-Freddie Mac qualified loan.  And as a consequence of us being able to reduce the interest rates that are available, we have now seen some extraordinary jumps in the rate of mortgage refinancings. 
And everybody here represents families who have saved hundreds of dollars a month, thousands of dollars a year in some cases, and that's money directly in their pocket.  More importantly, what it's allowed them to do is to consolidate their loans in some cases, reduce the length of their mortgages in other cases.  It has given them the kind of security and stability in their mortgage payments that a lot more people can take advantage of.
So the main message that we want to send today is, there are 7 to 9 million people across the country who right now could be taking advantage of lower mortgage rates.  That is money in their pocket.  And we estimate that the average family can get anywhere from $1,600 to $2,000 a year in savings by taking advantage of these various mortgage programs that have been put in place. 
We've already seen a substantial jump -- 88 percent increase in refinancings over the last month.  We've seen Fannie Mae refinance $77 billion of mortgages in March, which is their highest volume in one month since 2003.  And rates on 30-year mortgages have dropped to an all-time low of 4.78 percent.
So we are at a time where people can really take advantage of this.  And what we want to do is to send a message that if you are having problems with your mortgage, and even if you're not and you just want to save some money, you can go to MakingHomeAffordable.gov -- MakingHomeAffordable.gov -- and the way the web site is designed, you can plug in your information and immediately find out whether or not you are potentially eligible for one of these -- one of these mortgage refinancings.
Now, we are in the process of rolling out some additional phases to the program.  Everybody here represent responsible homeowners who made their payments, who have jobs and income that support their mortgages.  In some cases, people may have had difficulties because they lost a job, somebody in their family got sick, they may have missed some payments -- and in those cases we also want to be helpful and we are putting in place a loan modification program, working with banks, working with services, that will allow other folks who are closer to losing their home in a stronger position in the future.
So there are a range of different programs that are available for a range of different types of borrowers.  The main message we want to send today is, is that the programs that have been put in place can help responsible folks who have been making their payments, who are not looking for a handout, but this allows them make some changes that will leave money in their pockets and leave them more secure in their homes.
So we hope that everybody takes advantage of it.  Again, the web site is MakingHomeAffordable.gov -- is that right?  MakingHomeAffordable.gov -- so get on the web site, find out what's available.
Last point we want to make -- as people have become aware that the government is helping to promote refinancing, we're starting to see some scam artists out there who are contacting people saying, you can refinance your home, the government has got a program, we're ready to help -- oh, but by the way, first you've got to pay some money.  I just want everybody who is watching today to know that if somebody is asking you for money up front before they help you with your refinancing, it's probably a scam.
So take advantage of MakingHomeAffordable.gov and that will allow you to figure out exactly how to proceed on this in a way that's making you money, saving you money, as opposed to costing you money.
All right.  Thank you, everybody.
END          
10:05 A.M. EDT
 
THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Vice President
-----------------------------------------------
For Immediate Release                                      April 8, 2009
REMARKS BY THE VICE PRESIDENT
AT THE WELCOME HOME CEREMONY
FOR XVIII AIRBORNE CORPS
Parade Grounds
Fort Bragg, North Carolina
10:49 A.M. EDT
THE VICE PRESIDENT: As you all can tell, I not only am a little hoarse, but I'm not accustomed to being introduced by three-stars other than saying, "Here's the Vice President." (Laughter.) I thank you for that gracious introduction, General, and I think I'm actually closer -- I'm in the 20s in terms of my visits to the Balkans and the -- all the way through to Afghanistan, and every place in between.
I committed, when I was elected to the United States Senate as a 29-year-old kid, that wherever I voted to send a man or a woman, I would go to see how they were doing. And I know you all know it assembled here, but to the press corps assembled, and to anyone within the range of my voice or who'll read these remarks, I have been incredibly -- incredibly impressed.
My only regret, General, is when I've traveled to Prishtina or to Brcko or to -- up into the Kunar Valley in Afghanistan, or -- where you and I last hung out in Iraq, I -- my only regret is that the rest of America is not standing next to me, literally seeing the job you all do, the sacrifices you make.
I have never been so proud as standing up in a hamlet in God knows nowhere in the Kunar Valley with six -- I call them "kids" and my wife gets angry. She said, "These are warriors, don't call them kids." But they're younger than I am, standing up there in the middle of nowhere on a mountain pass seeing six people at a forward operating base, and watching them handle an entire community, put themselves in a position where not only are they exposed, but they're exposed also to not just the elements but to the people who in fact they're trying to get to know. And watching these young women and men without any fear or trepidation walking out into communities and villages of less than 200 people, building roads, making sure they have water, and actually, literally standing there, on occasion, behind some sandbag and physically -- physically protecting them.
So I say to all of you assembled on this field today: You are the best trained; you are the bravest; you are the most conditioned; you are the best force America has ever assembled. And I'm just honored and proud to be here today with my wife, Jill.
Fifteen months ago, our country called you to serve in Iraq. For some of you this was not your first deployment. You arrived in a country that was on the brink of a civil war, a country that I first visited over six years ago. I've been back about a dozen times, and watching the circumstance in which you walked into, with a country on the brink of a civil war, a country that experienced widespread sectarian violence while insurgents targeted our troops on a daily basis.
Thousands of young men and women prior to your arrival injured or killed, fighting like the devil to get MRAPs built to take place of up-armored Humvees. Watching there at Dover Air Force Base as so many of these young warriors made their last -- their last and final journey home to their country. You went in the midst of what was an uncertain future for Iraq, and you left -- you left five or six days ago -- you left behind a country in which violence is being replaced by progress.
Over the course of your deployment, you dealt a serious blow to al Qaeda and Iraq by taking the fight to them in the north, by moving out into Anbar Province, by taking on the Shia extremists in the south, and by stemming the flow of weapons and foreign fighters along that broad, open, expansive border in Iraq. You helped secure the provincial elections, which I might add, as you’ll remember, General, were very much in doubt. Everybody acts now like this was a done deal, this was a certainty, but it was not -- it was not. So you have made sure those provincial elections took place at the beginning of this year, the first of what will be basically four elections in that country.
During the Iraqi elections of 2005, there were over 300 attacks. During the provincial elections held just two months ago, there were 11 attacks in the entire country. I know because I spent some time with General Allen (sic) in Iraq. I know the general -- excuse me, General Austin in Iraq -- there's also a General Allen, by the way -- but General Austin in Iraq. And I know, General, you saw these provincial elections as the key focus of your efforts, and you were dead right -- you were dead right.
By helping these elections take place peacefully, you sent a message -- all of you assembled here, you sent a message -- you sent a message to the entire world that things weren't moving backwards, but they were moving forward in Iraq, that a country that had been in chaos was able to actually hold an orderly transfer of power at a provincial level to allow the Iraqis to begin to gain control of their own destiny. You gave them -- you and thousands and tens of thousands of others over the period of the last seven years -- you gave the Iraqis a chance, a fighting chance to reclaim their country and establish a stable government for the first time in God knows how long, a government chosen by their own people, not imposed upon them by a superpower, not imposed upon them by a dictator.
Perhaps most importantly, you and your predecessors built the capacity of the Iraqi security forces to a point -- to a point where the President could announce the drawdown of American combat forces from Iraq. I remember those early days -- I say to my colleagues I remember those early days standing there with General Petraeus, watching what looked like the -- kids trying to get together a police force and an army in those early days. Well, because of all the work you've done, all the work our military has done, I am absolutely confident that the Iraqis are in a much better place to take responsibility for their own security.
To the men and women of the 18th Airborne Corps, on behalf of a grateful nation, we thank you, thank you for a job well done. You did more than I suspect you even know. It's amazing to me as I go out into these battle spaces, how you just look at it like, "This is my job, sir. Mr. Vice President, or Senator, this is my job" -- like you're showing up to the bakery that morning to make sure the muffins get put out. (Laughter.) You're incredible, you're absolutely incredible. But you should know -- you should know that with the grace of God and the goodwill of the neighbors, as my grandfather used to say, you set a country on a course that may affect the shape of the history of that region for a generation to come.
I want to recognize some of the distinguished leaders. I know we should do this the other way. I know my colleague, Senator Kay Hagan, and my two congressional colleagues up there know the way to start off is recognize the brass first. But tell you the truth, you folks coming home are even more important than the brass that are here today, and more important than me and everyone assembled in that reviewing stand.
But the fact of the matter is, I don't think you could have done your job without the training, the commitment, and the absolute unflinching loyalty of your Lieutenant General Lloyd Austin. The last time I saw General Austin was in Kirkuk. The first thing he asked me -- he was getting in one of those helicopters, which I found fascinating -- not "This is what I need, Mr. Vice President" -- and then I was interim, I was between being a senator and a Vice President. When I was a senator I had real power. (Laughter.) But all kidding aside, I remember it was the first thing he asked me. He asked me about my son. You didn't ask me about anything else. You asked me about my son. I think that's a reflection of how the General's staff views every one of you that are deployed -- you're their sons and daughters.
So it's great to have you home, General. And I want to say publicly to the press here, so he cannot wiggle out of it, he made a commitment to me that when he got home, that he and his wife -- Mrs. Austin, it was a pleasure meeting you, by the way, thank you -- that you would come up to have dinner with my wife Jill and me in my new public housing accommodations. (Laughter.) So that was a commitment he made. And I want to let you all know I'm going to hold him to it. (Laughter.) And General Charles Campbell, Commanding General, U.S. Forces Command -- General, you're the best of the best, and you've got one hell of an outfit underneath you. And so I just want to thank you, thank you all for having the good judgment to follow these guys.
General James Lindsay is here, as well, as well as -- he was former retired commander of U.S. Special Operations Command. Also in our presence is the fellow who I -- and this is probably why I slipped and said "Allen" -- Command Sergeant Major Allen, who actually runs the whole show -- (laughter) -- is here today. And Command Sergeant, at least that's what my son tells me. Captains and Majors don't pay much attention to anybody but Command Sergeant Majors.
But it's a delight to be here. And Georgeann McRaven, whose husband is a commander, Joint Special Operations Command, who is still deployed; Tommy Bolton, who was referenced here, a civilian aide to the Secretary of the Army. And I want to thank the members of the Congress again, Senator Kay Hagan, and -- who is a welcome addition and a good buddy of mine. And I hope you're enjoying the Senate as much as I did when I was there, Kay; and Bob Etheridge, who you all know well, and Mike McIntyre -- two stalwart members of the United States Congress and overwhelming supporters of all of you here at Fort Bragg and every fighting man and woman in America; and Mayor Tony Chavonne of Fayetteville, and Mayor Ethel Clark of Spring Lake, for all you've done to connect this base to the community. I know they appreciate it. They talk about it. And it is -- coming from Delaware, where the Dover Air Force Base is a major presence in my state, the relationship with the community makes a gigantic difference in the quality of life for all those stationed here. And you do a great job for them.
I also feel like I should recognize one guy who's always been here for you when you come back, and that's Iron Mike. He didn't say a damn thing to me when I came in today. (Laughter.) I saluted him; he didn't respond. But I know -- I know you're good to see -- you were happy to see Iron Mike when you came on base; you know you're home.
You know, there's a famous expression uttered by the poet John Milton. He said, "They also serve who only stand and wait." "They also serve who only stand and wait." Well, you know, of all of the people we have to thank, there is no one we owe a greater debt to, as General Austin pointed out, than your families. And that's not a bit of hyperbole, that's real -- that's real. It's hard enough to stand and wait in past wars when the whole nation has been at war, when everyone has understood the sacrifice your families are making, when everyone has understood what was going on. But in a sense, we are more a military at war than a nation at war. There’s a very few of you who make the sacrifices you make.
And I think it's one thing to stand and wait when you have the psychic remuneration of a whole nation knowing about the sacrifice you've made. You don't ask for that, but it's reinforcing when it exists. But I think it's even harder, because so many people -- good, decent Americans -- don't have any idea of the depths of the sacrifices your families make. It's not that they don't care, they do care. But they're going about their everyday life trying to figure out how to put one foot in front of the other, put bread on the table, keep their jobs. And the sacrifices that are made, the exceptional sacrifices -- a 15-month deployment. To most Americans that's a lifetime, 15 months. And during that period of time a lot happens.
So I want you to know I think Jill and I understand. I know my daughter-in-law and my two grandchildren understand the sacrifices your family made. Jill and I proudly wear this blue star. We proudly wear it. But it's interesting -- it's interesting. As much as people care, they just don't know the extent of the sacrifice you're making. But I want you to know that my wife and I know, President Obama and Michelle Obama know, my colleagues in the Congress know -- and we appreciate it more than you can imagine.
You know, it's amazing how when you're confronted with the difficulties that all your families have been confronted with, how it gives you a different perspective. My wife, for the last four years, and as you noticed, the First Lady Mrs. Obama, Michelle Obama -- they've devoted an inordinate number of hours to making sure and championing the needs for military families. We also know that a lot happened over the past 15 months that you haven't been able to share. Your child takes his first step; spoke his first or her first words; had a birthday without you, maybe more than one; things around the house that needed to be done weren't able to be done. Some of you even suffered losses in your family in those 15 months. So, folks, we want you to know we genuinely, genuinely appreciate your families, almost as much as what you've done for us. They have been incredible.
Now, ladies and gentlemen, I know no one in North Carolina is interested in basketball. (Laughter.) I know it's only a moderate pastime. But at least you got home in time to see North Carolina win the national championship. (Applause.)
And so, folks, your loved ones waited and they prayed, and they stood strong in your absence, and they deserve our thanks. So on behalf of all of America, thank you, the families of these deployed soldiers. (Applause.)
And when I say America owes you -- and we owe you -- to President Obama and me these are not idle phrases. When we say we owe you, we mean it. We owe you. That's why we're working so hard to improve the quality of life on bases across America. Here at Fort Bragg that means $30 million in investment, including the funds for a new child development center so we can get your kids off a waiting list into high-quality child care. That's why the so-called Recovery Act, that special legislation we passed at the front end provides $7 billion in new military construction projects, the majority of which are designed to improve the quality of life of our men and women serving this country. That's why we so strongly support the GI bill to make college more affordable, because you deserve it, and I hope you all are able to take advantage of it. And that's why we put caring for those who serve at the center of all our efforts.
President Obama and I are proud that in the first budget, even in these hard economic times, that we submitted -- we called for an increase in funding for veterans, expanding the eligibility for health care coverage to additional half a million veterans in expanding the services that are afforded to those people. I believe there's only one sacred obligation. I know people are tired of hearing me say this, but our government has only one truly sacred obligation. We have a lot of obligations, but only one truly sacred obligation, and that's to care for those who we send to war, and to give them everything they need when they return.
Ladies and gentlemen, if we only have $10 to spend in the entire federal government, then we are convinced that we have to spend six of it caring for those who come home in need. We will spend all six before we spend it on anything else -- on the elderly, on children, on the poor, on our roads, on our security -- because this is the only genuinely sacred obligation this nation has. The service that you and thousands and thousands of others who went before you in Iraq over the last six years -- the services you've performed have come at great cost for some. Some of our warriors and their families have paid a much steeper price than others. Some had given their lives, the ultimate sacrifice, and we honor their memory.
But the best way to honor their memory, of those thousands -- over 14,000 seriously injured coming home from the wars which we are engaged in and have been engaged in -- we owe them the obligation to -- we know we can never fully repay it, but we know we owe them the obligation to provide them the absolute best medical care and service they need. Some will need that for the rest of their lives. Their life expectancies will be 35 to 40 years, and some will need care for the entirety of those lives.
And I hope when these wars are finished -- I hope, and they will be -- and we're victorious, I hope five years from now and seven years from now, when we're asking for billions of dollars to meet that obligation to those wounded warriors who return home, no one forgets -- no one forgets because in times of peace, sometimes -- sometimes we forget. Those sacrifices have been real. The sacrifices you've made have been real. They have stabilized Iraq, secured our interest, and put us in a position to begin in an orderly fashion to draw down forces and hand over responsibility to the Iraqis. That's the President's plan -- a plan that he came up with in conjunction with the Joint Chiefs, a plan that will mean a lot more homecomings like this and fewer deployments of units to take place into Iraq.
Yesterday, President Obama visited Iraq for two reasons: one, to thank our troops for their sacrifice and their commitment -- and a job done. He understands that the burden their deployment has put on their families -- he's made it clear that he's willing to do everything possible to meet the needs that are required for the mission and to support you on your return. He also went to Iraq for another reason: That is to send a message to President Maliki, a man I've met many times in Iraq and here, that there's a lot of work left to be done, but the work is on the Iraqi watch now. It's time that they do their responsibility, not militarily alone. It's time to reconcile their political differences so they can enjoy the peace that they say they want and do want in their land.
It kind of reminds me of that famous story about Benjamin Franklin. He came out of -- on a very hot day in July in 1789 -- out of Independence Hall, and a woman accosted him on the street and said, "Mr. Franklin, what have you given us?" And his response was, "A Republic, Madam, if you can keep it." "A Republic, Madam, if you can keep it." Well, you have given the Iraqis the opportunity, for the first time in any of their memories, to live in peace. But it's up to them to make the political reconciliation necessary so they can keep it.
But the job of our warriors is not done. The people who attacked the United States on 9/11, too many of them are alive and well in Pakistan. My helicopter went down with a three-star and two of my colleagues about 9,000 feet in those mountains as we're going up to Tora Bora. And it gives you an overwhelming appreciation -- overwhelming appreciation sitting up on top of that mountain for six hours in the cold with F-15s flying over top making sure you’re okay. What some of the kids we have over there are doing, the incredible job.
General, all I had to do after six hours is walk with a helmet and a vest on about 400 meters up a hill to get to the other side to get to help in the middle of the night. I'm in pretty good shape. I want to tell you something. It made me appreciate what it's like in those mountains, somebody carrying 60 pounds on their back, having to worry about whether their life is at stake, and how difficult it is.
So, ladies and gentlemen, that's where al Qaeda is; that's where bin Laden is; that's where the jihadists are who attacked the United States of America. And President Obama, when he came into office, asked me to go to Afghanistan and come back with a report. Because up to now, we had not absolutely clearly defined exactly what our mission is in Afghanistan. And the President has stated it, along with the Joint Chiefs, clearly and indisputably. He said, and I quote: "Our mission is to disrupt, defeat, and dismantle al Qaeda in Afghanistan and Pakistan." That effort is still underway. There's more work to be done, which means there are more people who are going to be separated from their families. We're going to be asking more of those of you who wear the uniform.
Once again -- once again, we're calling on you. I know the brave warriors of the 82nd, and I've had the opportunity, General, to visit the 82nd in a whole lot of places mentioned over the last 15 years. You are warriors of the first degree. But I know the brave warriors of the 82nd and their families are preparing to answer the call right now. Even though today is a day of celebration and welcoming troops home, let me say in advance to the 82nd Airborne, God speed and safe passage. Today -- today is a day to celebrate, and we're thankful.
As I was coming here, I read that nine months after the 82nd Airborne Division returned home in October of 2007, a strange thing happened: The number of births at Womack Army Medical Center jumped by 50 percent. Is that right? You all are -- you all are doing your job. (Laughter.) I just want you to know that.
So I'm hopeful -- I'm hopeful that as the headline said in your local newspaper: "The Stork Lands with the Airborne." Well, that's a long way of saying I know you're anxious for me to stop talking. (Laughter.) You've only been home four days, or three days. It's time to be with your loved ones. And if past is prologue, General, I'm looking forward to coming back, being invited back nine months from now to an awful lot of christenings and baptisms.
And so let me close by saying 15 months ago, I understand that you had plane trouble delaying you getting there. Well, I'm glad there was no delaying getting you back home. So let me just say to you all again, on behalf of my wife, me, First Lady, the President, and an entire nation, a grateful nation -- thank you so much. And may God bless you, and may God protect every troop that's in harm's way. It's been an honor to be with you. Thank you. (Applause.)
END
11:19 A.M. EDT
THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
______________________________________________________________________
For Immediate Release                                                   April 7, 2009
REMARKS BY PRESIDENT OBAMA
AND PRIME MINISTER MALIKI OF IRAQ
TO THE PRESS
Commanding General's Residence
Baghdad, Iraq
7:28 P.M. (Local)
PRESIDENT OBAMA: Well, thank you very much. I’m just going to make a short statement. I’ve just had very productive discussions with Prime Minister Maliki. I’m glad that I could come back to Iraq. It’s important for me to speak directly to the Prime Minister as well as other Iraqi leaders. And it’s obviously a great honor to pay tribute to our troops, our diplomats, as well as Iraqis who have fought side by side with Americans.
I’ve arrived in Baghdad a day after -- around the bombings that killed many innocent Iraqi civilians. And our hearts go out to the victims of this senseless violence, as well as their families. But I remain convinced that our shared resolve and commitment to progress is greater than the obstacles that stand in our way.
But we should not be distracted, because we have made enormous progress working alongside the Iraqi government over the last few months. Overall, violence continues to be down. There’s been movement on important political questions. But we have been reminded that there’s more work to do.
I communicated to the Prime Minister that we are strongly committed to an Iraq that is sovereign and stable and self-reliant. And as Prime Minister Maliki was already aware, we have committed ourselves to a strategy that ensures a orderly, responsible transition from U.S. and coalition security forces to Iraqi security forces.
I’ve made it clear to my commanders that we need to be flexible but focused on training and equipping Iraqi security forces so that they can take the lead in dealing with security threats in their country. And the drawdown that will take place will ultimately result in the removal of all U.S. troops by 2011.
The second point of discussion was to indicate that we strongly support political steps to be taken to resolve differences between various factions within Iraq and to ensure a more peaceful and prosperous future.
Again, we’ve seen very good progress, but going forward it’s absolutely critical that all Iraqis are fully integrated into the government and the security forces.
We also want to work with the Prime Minister to deliver basic services to the Iraqi people, and I know that’s something that he cares deeply about.
And finally, we discussed how important it is to work together to deal with some of the regional issues that ultimately will be important to Iraq’s security.
I just came from Turkey, for example, which I think has been working much more effectively and cooperatively in dealing with issues in northern Iraq. And we want to continue to foster good relations not just with Turkey, but with all of the countries in the region.
So as we carry out this strategy, we’ll be working closely not only with the Prime Minister and his government but also with President Talabani and all of the other key government leaders. We’ll do so in a spirit of partnership. The U.S. pursues no claims on Iraqis’ territory and resources. We respect Iraqi sovereignty and the sacrifices that you have made for your country. And we seek a full transition to Iraqi responsibility for the security and prosperity of the nation.
The American people, through its troops, through civilians, have made enormous sacrifices here in Iraq. But they do so with the knowledge that they have stood alongside the Iraqi people in creating a more stable and prosperous country. And they are proud of the work that they’ve done, and I am proud and speak for them when I say that we want to continue to advance progress here in Iraq. And I look forward to the partnership with the Iraqi government and the Iraqi people in making this happen.
PRIME MINISTER MALIKI: (As translated.) Thank you, Mr. Obama. I welcome you in Iraq, that you -- that was a station after a very good trip for you. We discussed a lot of things regarding fixing a lot of the regional and international problems. The discussion with Mr. Obama included a lot of the bilateral issues that we insisted that he should continue to include all type of areas like scientific, social, et cetera. And we also committed to whatever had been achieved from democracy and the SOFA agreement.
We also talked about that dialogue should be the only way to resolve any issue, whether it was between the Iraqi society components or in the region.
We achieved a lot of things in Iraq now, the democratic process. We commit to our constitution. We want to go forward to benefit the country in this direction.
We assured the President that all the progress that was made in the security area will continue so we will be able to continue our building effort, our progress in Iraq. Iraq that now is based on increased security and increased stability, look forward to international companies and to other countries to participate in investing in the country. The partnerships that were created and the agreements that were signed will be the base for the cooperation to improve our relationship.
I appreciate very much the call for dialogue that President Obama mentioned, especially between East and West, between Islam and Christianity, and also work to solve the Palestinian issue that will help reduce violence in the area drastically. It will help in giving people their rights also produce peace that we’ve been looking forward for a few years.
We also thank President Obama for his willingness to help in the resolutions that were issued against Iraq in the previous period.
Thank you very much.
END
7:35 P.M. (L)
THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
_________________________________________________________________
For Immediate Release                              April 7, 2009 
REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
TO THE TROOPS
Al Faw Palace
Baghdad, Iraq  
6:08 P.M. (Local)
THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you.  Thank you, guys.  Let me say Multinational Force Iraq, Multinational Corps Iraq, Multinational Security Transition Command Iraq First Corps, America's Corp Band:  Thanks to all of you.
Listen, I am so honored.
AUDIENCE MEMBER:  We love you.
THE PRESIDENT:  I love you back.  (Applause.)  I am honored -- I'm honored and grateful to be with all of you.  And I'm not going to talk long because I want to shake as many hands as I can.  (Applause.)  And I've been talking all week.  (Laughter.)
But there's a couple of things I want to say.  Number one, thank you.
AUDIENCE MEMBER:  You're welcome.
THE PRESIDENT:  You know, when I was at Camp Lejeune I spoke about what it means for America to see our best and brightest, our finest young men and women serve us.  And what I said then is something that I want to repeat to you, which is:  You have performed brilliantly in every mission that has been given to you.
AUDIENCE:  Ooh-ah.
THE PRESIDENT:  Under enormous strain and under enormous sacrifice, through controversy and difficulty and politics, you've kept your eyes focused on just doing your job.  And because of that, every mission that's been assigned -- from getting rid of Saddam, to reducing violence, to stabilizing the country, to facilitating elections -- you have given Iraq the opportunity to stand on its own as a democratic country.  That is an extraordinary achievement, and for that you have the thanks of the American people.  (Applause.)  That's point number one.
Point number two is, this is going to be a critical period, these next 18 months.  I was just discussing this with your commander, but I think it's something that all of you know.  It is time for us to transition to the Iraqis.  (Applause.)  They need to take responsibility for their country and for their sovereignty.  (Applause.)
And in order for them to do that, they have got to make political accommodations.  They're going to have to decide that they want to resolve their differences through constitutional means and legal means.  They are going to have to focus on providing government services that encourage confidence among their citizens.
All those things they have to do.  We can't do it for them.  But what we can do is make sure that we are a stalwart partner, that we are working alongside them, that we are committed to their success, that in terms of training their security forces, training their civilian forces in order to achieve a more effective government, they know that they have a steady partner with us.
And so just as we thank you for what you've already accomplished, I want to say thank you because you will be critical in terms of us being able to make sure that Iraq is stable, that it is not a safe haven for terrorists, that it is a good neighbor and a good ally, and we can start bringing our folks home.  (Applause.)
So now is not the time to lose focus.  We have to be even more focused than we've been in order to achieve success.
The last point I want to make is I know how hard it's been on a lot of you.  You've been away from your families, many of you for multiple rotations.  You've seen buddies of yours injured and you remember those who have made the ultimate sacrifice.
AUDIENCE:  Ooh-ah.
THE PRESIDENT:  There are probably some people here who have seen children born and have been missing watching them grow up.  There are many of you who have listened to your spouse and the extraordinary sacrifices that they have to make when you're gone.
And so I want you to know that Michelle and myself are doing everything -- (applause) -- are doing everything we can to provide additional support for military families.  The federal budget that I have introduced increases support for military families.  We are going to do everything required to make sure that the commitment we make to our veterans is met, and that people don't have to fight for what they have earned as a consequence of their service.
The main point I want to make is we have not forgotten what you have already done, we are grateful for what you will do, and as long as I am in the White House, you are going to get the support that you need and the thanks that you deserve from a grateful nation.  (Applause.)
So thank you very much everybody.  (Applause.)  God bless you.  (Applause.)  God bless the United States of America.  (Applause.)
END                
6:15 P.M. (L)
 
THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secrectary
_____________________________________________________________
For Immediate Release                                          April 7, 2009
REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
AFTER MEETING WITH GENERAL ODIERNO
Al Faw Palace
Baghdad, Iraq
5:24 P.M. (Local)
Q Sir, can you tell us what your primary purpose is in being here?
THE PRESIDENT: To say thank you to the troops. They are doing extraordinary work. General Odierno has been helping to lead a very effective operation here. We want to be fully briefed. And nothing does that better than face-to-face meetings.
I'll have the opportunity to meet with Prime Minister Maliki and President Talabani while I'm here. Obviously we've spent a lot of time trying to get Afghanistan right. But I think it's important for us to remember that there's still a lot of work to be done here. And in addition to thanking our troops, I also want to send a strong message to our diplomatic corps and our civilians that they're going to be critical to our success here.
We've made significant political progress. You've seen a greater willingness on the part of all the factions in Iraq to resolve their issues politically and through non-violent means. But with the national elections coming up, many of the unresolved issues may be brought to a head. And it's very important for us to use all of our influence to encourage parties to resolve these issues in ways that are equitable and fair. And I think that my presence here can help do that.
Okay. Thank you, guys.
Not to mention, Chip, I thought you guys hadn't been on the road long enough. (Laughter.) I know that you didn't feel like going home, we had under-worked you. So I figured one more stop.
Q Did you say you're meeting with or talking to –-
THE PRESIDENT: I will be meeting with them, face to face.
Q Face to face?
Q Will that be here, Mr. President?
THE PRESIDENT: Yes. In the near vicinity.
END
5:26 P.M. (Local)
THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
____________________________________________________________________
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE                                            April 7, 2009

REMARKS OF PRESIDENT BARACK OBAMA
AT STUDENT ROUNDTABLE

 
Tophane Cultural Center
Istanbul, Turkey
 

12:18 P.M. (Local)
PRESIDENT OBAMA: Thank you so much. Well, it is a great pleasure to be here. Let me begin by thanking Professor Rahmi Aksungur -- did I say that properly -- who is director of the university here. And I want to thank all the young people who've gathered together. This is a great privilege for me and I'm really looking forward to it.
I'm going to make a few remarks at the beginning and then I want to spend most of the time having an exchange and giving you an opportunity to ask -- ask questions of me and I may ask some questions of you.
So as I said yesterday, I came to Turkey on my first trip overseas as President for a reason, and it's not just to see the beautiful sights here in Istanbul. I came here to reaffirm the importance of Turkey and the importance of the partnership between our two countries. I came here out of my respect to Turkey's democracy and culture and my belief that Turkey plays a critically important role in the region and in the world. And I came to Turkey because I'm deeply committed to rebuilding a relationship between the United States and the people of the Muslim world -- one that's grounded in mutual interest and mutual respect.
Turkey and the United States have a long history of partnership and cooperation. Exchanges between our two peoples go back over 150 years. We've been NATO allies for more than five decades. We have deep ties in trade and education, in science and research. And America is proud to have many men and women of Turkish origin who have made our country a more dynamic and a more successful place. So Turkish-American relations rest on a strong foundation.
That said, I know there have been some difficulties in recent years. In some ways, that foundation has been weakening. We've had some specific differences over policy, but we've also at times lost the sense that both of our countries are in this together -- that we have shared interests and shared values and that we can have a partnership that serves our common hopes and common dreams.
So I came here to renew that foundation and to build on it. I enjoyed visiting your parliament. I've had productive discussions with your President and your Prime Minister. But I also always like to take some time to talk to people directly, especially young people. So in the next few minutes I want to focus on three areas in which I think we can make some progress: advancing dialogue between our two countries, but also advancing dialogue between the United States and the Muslim world; extending opportunity in education and in social welfare; and then also reaching out to young people as our best hope for peaceful, prosperous futures in both Turkey and in the United States.
Now, let me just talk briefly about those three points.
First, I believe we can have a dialogue that's open, honest, vibrant, and grounded in respect. And I want you to know that I'm personally committed to a new chapter of American engagement. We can't afford to talk past one another, to focus only on our differences, or to let the walls of mistrust go up around us.
Instead we have to listen carefully to each other. We have to focus on places where we can find common ground and respect each other's views, even when we disagree. And if we do so I believe we can bridge some of our differences and divisions that we've had in the past.
A part of that process involves giving you a better sense of America. I know that the stereotypes of the United States are out there, and I know that many of them are informed not by direct exchange or dialogue, but by television shows and movies and misinformation. Sometimes it suggests that America has become selfish and crass, or that we don't care about the world beyond us. And I'm here to tell you that that's not the country that I know and it's not the country that I love.
America, like every other nation, has made mistakes and has its flaws. But for more than two centuries we have strived at great cost and sacrifice to form a more perfect union, to seek with other nations a more hopeful world. We remain committed to a greater good, and we have citizens in countless countries who are serving in wonderful capacities as doctors and as agricultural specialists, people -- teachers -- people who are committed to making the world a better place.
We're also a country of different backgrounds and races and religions that have come together around a set of shared ideals. And we are still a place where anybody has a chance to make it if they try. If that wasn't true, then somebody named Barack Hussein Obama would not be elected President of the United States of America. That's the America I want you to know.
Second, I believe that we can forge a partnership with Turkey and across the Muslim world on behalf of greater opportunity. This trip began for me in London at the G20, and one of the issues we discussed there was how to help peoples and countries who, through no fault of their own, are being very hard hit by the current world economic crisis. We took some important steps to extend a hand to emerging markets and developing countries by setting aside over a trillion dollars to the International Monetary Fund and by making historic investments in food security.
But there's also a larger issue of how Turkey and America can help those who have been left behind in this new global economy. All of our countries have poverty within it. All of it -- all of our countries have young people who aren't obtaining the opportunities that they need to get the education that they need. And that's not just true here in Turkey or in the United States, but that's true around the world. And so we should be working together to figure out how we can help people live out their dreams.
Here there's great potential for the United States to work with Muslims around the world on behalf of a more prosperous future. And I want to pursue a new partnership on behalf of basic priorities: What can we do to help more children get a good education? What can we do to expand health care to regions that are on the margins of global society? What steps can we take in terms of trade and investment to create new jobs and industries and ultimately advance prosperity for all of us? To me, these are the true tests of whether we are leaving a world that is better and more hopeful than the one we found.
Finally, I want to say how much I'm counting on young people to help shape a more peaceful and prosperous future. Already, this generation, your generation, has come of age in a world that's been marked by change that's both dramatic and difficult. While you are empowered through unprecedented access to information and invention, you're also confronted with big challenges -- a global economy in transition, climate change, extremism, old conflicts but new weapons. These are all issues that you have to deal with as young people both in Turkey and around the world.
In America, I'm proud to see a new spirit of activism and responsibility take root. I've seen it in the young Americans who are choosing to teach in our schools or volunteer abroad. I saw it in my own presidential campaign where young people provided the energy and the idealism that made effort possible. And I've seen it wherever I travel abroad and speak to groups like this. Everywhere I go I find young people who are passionate, engaged, and deeply informed about the world around them.
So as President, I'd like to find new ways to connect young Americans to young people all around the world, by supporting opportunities to learn new languages, and serve and study, welcoming students from other countries to our shores. That's always been a critical part of how America engages the world. That's how my father, who was from Kenya, from Africa, came to the United States and eventually met my mother. It's how Robert College was founded so long ago here in Istanbul.
Simple exchanges can break down walls between us, for when people come together and speak to one another and share a common experience, then their common humanity is revealed. We are reminded that we're joined together by our pursuit of a life that's productive and purposeful, and when that happens mistrust begins to fade and our smaller differences no longer overshadow the things that we share. And that's where progress begins.
So to all of you, I want you to know that the world will be what you make of it. You can choose to build new bridges instead of building new walls. You can choose to put aside longstanding divisions in pursuit of lasting peace. You can choose to advance a prosperity that is shared by all people and not just the wealthy few. And I want you to know that in these endeavors, you will find a partner and a supporter and a friend in the United States of America.
So I very much appreciate all of you joining me here today. And now what I'd like to do is take some questions. I think we've got -- do we have some microphones in the audience? So what I'd like to do is people can just raise their hands and I'll choose each person -- if you could stand up and introduce yourself. I have a little microphone in my pocket here in case you're speaking Turkish, because my Turkish is not so good -- (laughter) -- and I'll have a translator for me.
Okay? All right. And I want to make sure that we end before the call to prayer, so we have about -- it looks like we have about half an hour. All right? Okay, we'll start right here.
Q I'm from the university. I want to ask some questions about climate issue. Yesterday you said that peace in home and peace in world, but to my opinion, firstly the peace should be in nature. For this reason, I wonder that when the USA will sign the Kyoto Protocol.
PRESIDENT OBAMA: Well, it's an excellent question. Is this mic working? It is? Okay. Thank you very much. What was your name?
Q (Inaudible.)
PRESIDENT OBAMA: As many of you know, I think the science tells us that the planet is getting warmer because of carbon gases that are being sent into the atmosphere. And if we do not take steps soon to deal with it, then you could see an increase of three, four, five degrees, which would have a devastating effect -- the oceans would rise; we don't know what would happen to the beauty of Istanbul if suddenly the seas rise. Changing weather patterns would create extraordinary drought in some regions, floods in others. It could have a devastating effect on human civilization. So we've got to take steps to deal with this.
When the Kyoto Protocol was put forward, the United States opted out of it, as did China and some other countries -- and I think that was a mistake, particularly because the United States and -- is the biggest carbon -- has been the biggest carbon producer. China is now becoming the biggest carbon producer because its population is so large. And so we need to bring an international agreement together very soon.
It doesn't make sense for the United States to sign Kyoto because Kyoto is about to end. So instead what my administration is doing is preparing for the next round, which is -- there will be discussions in Copenhagen at the end of this year. And what we want to do is to prepare an agenda both in the United States and work internationally so that we can start making progress on these issues.
Now, there are a number of elements. Number one, we have to be more energy efficient. And so all countries around the world should be sharing technology and information about how we can reduce the usage of electricity, and how we can make our transportation more efficient, make our cars get better gas mileage. Reducing the amount of energy we use is absolutely critical.
We should also think about are there ways that if we're using fossil fuels -- oil, coal, other fossil fuels -- are there ways of capturing or reducing the carbon emissions that come from them?
So this is going to be a big, big project and a very difficult one and a very costly one. And I don't want to -- I don't want to lie to you: I think the politics of this in every country is going to be difficult, because if you suddenly say to people, you have to change your factory to make it more energy efficient -- well, that costs the factory owner money. If you say to a power plant, you have to produce energy in a different way, and that costs them money, then they want to pass that cost on to consumers, which means everybody's electricity prices go up -- and that is something that is not very popular.
So there are going to be big political struggles in every country to try to ratify an agreement on these issues. And that's why it's going to be so important that young people like yourself who will be suffering the consequences if we don't do something, that you are active politically in making sure that politicians in every country are responsive to these issues and that we educate the public more than we have so far.
But it is excellent question, thank you.
All right, this gentleman right here.
Q Thank you. I'm studying at Bahcesehir University, and my major is energy engineering, so --
PRESIDENT OBAMA: Oh, there you go. You could have given an even better answer.
Q Yes, I hope we will solve that problem in the future. So my question is, what actions will you take after you wrote quote, peace at home, peace at the world, to do --
PRESIDENT OBAMA: I'm sorry, could you repeat the question?
Q What actions will you take after you wrote your quote, peace at home and peace at the world, to -- (inaudible) -- and what do you think, as Turkish young men and women, how can we help you at this purpose you have?
PRESIDENT OBAMA: Well, some people say that maybe I'm being too idealistic. I made a speech in Prague about reducing and ultimately eliminating nuclear weapons, and some people said, ah, that will never happen. And some people have said, why are you discussing the Middle East when it's not going to be possible for the Israelis and the Palestinians to come together? Or, why are you reaching out to the Iranians, because the U.S. and Iran can never agree on anything?
My attitude is, is that all these things are hard. I mean, I'm not naïve. If it was easy, it would have already been done. Somebody else would have done it. But if we don't try, if we don't reach high, then we won't make any progress. And I think that there's a lot of progress that can be made.
And as I said in my opening remarks, I think the most important thing to start with is dialogue. When you have a chance to meet people from other cultures and other countries, and you listen to them and you find out that, even though you may speak a different language or you may have a different religious faith, it turns out that you care about your family, you have your same hopes about being able to have a career that is useful to the society, you hope that you can raise a family of your own, and that your children will be healthy and have a good education -- that all those things that human beings all around the world share are more important than the things that are different.
And so that is a very important place to start. And that's where young people can be very helpful, because I think old people, we get into habits and we become suspicious and we carry grudges. Right? You know, it was interesting when I met with President Medvedev of Russia and we actually had a very good dialogue, and we were -- we spoke about the fact that although both of us were born during the Cold War, we came of age after the Cold War had already begun to decline, which means we have a slightly different attitude than somebody who was seeing Russia only as the Soviet Union -- only as an enemy or who saw America only as an enemy.
So young people, they can get rid of some of the old baggage and the old suspicions, and I think that's very important. But understanding alone is not enough. Then you -- we actually have to do the work.
And for the United States, I think that means that we have to make sure that our actions are responsible, so on international issues like climate change we have to take leadership. If we're producing a lot of pollution that's causing global warming, then we have to step forward and say, here's what we're willing to do, and then ask countries like China to join us.
If we want to say to Iran, don't develop nuclear weapons because if you develop them then everybody in the region is going to want them and you'll have a nuclear arms race in the Middle East and that will be dangerous for everybody -- if we want to say that to Iranians, it helps if we are also saying, "and we will reduce our own," so that we have more moral authority in those claims.
If we want to communicate to countries that we sincerely care about the well-being of their people, then we have to make sure that our aid programs and our assistance programs are meaningful.
So words are good and understanding is good, but ultimately it has to translate into concrete actions. And it takes time. I was just talking to my press team and they were amused because some of my reporter friends from the States were asking, how come you didn't solve everything on this trip? They said, well, you know, it's only been a week. These things take time and the idea is that you lay the groundwork and slowly, over time, if you make small efforts, they can add up into big efforts. And that's, I think, the approach that we want to take in promoting more peace and prosperity around the world.
Okay, let me make sure I get all sides of the room here. This young lady right here.
Q In one of your interviews you said you want us to be a member of the European Union. But after that, Nicolas Sarkozy said, it's not yours, it's European Union decision. Now I want to ask you that what's your opinion, and why Nicolas Sarkozy said that? Is that because he's more likely to support the so-called Armenian genocide?
PRESIDENT OBAMA: You know, the -- I don't think -- well, first of all, it's true, I'm not a member of -- the United States is not a member of the European Union, so it's not our decision to make. But that doesn't prevent me from having an opinion. I mean, I notice the Europeans have had a lot of opinions about U.S. policy for a long time, right? They haven't been shy about giving us suggestions about what we should be doing, so I don't think there's anything wrong with us reciprocating. That's what friends do -- we try to be honest about what we think is the right approach.
I think it is the right approach to have Turkey join the European Union. I think if Turkey can be a member of NATO and send its troops to help protect and support its allies, and its young men are put in harm's way, well, I don't know why you should also not be able to sell apricots to Europe, or have more freedom in terms of travel.
So I think it's the right thing to do. I also think it would send a strong signal that Europe is not monolithic but is diverse and that that is a source of strength instead of weakness. So that's my opinion.
Now, President Sarkozy is a good friend and a good ally. As I said, friends are going to sometimes disagree on this. I haven't had a lengthy conversation with him about his position on this issue. My hope is, is that as time goes on and as trust builds, that this is ultimately something that occurs.
I don't get a sense that his opposition is related to the Armenian issue. I don't think that's it. I think it's a more fundamental issue of whether he's confident about Turkey's ability to integrate fully. But you'll probably have to ask him directly. So maybe when he comes here he'll have a town hall meeting like this one.
Okay, the gentleman right there. Yes, go ahead. Here's a microphone.
Q First, I will ask about the Bush and you differences at the core, because some say just the face has changed and that -- but core is the same still. They will have a fight with the Middle East and they will have a fight with Iran.
And my second question is more in part to this. You will let the Kurdish state in northern Iraq? You will let -- you'll allow this?
PRESIDENT OBAMA: Okay, the --
Q Thank you.
PRESIDENT OBAMA: Yes. Well, let me answer -- I'll answer the Kurdish question first. You know, we are very clear about our position on Turkish territorial integrity. Turkey is an ally of ours and part of what NATO allies do is to protect the territorial integrity of their allies. And so we are -- we would be opposed to anything that would start cutting off parts of Turkey, and we have been very supportive in efforts to reduce terrorist activity by the PKK.
Now, I also think that it's important that the Kurdish minority inside of Turkey is free to advance in the society and that they have equal opportunity, that they have free political expression, that they are not suppressed in terms of opportunity. And I think that the President and Prime Minister are committed to that, but I want to continually encourage allowing -- whether it's religious minorities or ethnic minorities -- to be full parts of the society. And that, I think, is very, very important.
The first question, if I understood you correctly, is the suggestion that even though I present a different face from Bush, that the policies are the same and so there's really not much difference.
And, you know, I think this will be tested in time because as I said before, moving the ship of state is a slow process. States are like big tankers, they're not like speedboats. You can't just whip them around and go in a new direction. Instead you've got to slowly move it and then eventually you end up in a very different place.
So let me just give you a few examples. When it comes to Iraq, I opposed the war in Iraq. I thought it was a bad idea. Now that we're there, I have a responsibility to make sure that as we bring troops out, that we do so in a careful enough way that we don't see a complete collapse into violence. So some people might say, wait, I thought you were opposed to the war, why don't you just get them all out right away? Well, just because I was opposed at the outset it doesn’t mean that I don't have now responsibilities to make sure that we do things in a responsible fashion.
When it comes to climate change, George Bush didn’t believe in climate change. I do believe in climate change, I think it's important. That doesn’t mean that suddenly the day I'm elected I can say, okay, we're going to turn off all the lights and everybody is going to stop driving. Right? All I can do is to start moving policies that over time are going to obtain different results.
And then it is true, though, that there are some areas where I agree with many of my friends in the United States who are on the opposite political party. For example, I agree that al Qaeda is an enormous threat not just to the United States but to the world. I have no sympathy and I have no patience for people who would go around blowing up innocent people for a political cause. I don't believe in that.
So, yes, I think that it is just and right for the United States and NATO allies and other allies from around the world to do what we can to eliminate the threat of al Qaeda. Now, I think it's important that we don't just do that militarily. I think it's important that we provide educational opportunities for young people in Pakistan and Afghanistan so that they see a different path. And so my policies will be somewhat different, but I don't make any apologies for continuing the effort to prevent bombs going off or planes going into buildings that would kill innocents. I don't think any society can justify that.
And so, as I said, four years from now or eight years from now, you can look back and you can see maybe what he did wasn’t that different, and hopefully you'll come to the conclusion that what I did made progress.
Yes, this young lady right here.
Q First of all, welcome to our country, Turkey. I would like to continue in Turkish if it's possible.
PRESIDENT OBAMA: Yes, let me -- wait, wait, wait. See, I've got my --
Q Thank you very much.
PRESIDENT OBAMA: Hold on.
Q (As translated.) My first question is that in the event that Turkey becomes an EU member, what -- how will that -- how is that --
PRESIDENT OBAMA: Okay, try again.
Q In the event that Turkey becomes a member of the EU, how will that affect U.S. foreign policy and the alliance of civilizations? And my second question is a little more personal. We watched your election with my American friends. Before you were elected, my friends who said that they were ashamed of being Americans, after you were elected said that they were proud to be Americans. This is a very sudden and big change. What do you think the reason is for this change?
PRESIDENT OBAMA: You know, the United States friendship with Turkey doesn't depend on their EU membership. So even if Turkey continued not to be a member of the EU, the United States in our bilateral relations and in our relations as a NATO ally can really strengthen progress. And I had long discussions with the President and the Prime Minister about a range of areas where we can improve relations, including business and commerce and trade.
We probably can increase trade between our two countries significantly, but we haven't really focused on it. Traditionally the focus in Turkish-American relations has been around the military and I think for us to broaden that relationship and those exchanges could be very important.
You know, in terms of my election, I think that what people felt good about was it affirmed the sense that America is still a land of opportunity. I was not born into wealth. I wasn't born into fame. I come from a racial minority. My name is very unusual for the United States. And so I think people saw my election as proof, as testimony, that although we are imperfect, our society has continued to improve; that racial discrimination has been reduced; that educational opportunity for all people is something that is still available. And I also think that people were encouraged that somebody like me who has a background of living overseas, who has Muslims in his family -- you know, that I might be able to help to build bridges with other parts of the world.
You know, the American people are a very hopeful people. We're an optimistic people by nature. We believe that anything is possible if we put our minds to it. And that is one of the qualities of America that I think the world appreciates. You know, sometimes people may think that we are -- we aren't realistic enough about how the world works and we think that we can just remake the world without regard to history, because we're still a relatively new nation. Compared to Turkey and how old this civilization is, America is still very new.
And so it's true that I think we believe that things can happen very fast and that transformations in politics or in economics or in science and technology can make our lives better overnight.
So sometimes we need more patience. But I also think the world needs to have a sense – (drop in audio feed). That's a good thing and that we don't have to always be stuck with old arguments. I mean, one thing that is interesting about Europe as I travel around is, you know, you hear disputes between countries that date back to a hundred years, a thousand years -- people are still made about things that happened a very long time ago.
And so one thing America may have to offer is an insistence on looking forward and not always looking backwards.
Okay, I only have time for one more question. I'll give it to this gentleman right here.
Oh, wait, wait, wait, wait -- I’ve got to get my earplug.
Q I thank you for the opportunity to ask you a question. Right now I am in the Turkish language and literature faculty of this university. How do you assess the Prime Minister's attitude in Davos? Had you been in the same situation, would you have reacted the same way?
PRESIDENT OBAMA: Well, first of all, I think very highly of your Prime Minister. I've had a chance now to talk with him first in London. I had spoken to him on the phone previously, but we had the opportunity to meet in London during the G20, and then we've been obviously having a number of visits while I've been here in Turkey.
And so I think that he is a good man who is very interested in promoting peace in the region and takes great pride I believe in trying to help work through the issues between Israel and its neighbors. And Turkey has a long history of being an ally and a friend of both Israel and its neighbors. And so it can occupy a unique position in trying to resolve some of these differences.
I wasn't at Davos so I don't want to offer an opinion about how he responded and what prompted his reaction. I will say this -- that I believe that peace in the Middle East is possible. I think it will be based on two states, side by side: a Palestinian state and a Jewish state. I think in order to achieve that, both sides are going to have to make compromises.
I think we have a sense of what those compromises should be and will be. Now what we need is political will and courage on the part of leadership. And it is not the United States’ role or Turkey's role to tell people what they have to do, but we can be good friends in encouraging them to move the dialogue forward.
I have to believe that the mothers of Palestinians and the mothers of Israelis hope the same thing for their children. They want them not to be vulnerable to violence. They don't want, when their child gets on a bus, to worry that that bus might explode. They don't want their child to have to suffer indignities because of who they are. And so sometimes I think that if you just put the mothers in charge for a while, that things would get resolved.
And it's that spirit of thinking about the future and not the past that I just talked about earlier that I think could help advance the peace process, because if you look at the situation there, over time I don't believe it's sustainable.
It's not sustainable for Israel's security because as populations grow around them, if there is more and more antagonism towards Israel, over time that will make Israel less secure.
It's not sustainable for the Palestinians because increasingly their economies are unable to produce the jobs and the goods and the income for people's basic quality of life.
So we know that path is a dead end, and we've got to move in a new direction. But it's going to be hard. A lot of mistrust has been built up, a lot of anger, a lot of hatred. And unwinding that hatred requires patience. But it has been done. You know, think about -- my Special Envoy to the Middle East is a gentleman named George Mitchell, who was a senator in the United States and then became the Special Envoy for the United States in Northern Ireland. And the Protestants and the Catholics in Northern Ireland had been fighting for hundreds of years, and as recently as 20 years ago or 30 years ago, the antagonism, the hatred, was a fierce as any sectarian battle in the world.
And yet because of persistent, courageous efforts by leaders, a peace accord was arrived at. A government that uses the democratic process was formed. And I had at the White House just a few weeks ago the leader of the Protestants, the leaders of Catholics in the same room, the separatists and the unionists in the same room, as part of a single system. And so that tells me that anything is possible if we're willing to strive for it.
But it will depend on young people like you being open to new ideas and new possibilities. And it will require young people like you never to stereotype or assume the worst about other people.
In the Muslim world, this notion that somehow everything is the fault of the Israelis lacks balance -- because there's two sides to every question. That doesn't mean that sometimes one side has done something wrong and should not be condemned. But it does mean there's always two sides to an issue.
I say the same thing to my Jewish friends, which is you have to see the perspective of the Palestinians. Learning to stand in somebody else's shoes to see through their eyes, that's how peace begins. And it's up to you to make that happen.
All right. Thank you very much, everybody. I enjoyed it. (Applause.)
END
1:03 P.M. (Local)