The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Statement by National Security Council Spokesperson Bernadette Meehan on Murders in Libya

The United States condemns in the strongest terms the brutal mass murder purportedly of Ethiopian Christians by ISIL-affiliated terrorists in Libya.  We express our condolences to the families of the victims and our support to the Ethiopian government and people as they grieve for their fellow citizens.  That these terrorists killed these men solely because of their faith lays bare the terrorists’ vicious, senseless brutality.  This atrocity once again underscores the urgent need for a political resolution to the conflict in Libya to empower a unified Libyan rejection of terrorist groups.

Even as terrorists attempt through their unconscionable acts to sow discord among religious communities, we recall that people of various faiths have coexisted as neighbors for centuries in the Middle East and Africa.  With the force of this shared history behind them, people across all faiths will remain united in the face of the terrorists’ barbarity.  The United States stands with them.  While these dehumanizing acts of terror aim to test the world's resolve – as groups throughout history have – none have the power to vanquish the powerful core of moral decency which binds humanity and which will ultimately prove the terrorists' undoing.

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Statement by the President on the 20th Anniversary of the Oklahoma City Bombing

Twenty years ago today in Oklahoma City, two terrorists attacked their own country, killing 168 people and injuring hundreds more. We will never forget the men and women who lost their lives in the bombing that day. The passing of time will never extinguish the pain we feel. But if those murderers hoped to terrorize the American people that day, to break our spirits or shatter the bonds that unite us, then they completely and utterly failed. We will be forever grateful to the first responders who risked their lives to save others, the law enforcement officers and prosecutors who brought the perpetrators to justice, and the ordinary men and women who set an “Oklahoma standard” for resilience that we still hold today.

It is with heavy hearts that Michelle and I send our condolences to the families of those we lost 20 years ago. And it is with great pride that we send our deepest gratitude to all those who have served as an example of America at its best.

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Readout of the President’s Call with King Salman bin Abdulaziz al-Saud of Saudi Arabia

Today, the President spoke with King Salman bin Abdulaziz al-Saud of Saudi Arabia to discuss recent developments in Yemen. The President reaffirmed the strong friendship between the United States and Saudi Arabia and underscored our commitment to Saudi Arabia’s security. The President and King Salman discussed the recent adoption of a resolution on Yemen in the United Nations Security Council and next steps in the effort to resume the political transition in Yemen, including talks facilitated by the United Nations. The President and King Salman agreed that our collective goal is to achieve lasting stability in Yemen through a negotiated political solution facilitated by the United Nations and involving all parties as envisioned in the GCC Initiative. The President and King Salman also discussed the importance of responding to the humanitarian needs of the Yemeni people.

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the President and the First Lady at Poetry Workshop with Elizabeth Alexander

East Room

4:00 P.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you.  Thank you so much.  (Applause.)  Everybody, please have a seat.  Well, first of all, let me thank Madeleine for the wonderful introduction.  And Madeleine is going to be going to Princeton next year, so -- (applause) -- so her and Michelle were exchanging how special they were, backstage.  (Laughter.)  And you know, “President” is a cool title, but “former teen poet” -- (laughter) -- that is a pretty good title as well.  And I’m proud to be both.  I have to say my poems are not as good as yours, Madeleine.  I was going to recite some poetry, but Michelle said no.  (Laughter.)  She said, don't do that.  (Laughter.) 

Anyway, April is National Poetry Month.  So Michelle and I figured what better way to celebrate than with some of America’s brilliant young poets.  And we’ve invited poetry fans of all ages to join us, as well.  And we have one of America’s most gifted and accomplished poets, my dear friend, Elizabeth Alexander, who’s going to share some of work with us.  So I'm not going to speak long.

Poetry matters.  Poetry -- like all art -- gives shape and texture and depth of meaning to our lives.  It helps us know the world.  It helps us understand ourselves.  It helps us understand others -- their struggles, their joys, the ways that they see the world.  It helps us connect.  In the beginning, there was the word.  And I think it's fair to say that if we didn’t have poetry, that this would be a pretty barren world.  In fact, it's not clear that we would survive without poetry.  As Elizabeth once wrote, “We encounter each other in words, words spiny or smooth, whispered or declaimed, words to consider, reconsider.”  That’s the power of poetry.

Sometimes it’s only after reading a poem -- or writing a poem -- that we understand something that we already went through, that we felt, that we experienced.  And that’s why we often reach for poetry in the big moments -- when we fall in love, or lose somebody close to us, or leave behind one stage of life and enter into another.  A good poem can make hard times a little easier to survive, and make good times a lot sweeter. 

But poetry does not just matter to us as individuals; it matters to us as a people.  The greatness of a country is not just the size of its military, or the size of its economy, or how much territory it controls.  It’s also measured by the richness of its culture.  And America is America in part because of our poets and our artists and our musicians -- all those who shared their ideas and their stories, and helped make us the vibrant and passionate and beautiful country that we are today. 

It’s not every nation that produces poets like Elizabeth, or like Madeleine.  There are parts of the world where poets are censored or they are silenced.  But that’s not how we do it here.  That’s one of the many reasons why we’re such a special place.  If you want to understand America then you better read some Walt Whitman.  If you want to understand America, you need to know Langston Hughes.  Otherwise you're missing something fundamental about who we are.   

And now, for the very special poet here today.  I met Elizabeth when we were professors together at the University of Chicago.  She and Michelle and I have been friends ever since.  So when we were planning my first inauguration, we decided we better have a poet, and we thought we should have a poet that we know and we love.  And she penned this extraordinary poem called, Praise Song for the Day.”  You all should read it.  On a day full of unforgettable moments, hearing Elizabeth read that poem was one of my favorite moments.  And she has just written a amazing book that technically is not a poem, but is full of poetry, and I could not be prouder of her.

So, congratulations to all the young poets.  I look forward to reading your work or hearing your work.  But right now, I want to introduce Ms. Elizabeth Alexander.  (Applause.)

(Poetry reading begins.) 

MRS. OBAMA:  Wow.  And I’m supposed to talk after that, right?  (Laughter.)  Well, hello, everyone.  I’m thrilled that all of you could join us today for our National Poetry Month celebration with a fantastic, phenomenal -- I don’t know what to say about my friend, my girl, Elizabeth Alexander.  She read for us this weekend, a group of friends, and we were all in tears.  And I’m trying to hold it together now.  (Laughter.)  But what a gift, what a gift.

I want to start by thanking the President’s Committee on the Arts and the Humanities for their leadership and their work in planning this wonderful event, and for the outstanding work that they’re doing to bring the arts to young people across this country.  And again, I want to thank Elizabeth for gracing us with her presence today. 

Now, you all have heard her read from her writing, which is powerful, so you don’t need me to tell you that she is a genius.  (Laughter.)  It’s pretty clear now.  It’s almost like -- (laughter.)  And for years, Barack and I have just treasured our friendship, and we’ve been spellbound with your talent.  And as for her book, “The Light of the World,” you know, it just takes your breath away. 

Somehow, through this beautiful memoir, Elizabeth has been able to find her way through a crushing grief over the loss of her husband, our friend, Ficre.  Hers was the kind of grief that would leave most of us unable to function normally, yet she took all that grief and she transformed it into something beautiful and powerful –- not just for herself, but for anyone who has ever lost someone they love. 

So this book is not just an achievement for her, it’s also a lifeline for others who are overwhelmed by their own grief.  It’s Elizabeth’s way of telling us all, “You are not alone, you will eventually find your way out to the other side, and the love you felt for the one you lost will ultimately be your salvation.”

And that’s really the power of writing, right?  First and foremost, writing can be a form of healing for the writer and for the reader.  It can be a way of unlocking and untangling powerful emotions. 

And that’s a message especially that I want to emphasize to the student poets who are here today –- that when you take all those painful, noisy, confusing feelings that are in your head and you find a way to get them on a page, then suddenly they’re not so bad.  Suddenly they don’t hurt quite as much.  Because when you’re working through those words and those rhythms and those rhymes, you’re also working through those emotions.  And when you’re finished, it’s amazing how liberating you can feel.

And that’s true no matter what kind of writing that you do  -– whether it’s poetry or journaling or short stories, even rap -- yes, rap, because rap is definitely poetry -- snap, snap, snap.  (Laughter.)  But for the younger students, it’s even true for the writing you do for school, that sort of boring stuff that my kids work through every day.  Every essay or report that you write is truly an opportunity to express yourself.  Hopefully, you approach your writing like that -- to take all that creativity, all that passion from your poetry brain and use it to unleash your academic brain.  It’s the same stuff working.

Here at the White House, we’re guided by the belief that the arts can be the key to success in school and in life.  That’s why we do what we do.  We believe that deeply.  And that’s the basic idea that drives every cultural event that we host here in this home.  When we bring renowned artists to the White House -- and we do it a lot; people come here, it’s kind of cool -- we always ask them to host a workshop for students the afternoon before they perform.  And that’s exactly what Elizabeth did just a few hours ago with many of you.  And she had a special workshop for the student poets. 

How did you guys enjoy it?  Was it good?

AUDIENCE:  Great!  (Laughter.) 

MRS. OBAMA:  See now, that’s sincere.  That’s like -- it’s like, it was so great.  (Laughter.)  She’s really cool, isn’t she?  And real smart.  So you meet -- cool and smart and stylish and beautiful.  You can have it all. 

And I know that for so many folks in this room, particularly folks on the committee, have devoted their lives to doing the exact same thing in schools across the country, working tirelessly to bring arts education to our young people.  And I can’t stress enough how important that work is.  I can’t stress it enough, because we know that kids who are involved in the arts have higher grades, higher graduation rates, higher college enrollment rates, and on and on and on.

Arts is not a luxury.  Everyone needs it.  So really, arts education is the reason why so many kids in this country get out of bed every day.  It is the only thing that gets them -- snap, snap, snap.  Come on.  (Laughter.) 

So here’s what we do.  We hook them with the arts, and once we get them into those classrooms, then we can teach them some of that other stuff they don’t really like -- math, history, all that stuff.  So we’re not just shaping the future Elizabeth Alexanders of the world, but also the future lawyers and teachers and scientists and historians and business leaders.  It’s all connected.

And what I want to end today by simply saying is thank you to all of you in this room, to Elizabeth, our teachers, to all the folks who are dedicated to that vitally important work.  Because too many kids in our country will never experience this. They will never learn how to write a poem.  They will never learn how to appreciate the works of any of the great poets.  They will never play an instrument.  They will never be in a band or sing in a choir. 

And that’s something I want the young people to understand, is that you all are blessed.  Just by being in this room, you are blessed.  And because you are blessed, it is now your duty  -- Madeleine, we talked about this the last time you were here  -- to pass it on.  Pass it on.  That’s your job.  That’s the rent you are paying for sitting in these seats, especially our Yale students, because you’re coming up next.  You guys have got to find the young people in your world, and you’ve got to pull them in and give them these opportunities and to expose them, because this kind of stuff saves lives.  We see it every day.  It does.  Snap, snap.  (Laughter.) 

So I want to thank everyone here for supporting the PCAH and all the other efforts around the country to inspire arts education, and music and dance, and everything else that goes on in our schools.  And I want to thank Elizabeth and the Alexander and Ghebreyesus family for being here to celebrate with us, this day.  And I hope you guys pass it on.  Just keep going, keep working hard.  We are proud of you.  We believe in you.  We expect you to do be inhabiting this home.  Somebody out here has the potential to be standing here doing this stuff in a few years.

So get to work, all right?  Thank you all.  God bless.  (Applause.)

END 
4:32 P.M. EDT

The White House

Office of Media Affairs

White House Announces 2015 Spring Garden Tours

WASHINGTON – This spring, the White House will open the grounds and gardens to visitors on Saturday, April 25 from 10:00 AM to 4:30 PM EDT, and Sunday, April 26 from 10:00 AM to 2:30 PM EDT.  During this event, visitors can see the Jacqueline Kennedy Garden, the Rose Garden, the White House Kitchen Garden, and the South Lawn of the White House. 

This event is free and open to the public; however, a ticket is required for all attendees (including small children).  The National Park Service will distribute free, timed tickets at the Ellipse Visitor Pavilion located at 15th and E Street Northwest on each tour day beginning at 9:00 AM.  Tickets will be distributed -- one ticket per person -- on a first-come, first-served basis.

Please note the following items are not allowed on the White House grounds:

  • Aerosols of any kind
  • Animals (except guide dogs)
  • Backpacks (oversized)
  • Balloons
  • Food or beverages of any kind
  • Duffle bags/suitcases
  • Any pointed object
  • Fireworks/firecrackers
  • Insulated metal containers/water bottles/thermos
  • Guns/stun guns/ammunition
  • Knives of any kind
  • Mace
  • Tobacco

The U.S. Secret Service reserves the right to prohibit any other personal items.  However, strollers, wheelchairs, umbrellas (no metal tips), and cameras are permitted. All items needed for medical purposes will be permitted on the tour (e.g. wheelchairs, electric scooters, glucose tablets, EpiPens, etc.).  Please identify and explain all items needed for medical purposes to U.S. Secret Service upon arrival.

In the event of inclement weather, the event may be cancelled.  Please call the 24-hour information line at (202) 456-7041 to check on the status of the Spring Garden Tours.

Guests are encouraged to use #WHGarden to share their experience.

The White House

Office of the First Lady

FACT SHEET: VA Vet Centers and Administration Progress on Mental Health

Vet Centers

Vet Centers are community-based counseling centers that provide a wide range of social and psychological services including professional readjustment counseling to Veterans and active duty Servicemembers (including members of the National Guard and Reserve components) and their families.

A core value of the Vet Center program is to promote access to care by helping Veterans, Servicemembers, and their families overcome barriers that impede them from using those services. For example, all Vet Centers maintain regularly scheduled non-traditional hours, such as evening and weekends, to ensure Veterans and Servicemembers are able to access these services. Also, Vet Centers are able to create Veteran-to-Veteran connections, as over 72% of Vet Center staff are Veterans and a majority of those individuals have served in combat zones.

There are 300 Vet Centers located in every state, the District of Columbia, American Samoa, Guam, and Puerto Rico.

In addition, Readjustment Counseling Services maintains a fleet of 80 Mobile Vet Centers that are designed to extend the reach of Vet Center services through focused outreach, direct service provision, and referral to communities that do not meet the requirements for a “brick and mortar” Vet Center, but where there are Veterans, Servicemembers, and their families in need of services. In many instances these communities are distant from existing services and are considered rural or highly rural.

Additional Information

  • All services are available without time limitation and at no cost.
  • To use Vet Center services, Veterans or Servicemembers:
  • Do not need to be enrolled with the Department of Veteran Affairs (VA) Medical Centers;
  • Do not need a disability rating or service connection for injuries from either the VA or the Department of Defense, and;
  • Can access Vet Center services regardless of discharge character.
  • No information will be released to any person or agency without the written consent from the Veteran or Servicemember, except in circumstances averting a crisis.
  • www.vetcenter.va.gov

BUILDING ON PROGRESS

Mental health issues among our veterans, Servicemembers, and their families cannot be ignored, and we all have an obligation to do better to ensure that they receive the care that they need and deserve. The Administration continues to take action to improve the mental health of Servicemembers, Veterans, and their families. Most recently, the VA and DoD took two significant steps to help Servicemembers as they transition from active duty.

  • To ensure that Servicemembers receiving mental health care are connected to mental health professionals as they transition to the VA or a community provider, on April 1, 2015 the DoD changed its inTransition program so that all Servicemembers who have seen a behavioral health provider within one year of separation from Active Duty are automatically enrolled in the program and contacted by an inTransition coach. inTransition is a confidential coaching program that answers questions about treatment options, provides information about community resources, and secures an appointment with a behavioral health provider for Servicemembers transitioning between providers or systems. It used to be the case that a Service member had to proactively opt in to receive this transition assistance.
  • In February, the VA issued a revised policy to ensure that Servicemembers transitioning to the VA are able to maintain access to mental health medication prescribed by DoD providers, regardless of whether the medication is on the VA formulary.

The completion of these actions, which the President first announced as part of the package of 19 executive actions to improve the mental health of Servicemembers, Veterans, and their families in August 2014, build on the Administration’s ongoing work over the past six years.

  • The 2016 Budget provides over $7 billion to continue VA’s focus on expanding and transforming mental health services for veterans to ensure accessible and patient-centered care, including treatment for Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder, ensuring timely access to mental healthcare, and treatment for Military Sexual Trauma. 
  • In response to the President’s 2012 Executive Order on Servicemembers, Veterans, and their families’ mental health, VA has increased its mental health staffing, expanded the capacity of the Veterans Crisis Line, and enhanced its partnerships with community mental health providers. Additionally, DoD is reviewing its mental health outreach programs to prioritize those with the greatest impact, DoD and VA worked to increase suicide prevention awareness, and DoD, VA and the National Institutes of Health jointly developed the National Research Action Plan on military and veteran’s mental health to better coordinate federal research efforts.
  • In February 2015, the President signed the Clay Hunt Suicide Prevention for America Veterans (SAV) Act in order to take additional steps to help with veterans’ mental health and suicide prevention, including:
    • Requiring annual third-party evaluations of VA’s mental health care and suicide prevention programs, and any associated recommendations;
    • Creating a centralized website with resources and information for veterans about the range of mental health services available from the VA;
    • Conducting a three-year pilot program for educational loan repayment to help recruit and retain VA psychiatrists;
    • Extending the current five-year period of post-discharge eligibility for VA medical care by an additional year for those veterans discharged in 2009 and 2010.

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Fact Sheet: VA Vet Centers and Administration Progress on Mental Health

Vet Centers

Vet Centers are community-based counseling centers that provide a wide range of social and psychological services including professional readjustment counseling to Veterans and active duty Servicemembers (including members of the National Guard and Reserve components) and their families.

A core value of the Vet Center program is to promote access to care by helping Veterans, Servicemembers, and their families overcome barriers that impede them from using those services. For example, all Vet Centers maintain regularly scheduled non-traditional hours, such as evening and weekends, to ensure Veterans and Servicemembers are able to access these services. Also, Vet Centers are able to create Veteran-to-Veteran connections, as over 72% of Vet Center staff are Veterans and a majority of those individuals have served in combat zones.

There are 300 Vet Centers located in every state, the District of Columbia, American Samoa, Guam, and Puerto Rico.

In addition, Readjustment Counseling Services maintains a fleet of 80 Mobile Vet Centers that are designed to extend the reach of Vet Center services through focused outreach, direct service provision, and referral to communities that do not meet the requirements for a “brick and mortar” Vet Center, but where there are Veterans, Servicemembers, and their families in need of services. In many instances these communities are distant from existing services and are considered rural or highly rural.

Additional Information

  • All services are available without time limitation and at no cost.
  • To use Vet Center services, Veterans or Servicemembers:
    • Do not need to be enrolled with the Department of Veteran Affairs (VA) Medical Centers;
    • Do not need a disability rating or service connection for injuries from either the VA or the Department of Defense, and;
    • Can access Vet Center services regardless of discharge character.
  • No information will be released to any person or agency without the written consent from the Veteran or Servicemember, except in circumstances averting a crisis.
  • www.vetcenter.va.gov

BUILDING ON PROGRESS

Mental health issues among our veterans, Servicemembers, and their families cannot be ignored, and we all have an obligation to do better to ensure that they receive the care that they need and deserve. The Administration continues to take action to improve the mental health of Servicemembers, Veterans, and their families. Most recently, the VA and DoD took two significant steps to help Servicemembers as they transition from active duty.

  • To ensure that Servicemembers receiving mental health care are connected to mental health professionals as they transition to the VA or a community provider, on April 1, 2015 the DoD changed its inTransition program so that all Servicemembers who have seen a behavioral health provider within one year of separation from Active Duty are automatically enrolled in the program and contacted by an inTransition coach. inTransition is a confidential coaching program that answers questions about treatment options, provides information about community resources, and secures an appointment with a behavioral health provider for Servicemembers transitioning between providers or systems. It used to be the case that a Service member had to proactively opt in to receive this transition assistance.
  • In February, the VA issued a revised policy to ensure that Servicemembers transitioning to the VA are able to maintain access to mental health medication prescribed by DoD providers, regardless of whether the medication is on the VA formulary.

The completion of these actions, which the President first announced as part of the package of 19 executive actions to improve the mental health of Servicemembers, Veterans, and their families in August 2014, build on the Administration’s ongoing work over the past six years.

  • The 2016 Budget provides over $7 billion to continue VA’s focus on expanding and transforming mental health services for veterans to ensure accessible and patient-centered care, including treatment for Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder, ensuring timely access to mental healthcare, and treatment for Military Sexual Trauma. 
  • In response to the President’s 2012 Executive Order on Servicemembers, Veterans, and their families’ mental health, VA has increased its mental health staffing, expanded the capacity of the Veterans Crisis Line, and enhanced its partnerships with community mental health providers. Additionally, DoD is reviewing its mental health outreach programs to prioritize those with the greatest impact, DoD and VA worked to increase suicide prevention awareness, and DoD, VA and the National Institutes of Health jointly developed the National Research Action Plan on military and veteran’s mental health to better coordinate federal research efforts.
  • In February 2015, the President signed the Clay Hunt Suicide Prevention for America Veterans (SAV) Act in order to take additional steps to help with veterans’ mental health and suicide prevention, including:
  • Requiring annual third-party evaluations of VA’s mental health care and suicide prevention programs, and any associated recommendations;
  • Creating a centralized website with resources and information for veterans about the range of mental health services available from the VA;
  • Conducting a three-year pilot program for educational loan repayment to help recruit and retain VA psychiatrists;
  • Extending the current five-year period of post-discharge eligibility for VA medical care by an additional year for those veterans discharged in 2009 and 2010.

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Statement by the Press Secretary on the United States-GCC Summit

President Obama will welcome leaders from the Gulf Cooperation Council countries – Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates – to the White House on May 13 and to Camp David on May 14.  The gathering will be an opportunity for the leaders to discuss ways to enhance their partnership and deepen security cooperation.

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Statement by NSC Spokesperson Bernadette Meehan on National Security Advisor Susan E. Rice’s Meeting with Kazakh Prime Minister Karim Masimov

National Security Advisor Susan E. Rice met today with Prime Minister Karim Masimov of Kazakhstan.  Ambassador Rice expressed thanks for the valuable role Kazakhstan played in supporting the early stages of the P5+1 negotiations with Iran.  The two discussed regional affairs, including the conflict in Ukraine, a full range of bilateral issues, and Kazakhstan’s hosting of a countering violent extremism summit this summer.

The White House

Office of the Vice President

Readout of the U.S.-Iraq Higher Coordinating Committee Session Chaired by Vice President Biden and Iraqi Prime Minister Al-Abadi

Vice President Joe Biden and Iraqi Prime Minister Haider Al-Abadi co-chaired a meeting of the U.S.-Iraq Higher Coordinating Committee (HCC) today in Washington, D.C. The two sides reaffirmed their commitment to strengthen and fully activate the strategic partnership between the United States and Iraq as outlined in the Strategic Framework Agreement. The HCC discussion focused on energy and economic cooperation. Both sides agreed on the need to work closely together to garner immediate international support to stabilize areas liberated from ISIL terrorists, including through an international stabilization fund to be established by the Government of Iraq in cooperation with the United Nations.

U.S. and Iraqi officials also discussed steps Iraq can take to increase energy exports and to establish additional export routes from its southern facilities, including an export pipeline through Jordan to the Red Sea. Vice President Biden noted Iraq’s progress in increasing exports over recent months, including record-level exports over the past month. U.S. and Iraqi officials also discussed in detail Iraq’s efforts to raise revenues, curb expenditures, manage debt, and prioritize critical investments over the coming months and years. Both sides, finally, expressed a commitment to facilitate bilateral trade and to continue the accession process for Iraq’s entry into the World Trade Organization. This was the fifth meeting of the HCC since it was established in 2008 under the Strategic Framework Agreement.