The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Statement by NSC Spokesperson Caitlin Hayden on National Security Advisor Susan E. Rice’s Travel to the United Arab Emirates and Djibouti

National Security Advisor Susan E. Rice is traveling to the United Arab Emirates and Djibouti from March 6-8.  In the United Arab Emirates she is meeting with senior Emirati officials including Abu Dhabi Crown Prince Mohamed bin Zayed to discuss U.S.-UAE cooperation on a range of regional issues.  In Djibouti, she will meet with President Guelleh to discuss our strategic partnership and visit U.S. troops at the Combined Joint Task Force - Horn of Africa at Camp Lemonnier. 

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Statement by NSC Spokesperson Caitlin Hayden on Deputy National Security Advisor Antony Blinken’s Meeting with United Nations-Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons Joint Mission in Syria Special Coordinator Sigrid Kaag

Deputy National Security Advisor Antony Blinken met yesterday with Sigrid Kaag, Special Coordinator of the United Nations-Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) Joint Mission to eliminate the chemical weapons program in Syria, to discuss the Joint Mission’s progress and to reiterate strong U.S. support for its work.  Their conversation focused on ensuring the Syrian government maintains regular, substantial, and uninterrupted activities to remove its chemical weapons to enable destruction in accordance with the June 30 deadline set by the OPCW Executive Council and the U.N. Security Council, and on the continued readiness of the United States and the international community to support the Joint Mission’s efforts to facilitate the Syrian government’s meeting its obligations.  Deputy NSA Blinken thanked Special Coordinator Kaag for her leadership and for the dedication and bravery of her staff.

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Statement by NSC Spokesperson Caitlin Hayden on Deputy National Security Advisor Antony Blinken’s Meeting with United Nations-Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons Joint Mission in Syria Special Coordinator Sigrid Kaag

Deputy National Security Advisor Antony Blinken met yesterday with Sigrid Kaag, Special Coordinator of the United Nations-Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) Joint Mission to eliminate the chemical weapons program in Syria, to discuss the Joint Mission’s progress and to reiterate strong U.S. support for its work.  Their conversation focused on ensuring the Syrian government maintains regular, substantial, and uninterrupted activities to remove its chemical weapons to enable destruction in accordance with the June 30 deadline set by the OPCW Executive Council and the U.N. Security Council, and on the continued readiness of the United States and the international community to support the Joint Mission’s efforts to facilitate the Syrian government’s meeting its obligations.  Deputy NSA Blinken thanked Special Coordinator Kaag for her leadership and for the dedication and bravery of her staff.

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

FACT SHEET: Opportunity for All: Promoting College Opportunity and Graduation

Today at an event with the First Lady at Coral Reef High School in Miami, President Obama will lay out additional details of his plan to equip all Americans with the education and skills they need to compete in the 21st century economy and launch a new FAFSA Completion Initiative to give more Americans the opportunity to afford, attend, and graduate from college.

The President’s budget, released earlier this week, includes investments and initiatives to expand opportunity for all Americans by improving education at every level, from early childhood through college. But the President has also been clear that while he wants to work with Congress wherever they are willing, he is also going to make 2014 a year of action and won’t hesitate to take steps on his own wherever he can.

That’s why today President Obama will announce the launch of a new FAFSA Completion Initiative, led by the Department of Education, to help ensure that more of America’s students take the first step towards college success: completing the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) form. Today’s announcement includes new tools and resources to enable states, districts, and high schools to better support students to complete this critical form in a timely fashion:

  • The Department of Education will partner with states so they can identify individual students who have not completed the FAFSA. States can then use this limited, yet valuable, information to support school and district efforts to increase FAFSA completion beginning in the 2014-15 school year. These efforts build on the success of a pilot project launched by the U.S. Department of Education in 2010 working directly with about 100 school districts. 

  • The Office of Federal Student Aid has also updated the existing FAFSA completion tool with new, overall FAFSA completion numbers for the high school graduating class of 2014, and is expanding that tool to include more than 25,000 high schools nationwide. The completion tool is targeted at school and district leaders, but also allows anyone with web access to track the overall number of FAFSA forms completed by students at particular schools, in order to effectively provide outreach and resources as well as support community efforts to increase FAFSA completion. 

Building on Success

Filing the FAFSA is required in order for students to receive access to Title IV student aid programs, like the Federal Pell Grant and Federal student loans. It also is used by states, colleges, and universities in awarding other state-based or institution-based aid. Nonetheless, millions do not file a FAFSA each year, and many who do not may be eligible for federal student aid.

In order to ensure that the FAFSA is not a barrier to college access for students, President Obama took steps early in his Administration to simplify the FAFSA, including revamping the online form to skip questions that are irrelevant to individual students and to allow students and parents to answer many questions with pre-existing data from the Internal Revenue Service. These efforts have contributed to 33% increase in the number of FAFSA forms filed over the course of the Administration, growing from 16.4 million in 2008-2009 to 21.8 million in 2012-13.

Increasing FAFSA completion is just one of the critical efforts the Administration is taking to help prepare America’s students for college and for successful careers.  In Miami, the Miami-Dade County Public Schools district has leveraged federal support through critical initiatives like Race to the Top, the Teacher Incentive Fund, and the School Improvement Grant program to implement reforms that have helped Miami make significant strides to close achievement gaps and address inequities, promote digital learning, and strengthen pathways to college and careers.

Making Investments in America’s Future

The President has set a goal for the country that, by the end of this decade, America will once again lead the world in college graduation. The President’s budget includes critical investments to strengthen educational opportunity from early childhood and preschool, all the way through college and career placement. Beyond the investments in the base budget described below, the fully paid-for Opportunity, Growth, and Security Initiative included in the President’s budget would provide additional funding for Race to the Top, High School Redesign, and ConnectEDucators. 

  • Race to the Top: The President’s budget provides $300 million for a new Race to the Top:  Equity and Opportunity competition, incentivizing states and school districts to undertake comprehensive efforts to close achievement and opportunity gaps by attracting and retaining effective teachers and leaders, enhancing student supports, increasing access to rigorous coursework, and leveraging data to improve outcomes for students.  RTT–Opportunity would reinforce the existing Race to the Top program that has spurred reform and systemic change in states and districts across the country, including in Miami-Dade.  Miami-Dade is a recipient of a $32 million Race to the Top-District grant to personalize learning and change instruction in the district’s middle schools. 

  • High School Redesign: President Obama has called on Congress to invest $150 million in a new vision of high school learning where coursework is tied to real-world experiences. Students in redesigned high schools pursue rigorous academic curricula through project-based learning, career-related experiences, and innovative uses of learning time. At Coral Reef High School, each student chooses one of five academies based around the themes of Health Sciences, Agricultural Science & Engineering, Legal & Public Affairs, Visual and Performing Arts, and the International Baccalaureate program. 

  • ConnectEDucators: The future of learning is going to be driven by new digital technologies, and will be increasingly interactive and individualized.  To deliver that opportunity to every American child, the President’s FY 15 budget proposes $200 million to help prepare and support teachers as they work to integrate digital learning into their classrooms and lessons.  President Obama has set a goal to connect 99 percent of America’s students to high-speed broadband in their schools, within five years, and has already inspired over $1 billion in private-sector commitments to schools.  In Miami-Dade, the school has installed high-speed broadband in every one of its schools, consistent with this initiative. 

  • College Opportunity and Graduation Bonus: To reward colleges that successfully enroll and graduate a significant number of low- and moderate-income students on time and encourage all institutions to improve their performance, the President’s FY 15 budget includes a new College Opportunity and Graduation Bonus program to provide an annual grant to eligible institutions based on their number of on-time graduates that receive Pell Grants, at a total 10-year cost of $7 billion. 

  • State Higher Education Performance Fund: To encourage systemic efforts to make higher education more affordable and increase college access and success, particularly for low-income students, the President’s FY 15 budget includes a $4 billion State Higher Education Performance Fund for States to support, reform, and improve the performance of their public higher education systems.  States would receive up to four years of funding, and would match their federal grants, dollar-for-dollar, for a total of $8 billion in four years. 

  • First in the World: The President has called on Congress to advance new innovations to help ensure that college is affordable for all students. The FY 15 budget includes $100 million for a First in the World fund that would support innovative strategies and practices that improve college affordability and produce high-quality outcomes for students.

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Readout of the President's Call with Prime Minister Abe of Japan

The President spoke to Prime Minister Abe late last evening regarding the situation in Ukraine. The two leaders agreed that Russia’s actions are a threat to international peace and security and emphasized the importance of preserving Ukraine’s sovereignty and territorial integrity.  They committed to work with other G-7 partners to insist that Russia abide by its obligations and commitments to Ukraine’s sovereignty, including under the UN Charter and the 1997 basing agreement, but noted that there is an opportunity for Russia to resolve the situation diplomatically, in a way that addresses its interests as well as those of Ukraine and the international community.  Both leaders also agreed to work bilaterally and through the International Monetary Fund to support the government of Ukraine as it works to stabilize its economy and prepare for May elections. The President noted that his April visit to Japan will offer an important opportunity to advance the many diplomatic, defense, and trade initiatives the United States and Japan are pursuing in Asia and around the globe.

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

President Obama Signs Georgia Disaster Declaration

Today, the President declared a major disaster in the State of Georgia and ordered federal aid to supplement state and local recovery efforts in the area affected by a severe winter storm during the period of February 10-14, 2014.

Federal funding is available to state and eligible local governments and certain private nonprofit organizations on a cost-sharing basis for emergency work and the repair or replacement of facilities damaged by the severe winter storm in the counties of Baldwin, Bulloch, Burke, Butts, Candler, Carroll, Columbia, Coweta, Dade, Emanuel, Fayette, Fulton, Gilmer, Glascock, Hancock, Haralson, Heard, Jasper, Jefferson, Jenkins, Johnson, Jones, Lamar, McDuffie, Meriwether, Monroe, Morgan, Newton, Pickens, Pike, Richmond, Screven, Spalding, Upson, Walker, Warren, Washington, Whitfield, and Wilkes. 

Federal funding is also available on a cost-sharing basis for hazard mitigation measures statewide.

W. Craig Fugate, Administrator, Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), Department of Homeland Security, named W. Michael Moore as the Federal Coordinating Officer for federal recovery operations in the affected area. 

FEMA said additional designations may be made at a later date if requested by the state and warranted by the results of further damage assessments.

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Press Briefing by Press Secretary Jay Carney, 3/6/2014

James S. Brady Press Briefing Room

1:10 P.M. EST

MR. CARNEY:  Thank you all for being here.  And having heard the President’s statement, I have no other announcements -- we have no other announcements, but I'll go straight to questions.

Jim.

Q    Jay, thank you.  Just to follow up on what the President said.  This move toward an independent Crimea, or this referendum, does the White House see that as being pushed by President Putin?  And are there steps that the U.S. can take against the pro-Russian leaders in the Crimea peninsula to stop this -- what you are calling an unconstitutional move by within the region?

MR. CARNEY:  Well, when it comes to the framework announced today and the President just discussed, we have not -- we're not naming individuals in the framework itself.  The EO, the executive order creates a framework for action and sanctions -- that would include Ukrainians and Russians, and then, obviously, that would include Ukrainians and Russians in any part of Ukraine, including Crimea.  But I don't have a -- and we are not identifying individuals as part of either the visa ban or the executive order.

As for Russia’s involvement in what’s happening in Ukraine, I think it's self-evident that Russia has, in contravention of international law, intervened militarily in Crimea.  Russian forces are responsible for blocking roads and blockading military installations and bases.  And Russia needs to, instead of pursuing that path, work with the OSCE and the United Nations and the Ukrainian government towards addressing the concerns that Russia claims were the motivation for the action that it has taken, which is concern about the protection of the rights of ethnic Russians in parts of Ukraine, in particular in Crimea.

The way to do that is to allow monitors in and to allow fact-finders in who can assess whether or not the rights of any Ukrainian citizens are being violated.  That is certainly the far more appropriate course of action that they should take.

Q    Does the White House believe that President Putin is -- his goal here is outright annexation of the region, of the Crimean peninsula?  Or is it more to gain leverage against the West in this continuing struggle?

MR. CARNEY:  Rather than assess motives, we can assess facts, which are as follows:  Russia violated international law and treaties and conventions and obligations that it, itself, has signed by violating the territorial integrity of a sovereign state, the sovereign state of Ukraine -- violated an agreement with Ukraine and other partners made in Budapest in 1994.

The fact that Russia has interests in Ukraine and has specifically interests in Crimea is one that we have recognized. They have a military base there, a lawfully established military base, as part of an agreement with the sovereign state of Ukraine.  And our whole point has been, together with our many allies and partners, that Russia ought to pursue its concerns and interests in a lawful manner, consistent with the U.N. Charter, consistent with the Budapest Memorandum.  And that is what we are pressing Russia to do.

Q    There have been calls in Congress for the administration to ease export -- natural gas export restrictions to at least help supply Ukraine if their supply of natural gas from Russia gets cut off, but also perhaps even Europeans.  What’s the administration‘s position on that?

MR. CARNEY:  Jim, the administration is taking immediate steps to assist the government of Ukraine, including in the area of energy security, energy efficiency, and energy sector reform. Our support for energy-related reforms will help the government of Ukraine to take the steps needed to restore economic stability and growth, and reduce Ukrainian dependence on Russian gas -- imported Russian gas. 

The Department of Energy has regulatory authority over liquefied natural gas exports -- LNG exports -- and DOE will continue to make public interest determinations on a case-by-case basis, considering economic, energy security, environmental and geopolitical impacts, among other factors.

So we are moving forward to assist Ukraine in many ways, including in the area of energy security.  On the matter of the regulatory authority for LNG exports, that’s something that DOE handles on a case-by-case basis.

Q    So the assistance basically is giving them access to suppliers elsewhere in the world, other international suppliers other than Russia, is that basically what that assistance --

MR. CARNEY:  Well, I think that’s one form of it.  The State Department would have more details about the whole package.

Q    Jay, why is President Putin not being targeted himself under these sanctions you announced today, since he presumably is the one who ordered the Crimean operation?

MR. CARNEY:  First of all, Steve, just to be clear, the executive order established a framework for sanctions.  It does not specify individuals.  It establishes a broad authority that can be used as appropriate, given the situation on the ground.

So the Secretary of Treasury is now, under this executive order, allowed, in consultation with the Secretary of State, to impose sanctions for the conduct described in the order.  Entities and individuals sanctioned under this executive order will be placed on the Office of Foreign Assets Control Specially Designated Nationals List.  Their property under U.S. jurisdiction will be blocked and U.S. persons will be prohibited from doing business with them.  In addition, the border -- the order, rather, suspends entry into the United States of any alien designated pursuant to the order.

So this creates an authority that is broad and that can be used, executed by the Secretary of the Treasury as appropriate pursuant to the situation on the ground. 

Q    And how large a universe of people are we talking about?  Dozens, hundreds?  How many fall under this category?

MR. CARNEY:  I’m not aware of a limit on the number. 

Q    And just one last thing.  You’ve been warning about a move in Eastern Ukraine would be destabilizing.  Are you getting any indications that that is, in fact, happening?

MR. CARNEY:  Well, I certainly don’t have any intelligence assessments to provide to you.  I think that, as Russian officials noted a couple of days ago, the exercises that were announced had supposedly ended in Western Russia near the Ukrainian border and those units were returned to bases.  But that’s something we obviously monitor closely.

There are other activities happening on the ground in Eastern Ukraine that, of course, are of concern and that we monitor closely, and about which we have conversations with the Ukrainian government and others.

Q    Jay, to follow up specifically on -- Steve asked you about Putin.  I didn’t hear an answer.  Is Putin --

MR. CARNEY:  No Russian individuals or entities are blocked pursuant to the executive order.  It provides a flexible tool that in the coming days and weeks can be used to sanction persons responsible for -- and I could go through the list but -- in other words, the EO -- nobody has been sanctioned under this EO. The authority has been granted, broad authority has been granted to issue those sanctions as appropriate.

Q    Are you saying you don’t rule out that Vladimir Putin could be one of the people sanctioned under this order?  A travel ban on Putin --

MR. CARNEY:  I’m not discussing any individual.  The parameters are laid out in the executive order as to whom it would apply and those judgments will be made as we evaluate the situation on the ground.

Q    Well, you just said people responsible.  This is Vladimir Putin’s policy.  It’s not like there’s rogue operators in Russia that are doing this.  This is Putin’s policy, a policy he has defended.  So it sounds to me like you’re describing actions that would be taken against President Putin.

MR. CARNEY:  Well, what I am, in fact, saying, as opposed to what it might sound like I’m saying, is that the executive order does not name individuals or entities, does not identify individuals or entities; it establishes a framework that creates the authority to identify individuals.  That has not happened as of yet.

Q    Okay, let me try this a different way.  Do you think Vladimir Putin is responsible for what is going on in Crimea right now, for Russian activity in Crimea?

MR. CARNEY:  We have made clear that we strongly disagree with the Russian approach; that Russia is obviously responsible for its military forces that, contrary to some of the myths that have been put forward by Russian officials, it is clear through strong evidence that members of Russian security forces are at the heart of the highly organized anti-Ukraine forces in Crimea. And while these units wear uniforms without insignia, they drive vehicles with Russian military license plates and freely identify themselves as Russian security forces when asked by the Ukrainian military, and when asked by your colleagues who are there reporting on the story.  Moreover, these individuals are armed with weapons that are not generally available to civilians.  So, absolutely.  But that --

Q    Absolutely.  So just to be crystal clear -- Vladimir Putin is the one --

MR. CARNEY:  Well, we hold Russia accountable for the actions that Russia is taking in this regard.  And we call on Russia -- we call on President Putin -- to avail itself of the opportunity to address its concerns about ethnic Russians and the rights of ethnic Russians in Crimea and elsewhere in Ukraine through the allowance of OSCE or U.N. monitors into Ukraine so that they can make assessments about those concerns. 

Q    And this last thing.  When you say there’s no limit on who can be -- come under this order --

MR. CARNEY:  Well, I’m certainly not aware of a numeric limit.  What it does is establish a framework so that entities and individuals who are identified to fall under the categories that the executive order outlines can be targeted with sanctions. But again, there is no list of individuals.  This is an establishment of authority to act.

Q    But can you give us any idea of a range?  There’s obviously going to be a first round of this.  Are we talking about dozens of people?  Are we talking about thousands of people?  I’m just trying to get any kind of an indication of how widespread this is.

MR. CARNEY:  Again, I don’t have a -- the point of the EO is to provide a flexible tool that will allow us to sanction those who are most directly involved in destabilizing Ukraine, including the military intervention in Crimea.  And it does not preclude further steps should the situation deteriorate. 

And as the President just made clear, the steps that Russia has taken violate Ukraine’s sovereignty and territorial integrity, and are a breach of international law.  And that is not just our view; it is the view of countries and leaders across the region and the world.

Jim.

Q    The President just said a few moments ago that he wants to deescalate this crisis, but don’t these actions, by definition, escalate the pressure, escalate what you hope to accomplish?

MR. CARNEY:  No.  The facts are that Russia has intervened militarily in Crimea.  That is undeniable.  The authority that the executive order provides is a flexible tool that allows for the imposition of sanctions on individuals and entities, and it’s entirely appropriate at this stage to have that authority available for exercise by the Secretary of Treasury in consultation with the Secretary of State.  We note that our European partners and allies have also taken action.

In the meantime, we are aggressively pursuing with our partners and allies in Europe a diplomatic solution to this.  We are making clear to the Russians that there is a far better way to address the concerns that they say have motivated the action they’ve taken.  And we are also not just pursuing that avenue diplomatically; we are also, with our partners and allies, providing assistance to the legitimate government of Ukraine and the Ukrainian people at a very difficult time economically, not to mention politically, because of the situation caused by the intervention in Crimea.

Q    And the Russians have threatened to retaliate with sanctions of their own.  Has the administration sort of done a cost-benefit analysis and basically said this is a risk that you’re willing to take?

MR. CARNEY:  Well, we’ve seen reports that Russia is considering its own sanctions, but we have no details.  And our focus right now is to see what we, together with our international partners, can do to convince Russia to remove its military forces, to return them to their bases in Crimea, and to restore Ukraine’s territorial integrity.  So that's what we’re focused on.

Q    And what about -- getting back to Vladimir Putin, do you have any sense whatsoever that he is getting your message?

MR. CARNEY:  He certainly is.  I think that we have made it very clear to Russian leaders, including President Putin, including Foreign Minister Lavrov.  Secretary Kerry has had numerous meetings and conversations with the Foreign Minister.  The President spoke with President Putin.  Those consultations are ongoing, so I don't have any doubt that he, President Putin, is very clear about our position -- not just our position, again, but the position held by our European and international partners.

Q    And it sounds like -- just lastly, judging by what the President said, this White House is not giving up Crimea in this crisis.

MR. CARNEY:  Crimea is a part of Ukraine, the sovereign state of Ukraine.  Ukraine’s territorial integrity is recognized and validated under the United Nations Charter.  It is recognized and validated through an agreement to which Russia is directly a signatory, the Budapest Memorandum.  The vote in the Crimean legislative body, the proposed referendum, are not legitimate under the Ukrainian constitution and would not be legitimate if the referendum were to take place.  Any decisions about the status of a region or province within Ukraine have to be made in accordance with the Ukrainian constitution.  And I think that's, again, not just our view but a view held broadly across the world.

Q    Jay, is the best way to view the framework is that they are a deterrent to dissuade Russia from moving out of Crimea? Since they're not in effect now, so they're not penalizing individuals or businesses for what’s already happened, but they may be invoked if something worse happens?  Is that the proper way to interpret them?

MR. CARNEY:  Well, I’ll leave the interpretation to you.  I think that the executive order makes clear what the President said, which is there are costs to this action.  And this is a piece of the cost.

The State Department is imposing visa restrictions on a number of officials and individuals, reflecting a policy decision to deny visas to those responsible for or complicit in threatening the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Ukraine. And that is separate and apart from the executive order that --

Q    Right, that's happening, but the sanctions are not.

MR. CARNEY:  Well, no, the sanctions require the executive order that the President has signed.  And we’ve now created the framework --

Q    Right, but if I understood you earlier, you said clearly that they have not been implemented.

MR. CARNEY:  At this time they have not -- there is not -- there are not individuals and entities targeted yet through sanctions.

Q    Okay.  Following down the course of the interpretation, if you were in this chair or any of these chairs, you might read the executive order and ask yourself who better fits the definition of the words in the executive order of responsibility than Vladimir Putin.  Would that be an unfair interpretation?

MR. CARNEY:  I’ll leave the interpretation to you.  I can simply say that it does not --

Q    Do you disagree with that?

MR. CARNEY:  Again, Major, we’ve made clear our view, shared broadly across Europe and the world, that Russia in its actions has violated Ukraine’s territorial integrity, that Russia has violated Ukraine’s sovereignty, that Russia has taken action that is inconsistent with the obligations it has under the U.N. Charter and through the Budapest Memorandum that it signed with Ukraine and other partners.  So our view on who is responsible for the actions that have taken place is very clear.

The EO establishes a framework through which sanctions can be imposed on individuals and entities, but it does not at this stage name individuals or entities.  So I’m not going to jump ahead and speculate about who might be named, or what entities might be included.

Q    Let me ask you one question about the Rada.  I know in general the administration has been supportive of the process by which it dealt with Yanukovych abdicating.  But some analysts here have said there are other actions that the Rada took after that, singling out Russian language and other aspects of those Russian speakers within Ukraine that might have been viewed legitimately as provocative by the Russians -- not justifying their action but viewed as somewhat troublesome or worrisome.  Is there anything the administration has to say about those actions undertaken by the Rada that might have complicated this situation unnecessarily?

MR. CARNEY:  Well, we certainly believe that the Rada, the parliament, has conducted itself very well and in keeping with its authority under the Ukrainian constitution.  One of the myths that has been put out there by President Putin and others is that somehow President Yanukovych is still the President, that he was forced to flee, but, in fact, he signed an agreement that explicitly called for the Ukrainian parliament, the Rada, to pass a bill that would return to power the 2004 constitution, make that the governing document.  Fulfilling its obligation, the Rada did that very quickly.  And before signing it, Yanukovych fled the country -- packed up his belongings and fled the country, and left in his wake a cornucopia of evidence suggesting widespread corruption and abuse of his power and authority and legitimacy.  So again --

Q    I’m talking about the moves the Rada made after.

MR. CARNEY:  Well, I understand, but I’m not -- what I think is very clear is that the Ukrainian government and the Ukrainian parliament have conducted themselves professionally and responsibly in an extremely difficult situation.  And we have every step of the way made clear that it is very important for Ukrainian authorities to protect and guarantee the rights of ethnic Russians and all other ethnic minorities in Ukraine.  And the tension we’ve seen in Crimea has been brought about by the actions taken by Russian military forces and those allied with them.

Q    Jay, it was five years ago today that Secretary -- then Secretary Clinton hit the button on the Russian reset.  Does the President have any regrets about that approach?  Did he misjudge the Russians’ ambitions and intentions here?

MR. CARNEY:  What the President set out to do when he took office was to establish a bilateral relationship with Russia that ensured that the United States was very clear-eyed and not either romantic or dismissive about the capacity to advance our interests in that relationship.  That approach has led to cooperation between the United States and Russia, and Russia and other international partners, when it comes to Iran.  It has led to cooperation between the United States and Russia when it comes to resupplying U.S. forces in Afghanistan.  And it has led to other areas of cooperation, including in the area of the START II treaty.

What it has also meant is that that approach has allowed us to be extremely blunt when we have powerful disagreements with the Russians.  And we have been blunt all along, and that includes in the area of missile defense.  It includes, obviously, most notably, with regard to Syria, and here, as well as in other areas.  So --

Q    He still went into Ukraine.

MR. CARNEY:  What we --

Q    He still went in.  Here you’re trying to -- you have to mobilize --

MR. CARNEY:  I know that there is an argument out there, factless, founded on no substantiated basis, that suggests that the President of Russia has taken the action that he’s taken because of actions the United States has taken.  I think that any historian, anybody knowledgeable about Russia or the former Soviet Union, would be as dismissive of that suggestion as I am trying to be now.

Q    Well, you were -- the President was dismissive when Mitt Romney, in the last campaign, said Russia was our number-one geopolitical foe.  Any regrets about that?

MR. CARNEY:  No, because, again -- you have a situation where Russia is violating international law because a country that Moscow -- a government that Moscow supported was rejected by the vast majority of the Ukrainian people and because they wanted to determine their own future; because they wanted to be able to make the decision as to their integration with Europe; they didn't want to be dictated to by an outside state or an outside authority.  I think it’s hardly a demonstration of -- it’s not a positive thing for Russia that Ukraine has been moving in this direction.

Our whole point is it doesn't have to be a negative thing.  It is a mistake certainly in the long run for Russia not to accept the fact that Ukraine can, and the Ukrainian people should be able to decide for themselves in a democratic manner how they will integrate with Europe, and that doing so does not mean they cannot maintain their long, historical and cultural ties and economic ties to Russia.  They can and should be able to do both, and it should not be a threat to Russia to do so.

So I think on this matter I think it's very important to note that when it comes to these kinds of situations on the international scene, partisan politics are fine -- we engage in them every day here -- “here” I mean Washington -- but in a case like this, why -- instead of being a partisan Republican and attacking the President, be a partisan American in identifying the outrageous actions in violation of international law that have taken place.

Q    Do you think John McCain and Lindsey Graham and some of those critics have been --

MR. CARNEY:  I think that partisanship, as others have identified, in this circumstance is unwarranted, because in fact the President and others -- the administration has been taking concrete action in response to the violation of international law that has taken place.  We are working in concert with our partners to do so.  And it is in the United States’ interest and the interest of our allies and partners and in the interest of the Ukrainian people to support Ukraine and to work to persuade Russia to reverse course.

Q    I want to quickly get to another subject you haven’t been asked about yet -- health care.  So late yesterday another delay on the President’s law, this allowing people to keep the individual plans that became such a big controversy.  When that controversy popped up about if you like your plan you can keep your plan, you repeatedly said from this podium that these were substandard plans, people should get better plans.  Why then are you allowing people to keep these substandard plans for a couple more years?  To get it passed the midterm election?

MR. CARNEY:  No.  The fact of the matter is, is that we are working to implement the Affordable Care Act so that millions of Americans can have the benefits of quality, affordable health insurance.  And that process is well underway and millions of Americans have signed up for quality and affordable health insurance through the marketplaces.  What we also said is that when it became clear that the grandfather clause within the Affordable Care Act that was part of the law when it was passed was not sufficient to the task to ensure that folks who had these individual plans were not adversely affected in the transition, we have been taking steps to smooth that transition.

So we're about the business of enrolling people in affordable, quality health insurance and smoothing the transition that takes place as we adapt to the marketplaces and as the American people avail themselves of this option. 

By contrast, we have the House of Representatives, Republicans in the House of Representatives voting for the 50th time to repeal the Affordable Care Act without an alternative.  So every vote to repeal is a vote to go back to a world where insurance companies could throw you off your policy, to decide not to cover the condition from which you suffer, could put lifetime caps on your coverage, annual caps on your coverage, could charge your sister double what they charge you just because she’s a woman.  All those young Americans who are now able to be on their parents’ policies up to the age of 26 would be out of luck.  That's the consequence if they were to succeed with repeal.  So we're --

Q    How is it every time Republicans want a change to the law you say it's sabotage, and then the President changes it a couple dozen times and you're smoothing the transition? 

MR. CARNEY:  Again, Ed, I think any rational, reasonable analysis of the efforts undertaken by Republicans who say that it is their number-one priority to repeal Obamacare -- I think I heard a leading Republican say today that every word ought to be repealed.  Imagine if they took a vote to repeal each word one at a time.  Maybe they will.  But it wouldn't be any less productive than they’ve been on this issue.

So that's their focus.  To suggest otherwise is to be totally disingenuous.  You know they want to repeal the Affordable Care Act.  They don't want to fix it.  They don't want a smooth implementation.

Q    You know Orrin Hatch and Richard Burr and others have a plan on the table.  Would you at least acknowledge that?  You may not like the plan.  It may be a horrible plan --

MR. CARNEY:  I haven't seen Republicans rally around it or anybody vote on it.  So --

Yes.

Q    Regarding the health care event today, I talked to a number of people who are strongly in favor of the health care law and are concerned that this was maybe a little bit too late, too little, too late -- that there have been a lot of flaws in the outreach to the Latino community.  And I guess the question is should the administration have done more, sooner on this?  Or are there reasons that the President hasn’t been as publicly reaching out to Latinos on this until now -- whether it's the website or -- I guess I'm just trying to figure out --

MR. CARNEY:  Well, obviously I don't want to contradict whoever is telling you that.  I would simply say that we are aggressively reaching out to all communities across the country who stand to benefit from the options available to them under the Affordable Care Act.  And I think that's demonstrated. 

Did we hamper that effort?  Did we cause the effort that we were engaged in a lot of unnecessary harm when the website got off to such a terrible start?  Absolutely.  But what we have seen since healthcare.gov began working and functioning effectively for the vast majority of users is that that demand for quality, affordable health insurance has remained incredibly strong -- in spite of all the obstacles that were thrown up in front of Americans in that first month especially who were trying to sign up.

And that's on us.  We have taken complete responsibility for that.  That's why the all-out effort was engaged to fix the problems with the website and make sure it was working effectively for the American people.  And again, I think as the numbers that we've seen bear out, we've seen a steady and strong demand for the product on offer here.  And our goal -- going back to my answer on Ed’s question -- has been to effectively implement the Affordable Care Act, to make it easier by making the website work more effectively, and taking all the other steps related to outreach to communities like Hispanic Americans so that everyone can get the information they need, make the choices and the decisions that they need to make, and get the insurance that's available to them.

Q    If there confidence that the message has been received in the Latino community?

MR. CARNEY:  Well, this is an ongoing effort.  So nobody would -- nobody involved in this effort would say that the job is done with any community.  We have an open enrollment period that doesn’t end until March 31st and the team effort here is 24/7.  So the answer is no.  But I think the answer is no for, again, every community.

Roger.  And then Peter.

Q    Thank you.  When the President was out here he mentioned elections in Ukraine.  Is he also going to recognize -- or what does he think about the Crimea referendum?  Is he going to not recognize that?

MR. CARNEY:  I think we've said, and I'll repeat, that the referendum that has been scheduled to take place does not comport with the Ukrainian constitution.  It is certainly, again -- as established in the Ukrainian constitution, a decision on the status of a region of Ukraine in relation to the nation of Ukraine, or in relation to the rest of Ukraine has to be done in accordance with the Ukrainian constitution and in keeping with the will of the Ukrainian people.

So, no, that's not a legitimate step.  And I think nobody outside of Moscow and some parts of Crimea have suggested it is. 
Q    And one other question.  You mentioned DOE and the rules on liquefied natural gas.  Does the President want the department to accelerate those rules?  What does he want to do?  I'm not clear.

MR. CARNEY:  There’s a process that establishes a case-by-case evaluation.  And how that works is something that the Department of Energy can explain.  I don't have anything more on that from the White House.

Peter.

Q    Jay, when do you plan to designate individuals?  I know the visa bans, those have already taken place.  But authority exists for implementation; it hasn’t taken place in terms of sanctions, so when do you plan to designate individuals?

MR. CARNEY:  I don't have a specified timing for you.  What the action taken today does is provide the tools necessary and the flexible set of tools to sanction individuals and entities.  But we'll obviously make you aware of any action that's taken, but I don't have a timetable for you.

Q    I guess what I'm asking is, is the referendum sort of the next deadline?  In other words, if they were to park themselves, the Russian troops that are in Crimea right now -- if they were to continue to park themselves, but the referendum doesn’t take place, then is that a status quo that doesn’t require any further actions?  You said there would be costs or consequences for what’s already taken place, but you're not actually implementing the costs as they relate to sanctions.

MR. CARNEY:  Well, again, I think you're missing the fact that we've already taken action including suspending bilateral discussions with Russia on trade and investment, suspending --

Q    I mean, new action.  Understood. 

MR. CARNEY:  That's already old hat?  That probably doesn’t feel that way to Russia.  But suspending -- including exercises, bilateral meetings, port visits and planning conferences, and our agreement with G7 nations to suspend for the time being our participation in activities associated with the preparation of the scheduled G8 summit in Sochi, Russia, in June.

Depending on how the situation develops, the United States is prepared to consider additional steps and sanctions as necessary.  So I'm not going to attach the issuance of specific sanctions to any action or inaction, anticipated or otherwise, except to say the EO allows for the Secretary of Treasury to take this action in consultation with the Secretary of State.  And, in the meantime, the visa bans have been put in place, and all these other actions have happened.  Our European allies have announced their own set of actions.  Canada has taken action.
So I think if you look at the mosaic, if you will, there is a broad international consensus here that recognizes that what Russia has done here is in clear violation of international law.
Q    You brought up international monitors.  It’s been discussed by the administration for the last several days.  I want to get a sense from you how you can have international monitors given the situation that took place yesterday, where U.N. Special Envoy Serry was basically forced by “armed thugs,” as described by some administration members out of that region.
MR. CARNEY:  Well, it’s totally unacceptable that the U.N. Special Envoy was accosted at gunpoint and threatened yesterday during his visit to Crimea.  The United Nations has sought to deescalate the situation, and the inviolability of its envoys is enshrined in international law. 
This sets a dangerous precedent, and we call on Russia to allow international monitors to verify that the rights of all Ukrainians are being respected throughout all of Ukraine, including in Crimea.  But there’s no question this is unacceptable, and it makes more urgent the need for Russia to pursue a diplomatic, peaceful resolution to this -- one that does not have Russia continuing to violate international law.  Russian security forces need to return to their bases.  Ukraine’s sovereignty and territorial integrity needs to be protected.  And any concerns that Russia has about its interests in Ukraine, in the Crimea, its interests in the rights of ethnic Russians, can and should be addressed in accordance with international law, through the United Nations, through the OSCE.
And we are absolutely willing to support that effort.  Blocking the ability of the U.N. Special Envoy to enter Ukraine, or to have an effective visit in Ukraine, only reinforces to the world the lawlessness of the action that’s taken place thus far.
Peter.
Q    Just last question.  Hillary Clinton yesterday made some remarks -- she clarified some remarks where she basically compared the situation taking place in Ukraine and Russia to lessons that were learned in 1930s Germany in terms of the effort of Russia to go in claiming that they were protecting ethnic minorities, ethnic Russians, in this case.  Is that a fair comparison that Hillary Clinton was making?
MR. CARNEY:  Well, I would refer you to former Secretary Clinton.  I think that, as I think she said later, she was talking about tactics.  But I think that we are dealing with a problem in 2014 that we can address in ways that we’re addressing now, very aggressively, with our international partners. 
Scott.
Q    Thanks, Jay.  In drawing up this executive order and thinking about the implications of it, did the President express whether or not he thought Putin would be subject to it?
MR. CARNEY:  Again, Scott, I’m just not going to discuss individuals or entities because none are identified in the executive order, and no individual or entity has been identified under the executive order.  And I’m not going characterize conversations with the President about it.
I think it’s very clear what the executive order sets out to do and the authority that it establishes.  And judgments about individuals and entities that will be targeted with sanctions will be made along the way, but I’m not going to speculate about who or what entity might be included in that list.
Q    Who makes the assessment?  Will it be the National Security Council or will it be the State Department?  Who decides who’s on the list and who’s off the list?
MR. CARNEY:  Well, the authority -- the EO establishes the framework that allows the Secretary of Treasury, Jack Lew, in consultation with Secretary of State Kerry, to impose sanctions for the conduct described in the order.  So the execution of that authority rests with the Secretary of the Treasury in consultation with the Secretary of State, obviously all of this at the direction of the President.
Q    Last question.  In 2011, the President put sanctions directly on Bashar al-Assad, and I’m wondering what the difference would be in forcefully sanctioning a head of state in that situation and not doing so in this situation.
MR. CARNEY:  You’re presupposing something that is not consistent with what we’ve announced today.

Q    It doesn’t sound like you’re going to -- Putin could be on this list. 

MR. CARNEY:  Again, what we have done today establishes the framework, establishes the authority to take action against individuals and entities.  We’re not putting people on the list, we’re not taking people off the list right now.  We’re simply -- we’ve established the framework for that authority.

Q    Okay.  Just to be clear -- if there’s a possibility he will be on this list.

MR. CARNEY:  I’m just not going to engage in hypotheticals about individuals.  What we have clearly said is that --

Q    But you’re trying to have it both ways here.  You’re saying I can’t assume he’s not, but you won’t rule it out.

MR. CARNEY:  I’m not ruling anything in or out.

Q    Okay.

Q    On immigration, this morning the President responded to some criticisms that he’s not the “Deporter in Chief,” he’s the “Champion in Chief.”  And I was wondering if you could just --

MR. CARNEY:  Well, no, that was -- it wasn’t a criticism that he’s the “Champion in Chief.”  He is the “Champion in Chief”  when it comes to comprehensive immigration reform.

Q    He’s been called the “Deporter in Chief.”  That is the -- we can agree on that.  So would you say that the President is saying that he’s done everything he can within his executive power to slow the pace of deportations?  Is that the White House position?

MR. CARNEY:  We have made clear through our efforts that the way to resolve all the many problems associated with our broken immigration system is to comprehensively reform our immigration system.  And in that effort, the President has taken a lead.  But it’s not something that a President can do alone; he has to do it with Congress, he or she has to do it with Congress. 

And the Senate boldly, bravely, rightly, in keeping with broad consensus across the country, passed a bipartisan comprehensive immigration reform bill that reflects the principles that the President set forth.  We need to see the House do the same -- again, consistent with the support of a broad coalition of Americans, labor and business and law enforcement and faith-based groups.

So we have also taken action to ensure that, through prosecutorial discretion, that when it comes to enforcement the focus is on criminals.  There has been action taken through DHS to protect so-called DREAMers, kids who were brought here through no fault of their own and have grown up American in every way except for the absence of papers.

But the broader problems here can only be addressed through comprehensive immigration reform.  And the President has been a tireless supporter of that effort and led that effort.  And I think that it’s fair to say -- given the election we had in 2012 where the President was a fierce proponent of comprehensive immigration reform, his opponent took the stand that self-deportation was the appropriate approach to the immigration problem -- that the only reason why we’re having this discussion right now is because he was reelected.

Q    Can I just follow up?  How does he feel, then, about folks that were his allies in this push for immigration reform that you said he led have turned on him so quickly, it seems?

MR. CARNEY:  I think that the President is enormously aware of and sympathetic to the hardship and challenges that the broken immigration system creates for people across the country.  And the problems are many, and that’s why we need a comprehensive immigration reform bill passed -- because you have employers out there who play by the rules, you have employers who don’t.  We need to make sure that every employer plays by the same rules.  We need to make sure that incredibly talented and smart men and women who come here from abroad and study in the best universities in the world stay here to create businesses here and not elsewhere, they don’t create businesses in countries that are our competitors economically, because they should be here. 

And then the economic benefits are broad and acknowledged by economists across the country.  There really is a strong conservative argument for getting this done, and we hope that self-identified conservatives take it up and get it done.

April.

Q    Jay, could you talk to me about the White House’s feelings about this recent interaction between Darrell Issa and Congressman Elijah Cummings?  It seems to be a very big brouhaha on the Hill.  And what is the concern or the feeling of the White House as it relates to removing Darrell Issa?  The CBC is calling for Darrell Issa to be removed.

MR. CARNEY:  Well, congressional procedure actions like that are up to the houses of Congress -- in this case, the House of Representatives.  I don’t express a view on that.  What I would say is that we have seen -- Congressman Cummings, in my view and in our view, is always the smartest guy in the room, and when he wants to speak he should be allowed to speak.

Q    But wait a minute -- but there was a level of disrespect, many people are saying.  Do you feel that he was disrespected by Darrell Issa?

MR. CARNEY:  I think it’s inappropriate to -- we think it’s inappropriate certainly to not allow the ranking member of a committee to speak.

Q    But as a leader, as a Republican leader, you’re saying --

MR. CARNEY:  I’m not going to get into the business of the House when it comes to actions taken against individual members -- are considered.  But I have said that we obviously think ranking members, just like the chairman, ought to be able to speak in their committees.

Yes.

Q    Two clarifications on Ukraine.  I just want to go back to the question about whether the President’s EO is issuing a warning or it is imposing costs -- because senior administration officials were clear earlier today that this is designed -- the President’s order is designed to respond to violations of international law that have already occurred.  So can I just go back to the question, if President Putin and the Russian Federation pursues the diplomatic way out that the President outlined, would this executive order be null and void?  In other words, would they be avoiding the punishment if they follow the President’s --

MR. CARNEY:  Well, when you say “the punishment,” the executive order establishes an authority that is very broad and very flexible for the Secretary of Treasury to exercise.  So the actions -- it’s sort of like an accordion; the number of individuals and entities that can be named, as well as the kind and level of sanctions that can be imposed are very broad.  So it’s sort of impossible to answer that question, except to say that I don’t think people who focus on these things and understand how these authorities work would view it any other way than that is a concrete action that makes clear our position and our readiness to impose sanctions.  And this is the step you need to take in order to do that.

And I’m not going to then speculate about if Russia does this or if the Crimean parliament does that, what then will we do.  We’ve made clear that we have set forward the authority that is very flexible to take action appropriately -- 

Q    But I guess I’m still confused. 

MR. CARNEY:  -- building on the action we’ve already taken.

Q    I guess I’m just -- I’m still confused about whether this is a fait accompli.  In other words, names will go on this list; there will be a bite to this because of the violations that have already occurred?  But you’re using language that says, “can be imposed,” “might be” -- names might be added to this.  So do you understand the confusion that we’re having?

MR. CARNEY:  Well, I suppose I understand the question.  But I don’t want to get ahead of actions that would be taken under the authority established in this executive order.  And the authority is real and it is broad.

Q    One other follow-up on this.  Can you offer an example of how the economic bite would actually hit those entities or individuals who were directly or indirectly involved in violations that have already occurred, based on the property and holdings in the United States?

MR. CARNEY:  I would refer you to the Department of Treasury.  I mean, I think that if you look at discussions of this in the press and actions taken, for example, by the Europeans, there’s a way to answer that question.

Carol.

Q    On Tuesday, some administration officials said that some remarks from President Putin had indicated a pause in the escalation of the crisis.  And the President said that he seemed to be taking a moment to reflect.  Is that still the case?  When did we pass that moment?  Are these actions today an indication that that pause is no longer correct?

MR. CARNEY:  No -- the President and others were referring specifically to the announcement, apparently fulfilled, of the decision to move military units in the West of Russia back to their barracks after the completion of the announced exercises.  But I think in some ways -- this is an answer to Alexis’s question -- the action we’re taking today has to do with the clear and continued violation of Ukraine’s sovereignty and territorial integrity that is happening today and has been happening now for several days.

So we’re closely monitoring events in Crimea, in Eastern Ukraine, in all of Ukraine, and are urging the Russians to move towards a diplomatic resolution, towards a direct dialogue with the Ukrainian government about steps that can be taken with ample precedent using international monitors to ensure that the rights of ethnic Russians in Ukraine are protected and respected, and that the interest that Russia has in Ukraine, in particular its military facilities in Crimea, are protected and are protected in keeping with the agreement that the Ukrainian government and the Russian government have together.  But the only violation of that agreement thus far has been through the actions of the Russian government. 

Let me go to Jessica. 

Q    A question about how the White House views the Chinese role in this Ukrainian crisis.  I know yesterday, Ambassador Rice spoke with Foreign Minister [sic] Yang.  And according to the readout, they agreed on a solution that would uphold Ukraine’s sovereignty and territorial integrity.  President Xi has had a phone call with President Putin in which he characterized it as “accidental” and “had the elements of the inevitable.”  I’m just wondering where the White House sees them, as particularly since those could be construed as conflicting messages?
   
MR. CARNEY:  I would simply say that we are working with all our partners on the United Nations Security Council and elsewhere in together recognizing that the actions that Russia has taken are a violation of -- are in violation of international law.  I don’t think those actions were an accident, and I don’t think anybody believes they were an accident.  Thank you all very much.

END 
2:03 P.M. EST

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Readout of President Obama’s call with President Putin of Russia

President Obama spoke for an hour this afternoon with President Putin of Russia. President Obama emphasized that Russia’s actions are in violation of Ukraine’s sovereignty and territorial integrity, which has led us to take several steps in response, in coordination with our European partners. President Obama indicated that there is a way to resolve the situation diplomatically, which addresses the interests of Russia, the people of Ukraine, and the international community. As a part of that resolution, the governments of Ukraine and Russia would hold direct talks, facilitated by the international community; international monitors could ensure that the rights of all Ukrainians are protected, including ethnic Russians; Russian forces would return to their bases; and the international community would work together to support the Ukrainian people as they prepare for elections in May. President Obama indicated that Secretary Kerry would continue discussions with Foreign Minister Lavrov, the government of  Ukraine, and other international partners in the days to come to advance those objectives.

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

President Obama Announces More Key Administration Posts

WASHINGTON, DC – Today, President Barack Obama announced his intent to nominate the following individuals to key Administration posts:

  • Nani A. Coloretti – Deputy Secretary, Department of Housing and Urban Development
  • Estevan R. López – Commissioner of Reclamation, Department of the Interior
  • Erika Lizabeth Moritsugu – Assistant Secretary for Congressional and Intergovernmental Relations, Department of Housing and Urban Development
  • Monica C. Regalbuto – Assistant Secretary for Environmental Management, Department of Energy
  • Andrew H. Schapiro – Ambassador to the Czech Republic, Department of State

President Obama also announced his intent to appoint the following individuals to key Administration posts:

  • Thomas R. Lamont – Member, American Battle Monument Commission
  • Alan B. Lazowski – Member, United States Holocaust Memorial Council
  • Latifa A. Lyles – Director of the Women’s Bureau, Department of Labor
  • Susan Athey – Member, President’s Committee on the National Medal of Science
  • John T. Cacioppo – Member, President’s Committee on the National Medal of Science
  • Sharon R. Long – Member, President’s Committee on the National Medal of Science

President Obama said, “I am proud that such experienced and committed individuals have agreed to serve the American people in these important roles.  I look forward to working with them in the months and years ahead.”

President Obama announced his intent to nominate the following individuals to key Administration posts:

Nani A. Coloretti, Nominee for Deputy Secretary, Department of Housing and Urban Development
Nani A. Coloretti is the Assistant Secretary for Management at the U.S. Department of the Treasury, a position she has held since November 2012.  From 2009 to 2012, she served as the Deputy Assistant Secretary for Management and Budget.  Prior to joining the Administration, Ms. Coloretti worked in the San Francisco Mayor’s office from 2005 until 2009, most recently serving as Budget Director.  Previously, Ms. Coloretti served as the Director of Policy, Planning, and Budget for the San Francisco Department of Children, Youth, and Their Families from 1999 to 2005.  Ms. Coloretti worked as a Health Financing Branch Budget Examiner for the U.S. Office of Management and Budget from 1994 to 1997.  She was a Budget Analyst for the Department of Public Safety in the State of Hawaii from 1991 to 1992.  Ms. Coloretti is a recipient of the National Public Service Award, the Public Policy and International Affairs Achievement Award, the Government Finance Officers Association Distinguished Budget Presentation Award, and the Federal 100 Award.  Ms. Coloretti received a B.A. in Economics and Communications from the University of Pennsylvania and an M.P.P. from the Goldman School of Public Policy at the University of California at Berkeley.

Estevan R. López, Nominee for Commissioner of Reclamation, Department of the Interior
Estevan R. López is currently the Director of the New Mexico Interstate Stream Commission, a position he has held since 2003.  From 2001 to 2003, Mr. López served as County Manager of Santa Fe County.  Prior to that, he served as the Land Use and Utilities Department Director of Santa Fe County from 2000 to 2001.  Mr. López also served as the Utilities Department Director of Santa Fe County from 1998 to 2000 and as Utilities Division Deputy Director of Santa Fe County from 1997 to 1998.  From 1990 to 1997, he was a Public Utility Engineer at the New Mexico Public Utility Commission.  Previously, Mr. López worked at Arco Alaska, Inc. as an Operations Engineer and then a Well Work Supervisor.  He received a B.S. from the New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology.

Erika Lizabeth Moritsugu, Nominee for Assistant Secretary for Congressional and Intergovernmental Relations, Department of Housing and Urban Development
Erika Lizabeth Moritsugu is the Deputy Assistant Director for Legislative Affairs at the Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection, a position she has held since 2012.  Prior to that, Ms. Moritsugu was the Deputy Legislative Director for U.S. Senator Daniel Akaka of Hawaiʻi from 2010 to 2012.  From 2007 to 2010, Ms. Moritsugu served in several capacities at the Senate Democratic Policy Committee, including Acting Staff Director, Policy Director and Counsel, and Economic Policy Advisor.  From 2001 to 2007, Ms. Moritsugu was an Associate for the Government Regulations Practice Group at Hogan and Hartson, LLP and from 1995 to 2001, she worked at The Wexler Group.  Ms. Moritsugu was a Legislative Assistant at the U.S. Department of Agriculture Food Safety and Inspection Service from 1994 to 1995 and a legal clerk at the County of Honolulu Prosecutor’s Office in 1991.  She is a Member of the Board of Pan-Pacific American Leaders and Mentors.  She is a 2004 recipient of the Tahirih Justice Center Pro Bono Award and a 2001 Bryce Harlow Foundation Scholar.  Ms. Moritsugu received a B.A. from The College of William and Mary and a J.D. from George Washington University.

Dr. Monica C. Regalbuto, Nominee for Assistant Secretary for Environmental Management, Department of Energy
Dr. Monica C. Regalbuto is the Deputy Assistant Secretary for Fuel Cycle Technologies in the Office of Nuclear Energy at the Department of Energy (DOE), a position she has held since 2011. She is currently detailed to DOE from Argonne National Laboratory. Prior to this role, Dr. Regalbuto was Senior Program Manager for the Office of Waste Processing in the Office of Environmental Management at DOE from 2008 to 2010.  From 2003 to 2008, Dr. Regalbuto was the head of the Process Chemistry and Engineering Department in Argonne’s Chemical Sciences and Engineering Division and from 1996 to 2001, she was a Senior Research Engineer at BP Amoco Oil Company.  Dr. Regalbuto received a B.S. in Chemical Engineering from the Instituto Tecnológico y de Estudios Superiores de Monterrey (ITESM) and an M.S. and Ph.D. in Chemical Engineering from the University of Notre Dame.

Andrew H. Schapiro, Nominee for Ambassador to the Czech Republic, Department of State
Andrew H. Schapiro is a partner at the international law firm Quinn Emanuel Urquhart and Sullivan, LLP.  He was a partner at Mayer Brown, LLP from 1998 to 2011, and served as a trial attorney with the Federal Public Defender’s Office in Manhattan from 1993 to 1998.  Mr. Schapiro served as a Law Clerk to U.S. Supreme Court Justice Harry A. Blackmun from 1992 to 1993 and Judge Richard A. Posner of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit from 1991 to 1992.  He also served on the Criminal Justice Act Advisory Board of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit in New York, the Board of Directors of the Chicago Low-Income Housing Trust Fund, and the Board of Directors of the Jewish Council on Urban Affairs.  Mr. Schapiro received a B.A. from Yale College, an M.A from Oxford University, and a J.D. from Harvard Law School.

President Obama announced his intent to appoint the following individuals to key Administration posts:

Thomas R. Lamont, Appointee for Member, American Battle Monuments Commission
Thomas R. Lamont served as Assistant Secretary of the Army for Manpower and Reserve Affairs at the Department of Defense from 2009 to 2013.  He has also served as Special Counsel to the University of Illinois since 2005, and was Executive Director of the Illinois Board of Higher Education from 2004 to 2005.  Before entering private practice, he served as Executive Director of the Office of the Illinois State’s Attorney Appellate Prosecutor and Director of Civil Litigation in the Office of the Illinois Attorney General.  Mr. Lamont is a member and former Chair of the University of Illinois Board of Trustees, and a retired Colonel in the Illinois National Guard, where he served as the State Staff Judge Advocate General.  Mr. Lamont received a B.S. from Illinois State University and a J.D. from the University of Illinois College of Law.

Alan B. Lazowski, Appointee for Member, United States Holocaust Memorial Council
Alan B. Lazowski is Chairman and CEO of LAZ Parking, which he founded in 1981.  Mr. Lazowksi serves on the Board of Directors of the National Parking Association, the Green Parking Council, the Goodwin College Foundation, the Greater Hartford Jewish Federation, and the Hebrew Home and Hospital.  He is a member of the National Executive Committee of the Anti-Defamation League and received the Anti-Defamation League’s Torch of Liberty Award in 2007.  He was awarded the Thomas and Bette Wolff Family Entrepreneurship award at the University of Connecticut.  Mr. Lazowski is the son of Holocaust survivors and is the Founder and Co-Chair of Voices of Hope, an organization for descendants of Holocaust survivors. 

Latifa A. Lyles, Appointee for Director of the Women’s Bureau, Department of Labor
Latifa A. Lyles is the Deputy Director of the Women’s Bureau at the Department of Labor, a position she has held since September 2009.  She has been performing the duties of Director of the Women’s Bureau since May 2012.  Ms. Lyles was the Vice President for Membership at the National Organization for Women from 2005 to 2009.  From 2002 to 2005, Ms. Lyles was the Membership Program Manager at the Public Justice Foundation.  From 1998 to 2002, she was a Development Planner and Analyst for the National Organization for Women.  From 1997 to 1998, she was a Public Policy Associate at the Older Women’s League.  She is a member of the Board of Directors of the American Civil Liberties Union of the National Capital Area.

Dr. Susan Athey, Appointee for Member, President’s Committee on the National Medal of Science
Dr. Susan Athey is a Professor of Economics at Stanford University Graduate School of Business and co-director of the Market Design Working Group at the National Bureau of Economic Research.  Dr. Athey was the first female recipient of the John Bates Clark medal, awarded by the American Economic Association, and she is a fellow of the National Academy of Sciences as well as the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.  She has served as an elected member of the executive committee of the American Economics Association and the Council of the Econometric Society.  She was first appointed to the President’s Committee on the National Medal of Science in 2011.  Dr. Athey received a B.A. from Duke University in Economics, Mathematics, and Computer Science and a Ph.D. from the Stanford Graduate School of Business.

Dr. John T. Cacioppo, Appointee for Member, President’s Committee on the National Medal of Science
Dr. John T. Cacioppo is the Tiffany and Margaret Blake Distinguished Service Professor at The University of Chicago, a position he has held since 1999.  He is also the Director of the Center for Cognitive and Social Neuroscience, and the Founding Director of the Arete Initiative in the Office of the Vice President for Research and National Laboratories at The University of Chicago.  He has also held teaching positions at The Ohio State University, University of Iowa, and University of Notre Dame.  He has been elected to the Society of Experimental Psychologists, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and the Society of Experimental Social Psychologists.  He is a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, the Association for Psychological Science, the American Psychological Association, and the Royal Society of Arts.  Dr. Cacioppo received a B.S. in Economics from the University of Missouri, and an M.A. and Ph.D. in Psychology from The Ohio State University.

Dr. Sharon R. Long, Appointee for Member, President’s Committee on the National Medal of Science
Dr. Sharon R. Long is the Steere-Pfizer Professor of Biological Sciences at Stanford University.  She served as Dean of Humanities and Sciences at Stanford University from 2001 to 2007, and was appointed an Investigator of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute from 1994 to 2001.  Dr. Long was first appointed to the President’s Committee on the National Medal of Science in 2011.  She was a science advisor for Obama for America in 2008.  She has been a Trustee of the California Academy of Sciences since 2009, and a member of the National Academy of Sciences since 1993.  She was named a Presidential Young Investigator by the National Science Foundation in 1984 and received a MacArthur Fellowship in 1992.  Dr. Long received a B.S. from Caltech in Biochemistry and a Ph.D. in Cell and Developmental Biology from Yale University.

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Background Briefing by Senior Administration Officials on Executive Order on Ukraine -- Via Conference Call

Via Conference Call

8:38 A.M. EST

MS. HAYDEN:  Thank you very much.  Good morning, everyone.  Thank you so much for joining.  This conference call is to discuss the visa restrictions and executive order that were released today in relation to Ukraine.  We have several speakers today, all of whom are senior administration officials.  The call is on background so they should be referred to and this attributed to senior administration officials.  There is no embargo on this call.

With that, I will turn it over to our first senior administration official.

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  Thanks, everybody, for joining the call.  I just want to give you a bit of an overview of where things stand and the actions we've taken today.
 
To begin with, since the Russian intervention in Ukraine you have seen us work on several lines of effort to mobilize international unity, to condemn the Russian intervention, to impose costs on Russia for that intervention so that they are isolated politically and economically, to provide additional support for the government in Kyiv.  And you’ve seen both the United States and the European Union make important announcements about our support for the Ukrainian people over the last several days while also, again, indicating that there is an opportunity for Russia to deescalate going forward.

In terms of how that's manifested, you have seen broad international unity in the condemnations out of the North Atlantic Council, out of our European allies, and out of the G7 countries.  We suspended preparatory meetings for the G8 in Sochi.  The United States has pulled down and cancelled discussions associated with keeping trade and commercial ties to Russia.  We've also cancelled military exercises and joint consultations with Russia on those specific issues, while providing additional reassurance to our European allies about our commitment to their security.

With today’s actions we have taken additional steps to impose costs on Russia and those who are responsible for the violation of Ukraine’s sovereignty and territorial integrity.  That includes an executive order that gives us a great deal of flexibility to target individuals and entities who are responsible for this violation of international law and of Georgian -- sorry -- Ukrainian sovereignty.  And we are also imposing visa restrictions, which further imposes a cost on individuals responsible for the violation of Ukraine’s sovereignty and territorial integrity.

So this should send a strong message that we intend to impose costs on Russia for this intervention.  It also gives us flexibility, however, to respond in the coming days based on Russia’s continued actions.  So, again, we already have grave concerns over the intervention in Crimea.  The situation, of course, could escalate further if we see actions into Eastern Ukraine, and we have the flexibility, therefore, to calibrate and escalate our own response if we see further Russian destabilizing actions, just as we are going to impose a cost for what has already taken place in Crimea.

At the same time, there continues to be a way to deescalate the situation, to allow international monitors into not just Eastern Ukraine but also Crimea to assure the protection of all Ukrainian citizens including ethnic Russians; to have immediate discussions between the Russian government and the government in Kyiv with the support of the international community; and to work towards the elections that the Ukrainian people will have in May to determine their next democratically elected government.

With that, I'll turn it over to my Treasury colleague to discuss the EO.

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  Thank you.  Today the EO issued by the President allows the Secretary of the Treasury to impose powerful financial sanctions on individuals and entities responsible for an array of activities related to the situation developing in Ukraine. 

There’s four main criteria for designation:  First, it allows us to target those undermining democratic processes or   institutions in Ukraine; second, those threatening the peace, security, stability, sovereignty or territorial integrity of Ukraine; third, those misappropriating state assets of Ukraine;  and fourth, those purporting to assert governmental authority over any part of Ukraine without authorization from the Ukrainian government in Kyiv.

In addition, we also are afforded in this executive order the authority to target derivatives -- in other words, those who are acting on behalf of, or providing material support to, or those who are under control by anyone listed.

This is a powerful and flexible tool that will allow us to target those who are most directly involved in destabilizing Ukraine, including the military intervention in Crimea.  It does not preclude further steps should the situation deteriorate. 

Finally, we have not listed specific individuals or entities today, but this authority is now in place and we will be looking to use it as appropriate in response to developments on the ground.

Thank you.

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  The State Department is putting in place visa restrictions on a number of officials and individuals, which reflects a policy decision to deny visas to officials or other persons who have been complicit in or responsible for supporting actions which threaten the sovereignty, territorial integrity or political independence of Ukraine, including the Russian troop movements not authorized to or consented to by the government of Ukraine, and potentially, any other unauthorized actions by regional authorities in Ukraine.

So we have put this -- we have this authority, are implementing it, and we will be restricting visas as well as pulling a number of visas where people already have them.

Q    A couple quick questions.  I know you can’t give us the names of those on the visa ban.  Can you give us a sense of the scope of it, rough numbers of some sort?  And you mentioned that those who have visas will have them pulled.  Are they notified of that?  And then, secondly, why now, this morning, before the Lavrov talks, not after?  Did the Crimea referendum thing that they talked about today play a part?  And are we going to -- and are you saying you’re not going to do these other sanctions except in response to further actions by the Russians, or we’re going to take further actions even without further escalation?

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  I’ll go first and then turn it over to my colleague.  First, on the why now, Peter, we’ve been preparing very quickly this executive order.  We believe that there need to be costs and consequences for Russia for what they’ve already done in Crimea.  That is a violation of international law, a violation of Ukraine’s sovereignty and territorial integrity.  So there will be individuals who are designated pursuant to what we’ve already seen in Crimea.

The point I was making is that we also have flexibility under this EO and any other additional sanctions we may impose should we see further escalatory behavior by the Russian Federation. 

We’ve been working on this in close consultation and coordination with our European allies.  They were aware that we are taking this step.  They have taken some steps related to the events in Ukraine -- they’ll make their own decisions, of course, going forward.  But it’s important to note that we have been closely coordinating with them in this effort.

Again, the Russian Federation continues to have the opportunity to deescalate the situation.  I know Secretary Kerry is meeting with Prime Minister Lavrov this morning to continue those discussions.  But we’re not going to put on hold our efforts to impose a cost for what has been a violation of international law already.

I’ll turn it over to my colleague for the visa question.

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  Yes, Peter, we would notify anyone who holds a U.S. visa that that visa had been revoked.  And we will do so as occasion arises.  The authority allows us to add people to the visa ban list, and we will be looking at additional names as more information unfolds.

Q    Can you just give us sort of the U.S. reaction to the announcement of the referendum today? And secondly, you’ve talked a lot about watching for other movement into Eastern Ukraine.  Is it still the U.S. assessment that you’re not seeing that kind of movement at this point?

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  Sure, thanks, Julie.  First of all, with respect to the referendum that was announced, it is the belief of the United States that decisions about Crimea or any part of Ukraine needs to be made with the government in Kyiv. This is a country with clearly defined international borders, and ultimately only the people of Ukraine can make determinations about their political future.  And the government in Kyiv has to be a part of any decisions that are made about the future of Crimea or any other region.

And I think you saw the Prime Minister make comments about their openness to discussions about various arrangements going forward.  They have to be at the table.  You can’t have a situation in which the legitimate government of the country is excluded from decision-making about different parts of that country.  That is clearly a violation of international law and of how these things are done. 

So we will continue to support the sovereignty and the territorial integrity of Ukraine as a whole, and we will continue to insist that the government in Kyiv be engaged in any discussion about the future of any and all parts of Ukraine.

With respect to movements, what we have seen to date, of course, is a violation of Ukraine’s borders, its territorial integrity, and also the basing agreement that the Russians had with respect to their facility on the Black Sea.  We have not seen movements into Eastern Ukraine.  Were we to see that, we believe that would be a significant escalation of the situation, would further destabilize the situation, and would invite a further response from the United States and the international community.  So it’s something that we’re watching closely.

We’ve also said that international monitors are the best way to assure that the rights of all Ukrainians are being protected, including ethnic Russians.  And a monitoring team from the OSCE has arrived in Ukraine, has moved out to different parts of the country, has an important set of experiences and capabilities to ensure that basic rights are being protected.  We believe that that monitoring mission should expand into Crimea and can be the basis for a way of deescalating the crisis.

Q    For those of us who are here in Crimea, it’s very obvious kind of what’s going on -- law and order is increasingly being run by Russian soldiers and what is essentially their proxies, pro-Russian activists.  Do you have any notion that the sanctions today or the actions today will actually impact the people who are delivering orders to these soldiers on the ground, to these people who are doing things like detaining Robert Serry yesterday?  Do you have any sense of who the people are who are pulling strings in Crimea and whether there’s even a command structure that would allow you to target people who are making decisions here and who are increasingly targeting journalists and Westerners, not only including Serry but including OSCE members yesterday as well?  Thanks.

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  Thanks, Nate.  I’ll make a couple comments and then my colleague may want to comment as well. 

We have seen, obviously in addition to the basic violation of Ukraine’s borders and the basing agreement in Crimea, we have seen those concerning reports that you mention.  I think we do have an ability to establish individuals or entities that we believe are responsible for supporting those actions.  Frankly, the very flexibility of this tool, the fact, frankly, that we have not yet designated individuals I think should be leading people in Russia, people in Crimea to be asking whether or not they’re going to see their name in a designation. 

So I think this is a very clear message that the United States is going to use the authorities that we have to target the assets, the travel of individuals who are responsible for that concerning behavior.  And the flexibility it affords us I think should lead some of those individuals to be questioning whether or not they’re going to find their name on a list.  But I turn it over to Treasury to say anything else.

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  Nothing to add.

Q    I want to return to Peter’s question about the connection and timing with the referendum announcement.  I hear what you’re saying on your concerns about the referendum.  Our guidance earlier this week from administration officials was that you would take the week to watch how things played out.  We were not expecting to see even the step towards sanctions this week.  Did something expedite your timeframe?  And also, can you talk about whether the concerns of countries like Moldova and former Soviet republics are considering -- are making the U.S. consider expanding its approach in doing any sort of preemptive assistance to any other countries besides Ukraine?  Thanks.

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  Margaret, no, the referendum announcement had nothing to do with the timing of this.  We were planning this action -- frankly, we had to prepare the EO, to get it ready.  We were also coordinating with our European allies.  And I believe what we said throughout the week was not that we were going to hold off on any action until the end of the week; it was that we were going to have to prepare our various tools and make decisions about the timing of implementing them.

And now that we have this EO ready to go, we felt it was appropriate to signal the types of tools that are available to the United States, the types of costs that we’re prepared to impose on Russia and those who are responsible for what we’re seeing in Crimea. 

So it wasn’t tied to the referendum; it was tied to basically the preparation of this tool, the consultations that we’ve had with European partners, and President Obama was able to discuss these issues with Chancellor Merkel, with Prime Minister Cameron.  I know Secretary Kerry has been in touch with the Foreign Ministers of Italy, France, the United Kingdom, Germany, as well as Cathy Ashton.  And I think this sends a signal that Russia is not going to be able to avoid accountability for the types of actions that we’ve seen to date.

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  Just to add something to the question about Moldova, the Moldovan Prime Minister was here early this week on the snow day.  The Georgian Prime Minister was here the last couple of weeks.  Secretary Kerry hosted a U.S-Georgia bilateral working group, and I believe the Vice President saw both of those leaders during their respective visits.  So we’ve had, because of earlier scheduled visits, good opportunities to see these leaders.

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  I should have added, Margaret -- that’s a good addition by my State colleague -- the President was able to see the Moldovan Prime Minister and the Georgian Prime Minister, along with the Vice President.  I think separate and apart from how we’re responding specifically to events in Ukraine with these types of actions, we’re also providing additional reassurance to our allies in Eastern Europe and partners like Moldova and Georgia. 

In addition to those meetings, you saw DOD, for instance, yesterday announce that they are going to be expanding their Baltic overflights, which provide additional reassurance to Lithuania, Latvia, and Estonia.  They are going to be reinforcing our aviation detachment in Poland, and there is going to be a meeting of the Chiefs of Defense of Central and Eastern Europe with General Breedlove.  So we continue to reassure our Eastern European allies that at this very delicate and potentially destabilizing time, the United States is strongly committed to their security.

Q    I was hoping you might be able to just clarify something for me.  Have individuals been identified for the sanctions, on listing them?  Or now that the EO is in place, can you begin to identify people to take sanctions against?  And additionally, you mentioned that this is an attempt to impose a cost on the Russians.  If they do pull their troops back to their bases, will these be rolled back as well, or will these stay in place as sort of a punitive measure?
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  We can calibrate our sanctions and our actions based on what the Russians do.  And, obviously, were they to deescalate the situation, pull back into their base, that would very much affect our calculus as to how we move forward with these types of actions.  Like I said, we believe that there should be measures taken based on what’s already happened in Crimea.  We’ve already taken a number of those measures in our bilateral actions and statements out of the international community.  But we would certainly evaluate the situation if there were to be that type of constructive action taken by the Russians.

On individuals, Treasury can speak to the EO.  And as my State colleague said, we don’t publish the names of those who are affected by visa bans.  Suffice to say, that -- well, I’ll leave it to Treasury, actually, to describe their process for reviewing individuals. 

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  So as I noted at the outset, the financial sanctions authority put in place today does not contain an annex.  So no individuals or companies have been blocked or designated for sanctions this morning.  What the authority does, though, is put in place a powerful tool that will allow us to target individuals and companies in the future that we see directly responsible for these destabilizing activities, as well as assets -- that we identified in the executive order today.

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  Just to answer the questions about visas, just to clarify, there are individuals who have had their visas pulled or would be banned from visas.  And those individuals, while I won’t give names or numbers, this does include Russians and Ukrainians. 

Q    Well, you answered one of my questions here.  Thanks for doing the call.  I was going to ask about former President Yanukovych, because he has been targeted by the European Union, but I suppose you’re not willing to go that far.  But yesterday, the Russians were threatening retaliatory sanctions of their own and I’m just curious if that’s been taken into consideration here.

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  I’ll take the first and if anybody wants to add on Yanukovych.  We’ve seen those comments by the Russians.  Frankly, that does not concern us or factor into our decision-making on this.  We believe, number one, that Russia has already paid a cost in terms of seeing its stock market contract, seeing significant instability with its currency.  I think they have a fragile economy.  And similarly, they also have a set of individuals who have been engaged in supporting corruption and supporting the destabilizing actions we’ve seen in Crimea.  So there are specific vulnerabilities there, given the nature of the Russian system and the Russian economy, that these types of sanctions can be brought to bear on.

In terms of individuals, we have a process of reviewing who could be designated.  That is underway so we have begun the process of identifying potential individuals.  I’ll send it over to my colleague to see if he has anything to add on that or Yanukovych.

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  Nothing to add in particular on Yanukovych.  I would just say that anybody who is involved or complicit in activities that are threatening the sovereignty, territorial integrity, or stability of Ukraine is as of this morning on notice that they may be targeted for U.S. sanctions.

Q    In the context of your last comment on the vulnerability of the Russian economy, one of the (inaudible) of Russia’s influence in the region is its supply of energy.  I’m wondering whether the administration is giving any thought to pressuring Russia through energy moves such as tapping the Strategic Petroleum Reserve or through expediting approvals to export U.S. natural gas as a way to put pressure on Russia.  Thank you.  

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  I wouldn’t want to speculate about some of the specific steps you mention.  We’re certainly aware of the Russian reliance on energy as a source of support for its economy.  I do know that this has been a subject that we and the Europeans have taken into account.  As I’ve said, you’ve already seen instability in the Russian economy based on their destabilizing actions.  Again, the further Russia escalates this, the more they’re going to face potential costs from the United States, Europe, and other countries around the world. 

So I don’t want to speculate on the specific actions associated with energy markets or U.S. tools in that regard.  But we are very aware of that dynamic.  It is something that we take into account as we make these decisions. 

And again, frankly, I think, over time, what you’re going to see is that if Russia continues to perpetuate this crisis, this violation of Ukraine’s sovereignty and territorial integrity, it is going to bring greater isolation to their economy.  It is going to, I think, carry with it not just the costs that are imposed through punitive actions like this, but the costs for having instability in the neighborhood.  And that is not something that they are going to be able to compensate for.

And so we believe that there is a significant vulnerability over time that should affect Russia’s calculus.  And that’s why we’re seeking through these types of punitive measures taken by the United States and through our coordination with other allies and partners to make clear that we’re not going to accept a status quo in which Russia can violate the sovereignty of its neighbors with some type of impunity.  And so today’s action builds on the steps we’ve already taken.  I think if the situation continues, you can see further steps that we would anticipate and that we would coordinate with our European allies on.

Anything my colleagues want to add before we wrap up the call?

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  Only to say that the State Department and the USG has been working on long-term efforts to help Europe diversify its gas sources.  This has been in motion for a number of years and is beginning to yield results.

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  Well, thanks everybody for joining the call.

MS. HAYDEN:  Just a reminder -- this is Caitlin -- that the call was on background.  These were senior administration officials and there’s no embargo.  So thanks for joining us.  Bye.

END 
9:05 A.M. EST