The White House

Office of the Vice President

Vice President Biden Hosts Conference Call with Elected Officials to Discuss Recovery Act Implementation

Earlier today, the Vice President hosted a conference call with Governors and a Mayor from across the country to discuss implementation of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act.

The following officials participated:

  • Governor Mitch Daniels (R-IN)
  • Governor Martin O’Malley (D-MD)
  • Governor Bev Perdue (D-NC)
  • Mayor Adrian Fenty (D-DC)

The White House

Office of the Vice President

Readout of Vice President Biden’s Call with Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak

The Vice President called Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak today to extend his wishes for a quick recovery and to congratulate him on the birth of his first granddaughter, Farida Mubarak.  The Vice President told President Mubarak that he looks forward to rescheduling his visit to Egypt to a future date.

The White House

Office of the Vice President

3,100 Public Housing Authorities Meet Critical Recovery Act Deadline, Create Nearly 9,000 Jobs and Rehab 150,000 Homes for Low-Income Families

Just over one year after Recovery Act is signed, funds already putting Americans to work, making homes healthier for thousands of families across the U.S.

WASHINGTON – U.S. Housing and Urban Development Secretary Shaun Donovan today announced that over 3,100 public housing authorities across the U.S. successfully met a critical funding deadline outlined in the American Reinvestment and Recovery Act of 2009 (Recovery Act). As a result, the nearly $3 billion in Public Housing Capital Fund grants awarded through the Recovery Act one year ago are being used to make significant improvements to tens of thousands of public housing units nationwide; creating jobs and growing the economy.         

“Strict deadlines, such as this one, were written into the Recovery Act to ensure that funds would be used to meet the top goal of putting Americans back to work as quickly as possible,” said Donovan. “I am proud of the work HUD and public housing authorities across the country did to meet this critical deadline.  It speaks to the commitment they have to improve affordable housing and grow local economies.  Families and communities are already seeing new windows, roofs, cost-saving energy-efficient appliances, and much-needed jobs.”

To date, as a result of this critical Recovery Act funding, public housing authorities reported creating or retaining nearly 9,000 jobs and developing or rehabilitating 150,000 public housing units in hard-hit neighborhoods throughout the country.  Just one year after being awarded, Recovery Act public housing funds, which were intended to help jumpstart the economy during the worst recession in a generation, are also allowing housing agencies to address the long-standing capital needs of public housing, create jobs, and increase energy efficiency. 

On March 17, 2009, less than 30 days after the Recovery Act was signed into law, HUD provided nearly $3 billion in Public Housing Capital funds to over 3,100 public housing authorities nationwide.  The funds were allocated through an established formula, effectively more than doubling the Department’s annual support of local housing authorities.  Specific guidelines in the law required that all funding awarded to public housing authorities through the Recovery Act be “obligated,” or committed to specific projects or activities, one year after it was awarded, or the funding must be recaptured by HUD and redistributed to other agencies in compliance with the requirements.

All public housing authorities were able to meet that deadline by either obligating 100 percent of their funds or voluntarily returning all or a portion of their funds by the deadline.  Of the $2.985 billion that was awarded to 3,134 public housing authorities, $2.981 billion has been obligated and $3.246 million was voluntarily returned.  HUD is currently determining the redistribution process for the funding returned.  The 172 ‘troubled’ housing authorities that received funding all met the deadline as well, with only two troubled agencies returning all or a portion of their funds by March 17th.

HUD’s Capital Fund Program provides annual funding to public housing authorities to develop, finance, and/or modernize the public housing in their communities. This funding can be used to make large-scale improvements such as new roofs and for the replacement of plumbing and electrical systems to increase energy efficiency. 

The Recovery Act included $13.61 billion for projects and programs administered by HUD, nearly 75 percent of which was allocated to state and local recipients only eight days after President Obama signed the Act into law, including public housing capital funding. The remaining 25 percent is being awarded through competitive grant programs. To date, 98 percent of HUD’s Recovery Act funds are in the hands of local communities, being used to improve housing and neighborhoods, while creating jobs.  HUD is committed to implementing Recovery Act investments swiftly and effectively as they generate tens of thousands of jobs, modernize homes to make them energy efficient, and help the families and communities hardest hit by the economic crisis.

To learn more about the story of the Recovery Act, visit www.WhiteHouse.gov/Recovery.  To follow Recovery Act dollars as they are put to work, visit www.Recovery.gov.

The White House

Office of the Vice President

Readout of Vice President Biden's Dinner with Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu

Last evening, the Vice President and General Jones had a working dinner with Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu and Israeli Defense Minister Barak at the Vice President’s residence at the Naval Observatory, together with their delegations. They had a productive, candid discussion on the full range of issues in the bilateral relationship, in preparation for the meeting later today between the President and the Prime Minister.

The White House

Office of the Vice President

Vice President Biden Announces Recovery Act Putting More Money Back in Middle Class Taxpayers' Pockets This Year

Launches New WhiteHouse.gov Tax Savings Tool to Help Taxpayers Take Advantage of Recovery Act Tax Credits

WASHINGTON – With the 2010 tax filing season underway, Vice President Joe Biden, Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner and IRS Commissioner Doug Shulman today announced that that average tax refunds are up nearly 10 percent this year, due in large part to the significant new tax benefits available under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (Recovery Act), and reminded taxpayers that they can collect on those benefits this year as they file their 2009 tax returns.  To help taxpayers see for themselves exactly how they can benefit from Recovery Act tax credits and collect every dollar owed when they file this tax season, the White House today launched a new interactive Tax Savings Tool available at www.WhiteHouse.gov/Recovery.

“The big guys know all the credits and deductions to claim during tax season, but we want middle class families to know just how much is out there for them this year thanks to the Recovery Act – and how to take advantage of it,” said Vice President Biden.  “From help with college expenses to credits for cost-saving, energy-efficiency home improvements, these Recovery Act tax credits not only provide some needed relief for working Americans, but also help them invest in their families’ futures.”

“The more that individuals and families take advantage of these benefits, the more money is pushed back into the economy, helping all Americans as we grow our way out of this crisis,” said Treasury Secretary Geithner.  “Only by getting these benefits to the American people can we help ensure that the recovery is firmly established. And only by firmly establishing the recovery can we encourage the creation of new jobs and lay a foundation for sustained economic growth.”

"The average tax refund has reached $3,036 this year, a $266 increase from a year ago," said IRS Commissioner Shulman. "The Recovery Act is a major factor behind these larger, record refunds. About half of all Americans haven't filed their taxes yet, so we urge them to look carefully at these Recovery provisions. Taxpayers should also remember that the fastest, best way to get their tax refund is by filing electronically with direct deposit."

During these tough economic times, Recovery Act tax cuts are helping hard-hit middle class families.  This year’s tax refund puts more money in the pockets of families across the country, and gives them incentives to make energy-saving home improvements, purchase a new vehicle or buy a home.  Those purchases are helping to jumpstart the economy and provide more clean energy, manufacturing and construction jobs for working families right here in the U.S.  The Recovery Act’s nearly $300 billion in tax benefits are helping to rebuild the long-term strength of the economy, while helping middle class families get back on firm financial footing.

According to early data from the IRS, the average income tax refund is up more than $260 – a 9.6 percent increase over last year – which is due in large part to the Recovery Act.  The average refund through March 12, 2010, is $3,036, which is an increase of $266 compared to the same time a year ago.  This is a sign that people are taking advantage of the Recovery Act tax savings this year.

However, data show that less than half of the overall expected returns have been filed.  The Obama Administration wants to make sure that taxpayers are aware of the new Recovery Act benefits they are eligible for this year.  The new interactive Tax Savings Tool was launched today to alert taxpayers to the more than a dozen tax benefits available to them under the Recovery Act.  The Tax Savings Tool can be accessed HERE.

Administration officials will hold a series of events across the country leading up to the April 15th tax filing deadline to help educate taxpayers on the Recovery Act benefits available to them when they file their taxes this year.   On Tuesday, March 23rd, Commerce Secretary Locke will travel to Minneapolis, MN to meet with homeowners and a contractor benefiting from the Recovery Act’s tax credits for new home purchases and energy-efficient home retrofits.  On Wednesday, March 24th, Secretary Duncan will meet with students and parents that stand to benefit from the American Opportunity Credit for college expenses at Northern Virginia Community College in Annandale, VA.  Secretary Chu will visit Seaway Manufacturing Corporation, a manufacturer of energy efficient home improvement products that qualify for the Recovery Act tax credits, in Erie, PA on Friday, March 26th.  Secretary LaHood will host a community roundtable on Recovery Act tax relief on Monday, March 29th, in the Chicago area; Secretary Donovan will hold an event on the First-Time Homebuyer Credit on Wednesday, March 31st in Charlotte, NC; and SBA Administrator Mills will also travel as part of the month-long effort.

Taxpayers can collect more than a dozen 2009 Recovery Act tax benefits when they file their 2009 tax returns, including:

  • Making Work Pay - Ninety-five percent of working families are receiving the Recovery Act’s Making Work Pay tax credit of $400 for an individual or $800 for married couples filing jointly in their paychecks in 2009 – and will continue to in 2010.  Taxpayers whose withholding in 2009 did not provide the full amount of the credit they are due will get the additional amount when they file their 2009 tax return. Even though most taxpayers received the benefit of this credit in their paychecks from adjusted tax withholding by their employers, they still need to claim this credit on their tax returns (i.e., Form 1040 or 1040A).
  • Up to $2,500 in College Expenses – Families and students are eligible for up to $2,500 in tax savings under the American Opportunity Credit as well as enhanced benefits under 529 college savings plans, which help families and students pay for college expenses.
    • American Opportunity Credit – More parents and students are eligible for a tax credit of up to $2,500 to pay for college expenses and can claim the credit annually for four years instead of two.

       

    • 529 College Savings Plans – Students can now use a 529 plan to pay for computer technology, adding this to the list of traditional college expenses (tuition, books, etc.) that can be paid for by a 529 plan.
  • Up to $8,000 for Purchase of First Home – Homebuyers can get a credit of up to $8,000 for first homes purchased by April 30, 2010 under the First Time Homebuyer tax credit.  Long-time residents who don’t qualify as first-time homebuyers and those with incomes of up to $145,000 for an individual and $245,000 for joint filers are also eligible for a reduced credit.
  • Up to $1,500 in Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy Incentives – Taxpayers are eligible for up to $1,500 in tax credits for making some energy-efficiency improvements to their homes such as adding insulation and installing energy efficient windows.
  • Money Back for New Vehicle Purchases – Taxpayers can deduct the state and local sales taxes they paid for new vehicles purchased from Feb. 17, 2009 through Dec. 31, 2009 under the vehicle sales tax deduction.  In states that don't have a sales tax, some other taxes or fees paid may be deducted.
  • Expanded Family Tax Credits - Moderate income families with children may be eligible for an increase in the Earned Income Tax Credit and the additional Child Tax Credit.
    • Earned Income Tax Credit – The Recovery Act increased the credit for families with three or more children, bringing the maximum amount to $5,657.
    • Child Tax Credit – More families will be able to take advantage of the child tax credit under the Recovery Act, which reduced the minimum amount of earned income used to calculate the additional child tax credit to $3,000 from $12,550. 
  • Up to $2,400 in Unemployment Benefits Tax Free in 2009 – Unemployment benefits are normally taxable, but the Recovery Act made the first $2,400 of unemployment benefits received in 2009 tax free.

RECOVERY ACT TAX CREDIT IMPACT ON MIDDLE CLASS FAMILIES
Fact Sheet

During these tough economic times, Recovery Act tax cuts are making things a little easier for hard-hit middle class families.  There are more than a dozen Recovery Act tax cuts working families can take advantage of this tax season.

Here is a sampling of how Recovery Act tax cuts would benefit some “typical” middle class families this tax season:

Married Couple with Child in College

  • Married couple with income of $75,000 in 2009. 
  • Two children, one of whom is a junior in college. 
  • Paid $5,000 in college expenses in 2009.

Thanks to the Recovery Act, this married couple making $75,000 in 2009 is eligible for $3,300 in new or expanded 2009 tax credits.

Their employers adjusted their withholding last year to reflect the Making Work Pay Credit, and they collected an extra $800 in their paychecks in 2009 – and will continue to collect this credit in 2010.  When they file their taxes this year, they will collect an additional $2,500 thanks to the American Opportunity Credit to help with the costs of sending their oldest child to college.

Tax Savings:

  •  $800 in Making Work Pay Credit: Over 110 million working Americans qualify for the Recovery Act’s Making Work Pay Credit, saving them up to $400 per year ($800 for married couples filing a joint return).  Qualifying Americans should have received the credit incrementally in paychecks in 2009 and should continue to collect it throughout 2010.
  • $2,500 in American Opportunity Credit: College students and their parents are eligible to collect an American Opportunity Tax Credit of up to up to $2,500 through the Recovery Act to pay for college tuition and other expenses when filing taxes. This expanded the Hope Credit by $700 per student, and opened up the credit to apply beyond the first two years of college. Only the parent or the student can claim this credit – not both.

    Married Couple Who Made Energy-Efficient Home Improvements

    • Married couple with income of $90,000 in 2009.
    • Spent $6,000 in 2009 making energy-efficiency improvements including new energy-efficient windows, doors and insulation.

    Thanks to the Recovery Act, this married couple making $90,000 in 2009 is eligible for $2,300 in new or expanded 2009 tax credits.

    Their employers adjusted their withholding last year to reflect the Making Work Pay Credit, and they collected an extra $800 in their paychecks in 2009 – and will continue to collect this credit in 2010.  And when they file their taxes this year; they will collect an additional $1,500 in Residential Energy Property Credits because they made qualifying energy-efficiency improvements to their home.

    Tax Savings:

    • $800 in Making Work Pay Credit: Over 110 million working Americans qualify for the Recovery Act’s Making Work Pay Credit, saving them up to $400 per year ($800 for married couples filing a joint return).  Qualifying Americans should have received the credit incrementally in paychecks in 2009 and should continue to collect it throughout 2010.
    • $1,500 in Residential Energy Property Credits: Americans who made some types of energy-efficient upgrades to their homes this year can get 30 percent of what was spent back – up to $1,500 – this tax season.

    Single Mom With Three Children, Collected Unemployment

    • This single parent made $15,700 in 2009 and has three children. 
    • She dealt with a layoff at the beginning of the year and collected $2,400 in unemployment benefits.

    Thanks to the Recovery Act, this single mom making $15,700 in 2009 is eligible for $1,233 in new or expanded 2009 tax credits – plus her unemployment benefits are tax-free.

    Her employer adjusted her withholding last year to reflect the Making Work Pay Credit, and she collected an extra $400 in her paychecks in 2009 – and will continue to collect this credit in 2010.  She also will collect an extra $833 in Earned Income Tax Credit this year since the Recovery Act increased the maximum EITC for families with three or more children from $4,824 to $5,657.  And thanks to the Recovery Act, she will not have to pay taxes on the $2,400 in unemployment benefits she collected in 2009.  Typically unemployment benefit income is taxable.

    Tax Savings:

    • strong>$400 in Making Work Pay Credit: Over 110 million working Americans qualify for the Recovery Act’s Making Work Pay Credit, saving them up to $400 per year ($800 for married couples filing a joint return).  Qualifying Americans should have received the credit incrementally in paychecks in 2009 and should continue to collect it throughout 2010.
    • $833 increase in Earned Income Tax Credit to $5,657: The Recovery Act has expanded the Earned Income Tax Credit for larger families (with 3 or more children) up to $5,657.
    • Up to $2,400 in Unemployment Benefits Tax-Free: Americans who collected unemployment benefits in 2009 can benefit from the Recovery Act tax exemption that makes the first $2,400 of those benefits tax-free.

    First-Time Homebuyer Couple, Purchased New Car

    • This married couple made $80,000 in 2009 and closed on their first home last year that cost $125,000. 
    • They also bought a $17,000 new car in St. Louis, MO in 2009.

    Thanks to the Recovery Act, this married couple is eligible for $8,800 in new or expanded 2009 tax credits plus they can deduct the state and local sales taxes they paid on their new car.

    Their employers adjusted their withholding last year to reflect the Making Work Pay Credit, and they collected an extra $800 in their paychecks in 2009 – and will continue to collect this credit in 2010.  When they file their taxes this year, they will collect an additional $8,000 through the First-Time Homebuyer Tax Credit because they purchased their first home in 2009 (this credit is refundable).  They will also be able to deduct the state and local taxes they paid when they bought their new car last year.

    Tax Savings:

    • $800 in Making Work Pay Credit: Over 110 million working Americans qualify for the Recovery Act’s Making Work Pay Credit, saving them up to $400 per year ($800 for married couples filing a joint return).  Qualifying Americans should have received the credit incrementally in paychecks in 2009 and should continue to collect it throughout 2010.
    •  $8,000 in First Time Homebuyers Tax Credit: First-time homebuyers who purchased in 2009 can collect a refundable tax credit of up to $8,000 with no payback requirement unless they sell the home within three years of purchase.
    • Deduction of State and Local Taxes Paid on New Vehicle: The Recovery Act’s New Vehicle Purchase Incentive provides a tax deduction for state and local taxes or other fees paid on up to $49,500 of the price of that vehicle purchased between February 17, 2009 and December 31, 2009.

The White House

Office of the Vice President

Vice President Biden Announces 10,000 Recovery Act Transportation Projects Now Under Way

As Spring Construction Season Begins, Active Transportation Projects Totaling $29.8 Billion are Creating Jobs Across the Country

DURHAM, NC – Vice President Joe Biden today announced that 10,000 transportation projects are now under way in all 50 states and the District of Columbia thanks to the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA).  Projects are considered under way when a contractor has been hired, the project has received official notice to proceed, and work has begun.  This milestone comes just over a year after the Recovery Act was signed into law and as the spring construction season is getting into full swing. 

The Vice President made the announcement as part of a visit to North Carolina - the state where the 10,000th project, the Sanford Bypass, will break ground.  The contractor, DHG Infrastructure, says they are hiring more than 45 employees to work on the project.  The $26 million project, which was accelerated by the Recovery Act, will redirect commercial truck traffic away from the heart of the city of Sanford, relieving congestion and maintenance problems, and increasing access for businesses to relocate and expand in the area.

“The 10,000 transportation projects under way are already helping put us on the road to economic recovery, but there is even more to come,” said Vice President Biden. “This spring, Recovery Act projects will pick up the pace across the country, providing even more jobs improving America’s roads, highways and bridges.”

In just one year, the Recovery Act has improved more than 33,000 miles of pavement across the United States; helped purchase nearly 12,000 buses, vans and rail vehicles; helped construct or renovate more than 850 transit facilities and provided more than $620 million in preventive maintenance.  This helped save and create jobs, and maintained and enhanced the nation’s transportation network. In addition to the 10,000 projects already under way, construction activity is expected to ramp up even further in the next few months as temperatures warm and new projects break ground.

“Every new Recovery Act project means workers back on the job, paying their rent or mortgage, putting food on the table for their families,” said U.S. Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood.  “These 10,000 projects are strengthening our economy and creating jobs right now, and there are more projects still to come this spring.”

During the first week of March, the U.S. Department of Transportation successfully met an aggressive deadline to “obligate” – or commit funds to specific projects – 100 percent of their Recovery Act highway and transit formula dollars.  That important milestone means that for every Recovery Act project, contracts can be bid, workers can be hired and construction can begin on projects that create jobs and drive economic growth.

In addition to the Sanford Bypass Project, some other major Recovery Act-funded projects under construction include:

I-4/Selmon Expressway in Tampa. Because of $105 million in Recovery Act funds, construction began earlier this month on the $653 million I-4/Selmon Expressway Crosstown Connector in Tampa.  The project will provide direct access for the more than 12,000 commercial trucks that travel through downtown to and from the Port of Tampa every day.

DART Orange Line in Dallas.  Recovery Act funds totaling $61.2 million are helping Dallas Area Rapid Transit construct the 14-mile Orange Line, which will eventually link Downtown Dallas and the Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport.

Nelsonville Bypass in Southeast Ohio.  Ohio is constructing a new, 8.5 mile, four-lane highway to divert freight traffic from U.S. 33, which bottlenecks in the town of Nelsonville. Recovery Act funds totaling $138 million are helping fund this final upgrade of the U.S. 33 corridor in southeast Ohio that will take traffic off local roads, which carry 1,700 trucks a day on one of the busiest truck routes in the state.

Merritt Parkway, near Fairfield, Conn.   Recovery Act funds in the amount of $67 million are improving safety for the estimated 60,000 daily drivers who use the Merritt Parkway by widening shoulders and installing or updating guard rails along 9.3 miles of one of the East Coast’s most congested commuter routes.

South Westnedge Avenue Interchange on I-94 near Kalamazoo, Mich. Last fall, the Recovery Act fully funded this $47.7 million project to reconstruct the interchange and ease traffic congestion along this key Midwest corridor that serves an estimated 87,000 drivers daily. One additional lane will be added in each direction to widen the road from four lanes to six, allowing cars and trucks to move through Kalamazoo more safely and easily.

The White House

Office of the Vice President

Remarks by Vice President Biden: The Enduring Partnership Between the United States and Israel

Tel Aviv University

VICE PRESIDENT BIDEN:  Mr. President, thank you for that lovely introduction.  And thank you for hosting me at such a world-class center for higher learning.  It’s been a long time since I’ve been back on campus.  I was a mere child, a 31-year-old Senator when I was here the first time.  But it’s a privilege to be back. 

The past few days being back in Israel has been wonderful.  It’s -- it’s been an honor to be here, and it’s been -- I wanted everyone to know with whom I spoke, and all of you to know, the deep friendship and kinship I feel as well as President Obama feels for this magnificent country.  I should probably be used to it by now, but I’m always struck every time I come back by the hospitality of the Israeli people.  No matter how long I’ve been away -- and I imagine you’ve experienced this yourself -- the instant I return, I feel like I’m at home.  I feel like I never left.  I feel like things just picked up where they left off the day that I left being here.  So please accept my warmest gratitude, as well that of President Obama, who knows as well as I do that the United States has no better friend in the community of nations than Israel.  Thank you so much.  (Applause.) 

I see some of my U.S. friends down there in the front row.  I won’t identify them and ruin their reputations.  But they -- they know where my love for this country comes.  It started at my dinner table with my father, who you would refer to as a righteous Christian.  My father -- my dinner table was a place where we gathered to have conversation and incidentally eat, as opposed to the other way around.  And my father -- my father’s support for Israel is outrage for what had happened in the ‘30s and the failure of the world to act, his support for the creation of the state of Israel.  It generated a feeling for Israel that began in my gut and went to my heart, and the older I got matured in my mind. 

During those sessions, my other -- my father often spoke passionately about the special connection between the Jewish people and this land.  Like many of my countrymen, I experienced the magic of Israel at a relatively young age -- at least it looks young now from my perspective.  When I first visited here in 1973 on the eve of the Yom Kippur War, your nation was only a quarter-century old, and I was not much older.  Already, Israel had a tragic as well as triumphal history behind it, and as we all know, some very difficult days ahead.  Already, there was a sense here that anything was possible.

My very first meeting in Israel was maybe the one that I carry closest to my heart.  My first meeting in Israel -- I was invited by a woman named Golda Meir, who I admired from afar as millions of Americans did.  We sort of claimed her as our own.  I know she is Israeli, but we claimed her.  We claimed her as our own in America.  And I remember walking into her office as a young senator being literally in awe as she was so gracious the way she accepted me and gave me a hug more like my mother would, sat down behind her desk and while chain-smoking -- she had a series of maps behind her.  And there were six or seven maps.  She kept flipping the maps up and down, and explaining to me what exactly had happened in the Six-Day War.  And there was a young man sitting next to me, a guy named Yitzhak Rabin, who I met for the first time.  And as she pulled those maps up and down, educating this young senator as to the -- to the threat that this young nation of Israel was facing, I guess she could see the sense of apprehension on my face.  I found myself being -- the more she talked about 2 million Jews -- and back then, by the way, there were not that many Arabs compared to today.  The numbers were much smaller, but they were still exponentially larger than the Jewish population.  And she went through the threats that were faced, and how it had come through the battles of the Six-Day War.  She spoke so passionately about her country.

And I was concerned.  I guess it showed in my face.  I was concerned that surrounded by the neighbors who denied the very right of the nation to exist, how were you going to do this?  The Prime Minister caught me off guard.  After about an hour and a half, she looked at me and she said. “Senator, would you like a photo opportunity?”  And I thought, what the hell is a photo opportunity?  And I said, “Well, yes, Madam Prime Minister.”  We opened those double doors and we walked out into the ending room of her office and there was a lot of press there -- a lot, half a dozen photographers and cameras.  (Laughter.) 

For me, that was a lot, not like today.  And they started snapping pictures.  And while looking straight ahead, she talked to me without turning her head.  She said, “Senator, don’t look so worried.”  She said -- I said, “Well I am, Madam President, and because I just had this hour and a half.”  And she said -- she said, “We Israelis have a secret weapon.”  And I thought she only had said this to me, no one else in the whole world.  She said, “We have a secret weapon in our struggle with the Arabs.”  And I thought she was going to tell me about a new secret weapon.  (Laughter.)  And I found myself turning and looking at her, and the press -- because this was all just a stand-up photo opportunity.  And she said, “We have a secret weapon.  We have nowhere else to go.”

That trip was almost four decades ago, but I remember it as clearly as if it happened yesterday.  And it drove home all that my father had spoken of -- randomly, occasionally but consistently -- over the previous 15 years.  And he told me as a young boy, that Israel and Jews in the world had no place else to go with absolute certitude.  This place, it gets in your blood.  It never really lets you go.  

I expect that there are several people in the audience today who have had similar experiences who first came here as tourists or religious pilgrims and ended up making aliyah and launching a new life in northern kibbutz, or a small town in Negev, or in the beautiful city by the sea.  Throughout my career, Israel has not only remained close to my heart but it has been the center of my work as a United States Senator and now as Vice President of the United States.

I have had the privilege of returning many times, and to know every one of your prime ministers over these past three and a half decades, including your current leader who is a close, personal friend of over 33 years, Bibi Netanyahu. 

Israel’s history is a tale of remarkable accomplishment.  On a perilous patch of desert with sparse natural resources, you have built perhaps the most innovative economy in the world.  You have more start-ups per capita than any nation on the planet, more firms on the NASDAQ exchange than anyone except the United States, and more U.S. patents per capita than any country, including my own.  You have cultivated the gifts of 11 Nobel laureates, the great -- and as well as those of the great Itzhak Perlman, and in recent years you have Shai Agassi, whose path-breaking work on electric automobiles began not very far from where I stand.

Israel owes this remarkable and yet improbable success, I believe, to your democratic traditions, to its patriotic and pioneering citizens, and as with my own country, to its willingness to welcome the persecuted and the downtrodden from far-flung corners of the globe.  All this gives life to Theodor Herzl’s famous slogan, which I was reminded of this week while visiting his grave on this 150th anniversary of his birth.  He said, “If you will it, it is no dream.”

I had said in a speech in the United States some years ago for which I got some criticism, I said were I a Jew, I would be a Zionist.  And it got a lot of national publicity, how could I say that, until I was reminded by my father you need not be a Jew to be a Zionist. 

Ladies and gentlemen, just over 60 years ago, Israel’s founders gave life to Herzl’s dream by willing Israel into being.  Since then, this nation has become more than an undeniable fact, more than just a legacy of age-old ties between a people and a land, though it is both of those things.  Your very existence is also a hard-won and inviolable right.

Israel’s unique relationship with the United States means that you need not bear that heavy burden alone.  Our nations’ unbreakable bond borne of common values, interwoven cultures, and mutual interests has spanned the entirety of Israel’s history.  And it’s -- it’s impervious to any shifts in either country and either country’s partisan politics.  No matter what challenges we face, this bond will endure.  As a result, generations of Israelis and Americans and American-Israelis have kept a foot in each country, enriching both our nations and peoples.  I met with some of your leading high-tech leaders earlier, prior to coming to the stage.  And they have a foot in both countries, many of them. 

While these close relationships span the realm of commerce and education, medicine and technology, culture and the arts, at its core is an ironclad commitment to security -- Israel and my own country’s.  Every day, Israel faces bravely threats no country should have to endure.  No parent should their child to schools equipped with air raid sirens in the year 2010.  No government should be expected to turn a blind eye while an enemy calls for its destruction.

I am here to remind you, though I hope you will never forget, that America stands with you shoulder-to-shoulder in facing these threats.  President Obama and I represent an unbroken chain of American leaders who have understood this critical, strategic relationship.  As the President said recently, “I will never waver from ensuring Israel’s security and helping them secure themselves in what is a very hostile region.”

President Obama has not only stated those words, he has translated that vow into action in his first year in ways both known to the public and not known to you, as Prime Minister Netanyahu eloquently acknowledged the other day when he and I were meeting and had a short press conference that followed.  Beyond providing Israel nearly $3 billion in military aid each and every year, we have reinvigorated defense consultations and redoubled our efforts to ensure that Israel’s -- that Israel’s forces will always maintain a qualitative edge.

We lead the fight in international institutions against the insidious campaign to challenge Israel’s legitimacy and question its right to self-defense.  Since our administration came into office, our militaries have expanded cooperation -- not maintained, expanded -- cooperation on joint exercises and missile defense.  Last fall, more than 1,000 American troops participated in Juniper Cobra ballistic missile defense exercises, the largest such drill to date. 

And it should go without saying, but I’ll say it anyway so there’s no doubt, the United States stands resolutely beside Israel against the scourge of terrorism, from which both of our countries have suffered badly.  No one in this audience needs to be reminded of the fear and devastation caused by suicide bombers or by rockets from Southern Lebanon or from Gaza.  The band of Israeli territory outside the rocket’s range grows narrower all the time.  And I, as an American, continue to marvel -- continue to marvel at the residents in the region being able to resolutely get up every morning of the communities -- other communities that in fact are within the bulls eye, the crosshairs, how you respond to that with defiance and not fear.  American support for Israel is not just an act of friendship; it’s an act of fundamental national self-interest on the part of the United States, a key component to our broader efforts to secure this region and a wider world, as well as our own security.

Ladies and gentlemen, I’ve heard it raised occasionally in editorials in this country and others wondering about our resolve.  Make no mistake about America’s resolve.  Make no mistake about America’s resolve.  We have 200,000 young women and men -- we are spending a quarter of a trillions a year.  We have had tens of thousands of fallen angels and multiple times more injured in the service of our nation deployed far from home  in Iraq and Afghanistan.  There, and elsewhere, we are aggressively confronting violent extremism and radical ideologies that threaten not only you and the United States, but our allies as well. 

But our approach consists of more than the awesome military might we possess and are willing to use.  From the very start, President Obama has called for a new era of diplomatic engagement with both our friends -- some of whom we had alienated the previous years -- as well as -- as well as those who are not viewed as our friends. 

In Cairo last June, he launched a new beginning between the United States and the Muslim communities around the world.  Later this month, the President will continue this engagement by visiting Indonesia, home of the world’s largest Muslim population where he lived as a boy.  We are absolutely convinced that this approach will improve not only our security, but as a consequence, your security.

A new generation of Muslims is coming to age, more numerous than its predecessors, more dispersed geographically, and because of technology, more closely connected with each other and with the forces and events that shape the world we share.  If we can rollback recent tensions and redirect crude stereotypes -- theirs and our own -- it will make America safer and our closest allies, like Israel, safer as well in our view.

We are returning an ambassador to Damascus and elevating our diplomatic contacts.  We do so with our eyes wide open both to our deep concerns with Syrian actions that has threatened your security and the stability of the region, and also to the hope of a better relationship and peace between Israel and Syria.  And we will continue to help strengthen the institutions in Lebanon and work to implement the U.N. Security Council resolutions aimed at ending the flow of weapons to Hizballah and disarming this threat to Israel, as well as to the civilian Lebanese. 

With other Arab and Muslim countries, we are revitalizing a partnership in education, science, technology, business, culture; because the best way to counter the lure of extreme ideology is to offer future opportunity.  In speaking with your Prime Minister recently, he talked about the high birth rates in neighboring poor countries, including Yemen, and the need for us to provide economic outlets and opportunities so there is an option.

Looming over all our efforts in this region is the shadow cast by Iran, home of a -- home of a great civilization and proud people who suffer from a leadership that flouts the will of the world by pursuing nuclear weapons and supporting terrorism and terrorists.  Over the past decade, Iran has become more, not less dangerous, building thousands of centrifuges that churn out nuclear material, funding and arming dangerous proxies like Hizballah and Hamas, intimidating both its neighbors as well as its own citizens.

From the moment we were elected, President Obama decided that we needed a new approach.  He has sought to engage Iran’s leaders for the purpose of changing their conduct, knowing full well how difficult that may be, but also knowing that if they fail to respond, we would be in a much stronger position to rally the international community to impose consequences for their actions.  

Iran thus far has refused to cooperate, as the whole world has witnessed.  Instead it has engaged in more violations of international obligations, like undeclared enrichment facilities that were recently exposed by the United States, and the decision to enrich uranium to 20 percent to build more -- and to build more enrichment facilities, all violations.  It rejected a good-faith offer to exchange its low enriched uranium for fuel that could power a research reactor to produce medical isotopes.  And it continues to deploy thugs to lock up and beat down those who bravely take to the streets in a quest for basic justice in their own country.

The Iranian leadership’s continuing defiance has set the stage for our efforts to mobilize the world to impose meaningful sanctions that clarify for the Iranian leadership the stark choice:  follow international rules or face harsh penalties and further isolation. 

You have to acknowledge that today Iran is more isolated with its own people as well as the region and in the world than it has been at any time in the past two decades.  The United States is determined to prevent Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons, period.  I know -- I know that for Israel -- (applause) -- I know that for Israel, there is no greater existential strategic threat.  Trust me, we get that.  It’s also a threat -- the acquisition of nuclear weapons by Iran is also a threat to the security -- short-term, mid-term, and long-term -- to the United States of America. 

And many other countries in this region and around the world strongly oppose a nuclear-armed Iran.  It would threaten them, trigger an arms race in this region, and undermine the efforts to stop the spread of nuclear weapons, which would be a sorry outcome for such a promising beginning of the 21st century.  For all those reasons, confronting this challenge is and must be a top national priority for the United States of America.

We are determined to keep the pressure on Iran so that it will change its course.  And as we do, we will also be seeking to improve relations between the Israelis and Palestinians.  They are connected indirectly, but there is a relationship.  We call on Arab states who share a mutual concern about Iran -- we call on Arab states to support the effort to bring peace between Palestinians and the Israelis, and to take their own steps forward for peace with Israel.

These are critical goals in their own rights.  Their pursuit also denies Tehran the opportunity to exploit the differences between Israelis and Palestinians, and Israelis and the Arab world, and to distract the many countries that stand united against Iran’s pursuit of nuclear weapons and the support of terrorism.  Building peace and security between a Jewish democratic state of Israel and a viable, independent Palestinian state is profoundly in Israel’s interest, if you will forgive me for suggesting that.  (Applause.)

I’ve learned never tell another man or another country what’s in their own interest, but it seems so -- it’s also profoundly in the interest of Palestinians.  And it’s fundamentally in the national security interest of the United States of America.

Ladies and gentlemen, in my experience one necessary precondition for progress is that the rest of the world knows this.  There is no space -- this is what they must know, every time progress is made, it’s made when the rest of the world knows there is absolutely no space between the United States and Israel when it comes to security, none.  No space.  (Applause.)  That’s the only time when progress has been made.   

And I applaud Prime Minister Netanyahu’s recent call for two states for two people, lending a vital voice to what the Israelis, Palestinians, their Arab neighbors all know in their heart to be true.  Ladies and gentlemen, the status quo is not sustainable. 

It’s no secret the demographic realities make it increasingly difficult for Israel to remain both a Jewish homeland and a democratic country in the absence of the Palestinian state.  Genuine steps toward a two-state solution are also required to empower those living to live in peace and security with Israel and to undercut their rivals who will never accept that future. 

For Israel, then, this is about both preserving your identity and achieving the security you deserve, lasting security.  

For Palestinians, statehood will not just fulfill a legitimate and long-sought aspiration common to all peoples; it will restore the fundamental dignity and self-respect that their current predicament denies them.  I understand why both sides are skeptical.  I’ve been doing this for a long time, not as long as my friend, Dennis Ross who is with me -- Ross, who is with me -- Ross who is with me.  He is with me.  (Laughter and applause.)  He has even more experience in the nitty-gritty of this than I do.  We understand why both sides are skeptical.  We’ve been down this road before and so have you, which every time makes it a little harder to go down the road again.

But I know -- I know that Israel’s faith in the prospects for peace have been shaken by the searing experience of withdrawing from Lebanon and from Gaza, only to be rewarded with rocket fire and ambushes across your border.  I know you’ve been frustrated by the unwillingness of some Palestinian leaders to curb incitement and take the risk that peace requires, just as when the West Bank checkpoints proliferate and settlements grow, the Palestinians experience their own crisis in confidence and come to doubt Israeli intentions.

And we all know what happens when cynicism festers -- distrust, harsh words, and eventually violence.  The cycle of unintended consequences, which has happened more times than I can count, has led you to build more walls that may offer short term relief, but will not bring the sustained security that you seek.  This is no way to live.  This cycle must be broken.

In the Middle East -- in the Middle East that I first visited, peace between Israelis and its neighbors seemed absolutely impossible even to discuss.  Those who suggested a two-state solution -- and no one did that, actually.  But had someone suggested a two-state solution, they would have been considered either demented or dreamers.  But then, Israel, Egypt and Jordan all acted boldly to end decades of conflict.  Over time, other contacts have emerged between Israelis and Arabs.

And there is now an Arab Peace Initiative that makes an important contribution by envisioning a future in which Israel is secure and at peace with its Arab neighbors.  Turning these visions into reality is among the hardest challenges we face, but we have to face it.  There is no alternative.  (Applause.) 

As Prime Minister Netanyahu said, “all sides” -- “all sides need to take action in good faith if peace is to have a chance.”  But it’s hard, my words, it’s hard.  While it’s always easier to point fingers, it’s time for Israeli and Palestinian leaders to acknowledge each others’ steps to heed this call, even when more remains to be done -- and for the world to do the same thing.

Your Prime Minister is roundly criticized in other parts of the world, but your Prime Minister has endorsed the idea of a Palestinian State.  He has removed roadblocks and checkpoints that choked the West Bank.  These were difficult decisions -- not all that was asked for on the other side, but these were difficult decisions.

It was also difficult for the Palestinian Authority to take a step that it has to take to combat incitement and reform the institutions it’s reforming.  Of an even greater note, it’s building an effective -- for the first time a genuinely effective security force to uphold law and order, in my view, with the potential to do it throughout the West Bank and throughout the Palestinian territories. 

President Obama and I believe that -- believe that in President Abbas and Prime Minister Fayyad, men who I’ve known for a long time, Israeli leaders finally have willing partners who share the goal of peace between two states and have the competence to establish a nation.  Their commitment to peace is an opportunity that must be seized.  It must be seized.  Who has there been better to date, to have the prospect of settling this with?  But instead, two days ago the Israeli government announced it would advance planning for new housing units in East Jerusalem.  I realize this is a very touchy subject in Israel as well as in my own country.  But because that decision, in my view, undermined the trust required for productive negotiations, I -- and at the request of President Obama condemned it immediately and unequivocally.  (Applause.)

Now, some legitimately may have been surprised that such a strong supporter of Israel for the last 37 years and beyond, but 37 years as an elected official, how I can speak out so strongly given the ties that I share as well as my country shares with Israel.  But quite frankly, folks, sometimes only a friend can deliver the hardest truth.  And I appreciate, by the way, the response your Prime Minister today announced this morning that he is putting in place a process to prevent the recurrence of that sort of that sort of events and who clarified that the beginning of actual construction on this particular project would likely take several years -- a statement he put out.  That’s significant, because it gives negotiations the time to resolve this, as well as other outstanding issues.  Because when it was announced, I was on the West Bank.  Everyone there thought it had meant immediately the resumption of the construction of 1,600 new units.   

Look, folks, as we move forward I promise you this:  The United States will continue to hold both sides accountable for any statements or any actions that inflame tensions or prejudice the outcome of these talks.  The most important thing is for these talks to go forward and go promptly and go forward in good faith.  We can’t delay, because when progress is postponed, extremists exploit our differences and they sow hate. 

These indirect talks everyone knows are just that, indirect talks, indirect negotiations.  The only path, though, to finally resolving the permanent status issues, including borders, security, refugees, and Jerusalem are direct talks.  Our administration -- (applause) -- but you’ve got to begin.  The process has to begin.  Our administration fully supports this effort led by our Special Envoy, Senator George Mitchell, a seasoned negotiator and a proven peacemaker in whom the President, the Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, and I have complete and utter confidence.

We believe that through good-faith negotiations, the parties can mutually agree to an outcome which ends the conflict and reconciles the Palestinian goal of an independent and viable state based on the ‘67 lines with agreed swaps and Israel’s goal of a Jewish state with secure and recognized borders that reflect subsequent developments and meet Israel’s security requirements.

Many challenges remain.  Gilad Shalit is still in captivity and we pray every day for the day when he will come home and be reunited with his family.  (Applause.)  Ladies and gentlemen, incitement against Israel continues as do attacks on the legitimacy of Jewish ties to this ancient land. 

And the ongoing threat from Gaza still in Hamas’s grip, and from Hizballah in Southern Lebanon, remind us that your security is far from assured.  Meanwhile, though, our policy and our concerns about Israel’s settlements remain unchanged.  And while Hamas has condemned Gaza’s populace to misery and hopelessness, Israel too has a responsibility to address their many needs.  That’s why we’re working with the Israeli government to do just that and address some of legitimate needs without -- without further endangering Israel’s security.

Ladies and gentlemen, I’m a Roman Catholic.  And no one -- and I’m no expert on the Old Testament.  But I know we’re gathered today between Purim and Passover, holidays that teach us about salvation and redemption.  It was written in the Book of Isaiah that Israel shall be “a light unto the nations.”  And yet, for more than six decades, Israelis have often sought but never found the salvation of a lasting peace. And it is very hard -- it is very hard to be a beacon for others, when you are constantly at war.  To end this historic conflict, both sides must be historically bold, because if each waits stubbornly for the other to act first, this will go on and we’ll be waiting for an eternity. 

Back home, I am sometimes called an optimist, but I am an optimist about the prospects for peace because I am a realist.  And to paraphrase Golda Meir, there is nowhere else to go.  There is nowhere else to go.  I cannot tell you that peace will come easily, you know better.  In human history, it rarely has.  But I can promise you, both Israelis and Palestinians, that the rewards for success will be boundless and that so long as well-intentioned people are engaged in this struggle, the United States will be your partner.

Thank you.  And may God protect you, and may God protect Israel.  Thank you very much.  (Applause.) 

The White House

Office of the Vice President

Remarks by Vice President Biden and Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas

Muq’ata
Ramallah

PRESIDENT ABBAS:  In the name of God the merciful, the compassionate, it is our pleasure to welcome the Vice President, our friend, Joseph Biden, here in Ramallah.  This visit comes as an expression of the interest that President Obama’s administration has according to the peace process and to achieve the two-state solution.

The establishment of the Palestinian state and the 1967 borders -- the decisions that the Israeli government has announced over the past two days and the establishment and the construction of thousands of new units in the Palestinian territories constitute an undermining of the confidence and all the efforts that were exerted over the past months to launch the indirect negotiations.  The decision to approve these negotiations was taken with great difficulties within the Arab Committee and the leadership entities of the Palestinian people.  And in order to reiterate our intention to support the American efforts to launch the peace process, to revive the peace process, the Israeli resettlement policies and particularly, in Jerusalem, threaten these negotiations and we ask that these decisions are revoked.

I reiterate, Mr. Vice President, our commitment to peace as a strategic option, just and comprehensive, a permanent peace on all tracks, including the Syrian and the Lebanese tracks that would lead to ending the Israeli occupation that started in 1967, based on the roadmap plan, including the Arab Peace Initiative.  I would like to address the Israelis’ settling.  The time has come to make peace, peace under a two-state solution -- based on the two-state solution, the state of Israel that lives in peace and security alongside the state of Palestine on the borders of the 4th of June 1967 with its capitol East Jerusalem.  And here it is important to speak about the siege that is imposed on Gaza strip that should be lifted in order to provide for the basic needs of our people in Gaza strip in addition to the construction materials that are necessary, because there are 25,000 houses that are in debris and there are hundreds of thousands of Palestinians who live without shelter and need houses.  And, therefore, we ask that the Gaza strip is provided with construction materials.

Again, I would like to call out to the Israeli government not to waste this opportunity to make peace.  I call upon this government to stop its settlement policies and to stop imposing fights on the ground and to give the efforts of President Obama’s administration and Representative Mitchell’s efforts the opportunity to succeed.  Thank you, Mr. Vice President.

VICE PRESIDENT BIDEN:  Mr. President, thank you very much for your hospitality and for the opportunity to be with you again.  I greatly appreciate the time you’ve given me, you and the Palestinian Authority.  I also had the pleasure of meeting earlier this morning with your Prime Minister Fayyad in -- here in Ramallah.  I must say I admire the courage and conviction of the two of you, whom President Obama and I consider willing partners in the quest for a lasting peace in the region.

Our administration is fully committed to the Palestinian people and to achieving a Palestinian state that is independent, viable, and contiguous.  Everyone should know -- everyone should know by now that there is no viable alternative to a two-state solution, which must be an integral part of any comprehensive peace plan.  The United States considers the goal to be not only in the interest of the Palestinians and the Israelis, but in the United States’ interest as well.  We also believe that the divide between the Israelis and Palestinians can only be resolved by negotiations.  The indirect talks being launched should lead to direct negotiations, which will necessarily reach -- which would be necessary to reach an agreement on the permanent status -- status issues which you referenced, Mr. President, such as borders, security, refugees, and Jerusalem.  And the United States pledges to play an active as well as a sustained role in these talks.  It’s incumbent on both parties to build an atmosphere of support for negotiations and not to complicate them.

Yesterday -- yesterday, the decision by the Israeli government to advance planning for new housing units in east Jerusalem undermined that very trust, the trust that we need right now in order to begin as well as produce -- have profitable negotiations.  That is why I immediately condemned the action.

As we move forward, the United States will hold both sides accountable for any statements or actions that inflame tensions or prejudice the outcome of talks, as this decision did.  The United States strongly supports the Palestinian Authority’s efforts to build as well as strengthen its institutions and develop the economy of a state, including Prime Minister Fayyad’s two-year institution building plan.

We must find a way to improve the lives of Gazans, as well.  The Palestinian Authority offers the possibility of a peaceful, independent, and more prosperous future rather than the false promises of extremists.  A historic peace is going to require both the Palestinians as well as the Israelis, as well as their leaders, to be historically bold.

And I promise you, Mr. President, the United States will always stand with those who take the risk that peace requires.  Again, Mr. President, I thank you very much for the courage you’ve shown in moving forward.  I thank you for the hospitality you’ve extended to me and my delegation.  And I look forward to seeing you many more times.

Thank you.

PRESIDENT ABBAS:  Thank you.

The White House

Office of the Vice President

Remarks by Vice President Biden at Yad Vashem Memorial

Jerusalem
Tuesday, March 9, 2010

 VICE PRESIDENT BIDEN:  I want to thank our hosts for showing us through Yad Vashem.  As a young father, when I introduced each of our sons -- who are grown men now -- to Europe at age 15, I took them first to Dachau for them to understand as young men the human capacity -- ability of mankind to be so brutal.  But also, I took my son here to Israel to let him know that the indomitable spirit of the human being is not able to be snuffed out.

What I wrote in the book is as a fan of the Irish poet William Butler Yeats.  Writing about his Ireland, he said, “Too long a suffering makes a stone of the heart.”  What I wrote here is that every day, Israel makes a lie of the poet’s words -- ”too long a suffering makes a stone of the heart” -- because for world Jewry, Israel is the heart.  For world Jewry, Israel is the light.  For world Jewry, Israel is the hope.  If anyone ever wondered about that, they ought to take the tour of the museum.  They would not doubt it again.  The word -- phrase “never again” is used so often it almost has lost its meaning.  But, again, all you have to do is walk through -- walk through Yad Vashem and understand how incredible -- how incredible the journey has been and the spirit a world Jewry and that Israel is such a central part to its existence.

Thank you.

The White House

Office of the Vice President

Statement by Vice President Joseph R. Biden, Jr.

Jerusalem

"I condemn the decision by the government of Israel to advance planning for new housing units in East Jerusalem. The substance and timing of the announcement, particularly with the launching of proximity talks, is precisely the kind of step that undermines the trust we need right now and runs counter to the constructive discussions that I’ve had here in Israel. We must build an atmosphere to support negotiations, not complicate them. This announcement underscores the need to get negotiations under way that can resolve all the outstanding issues of the conflict. The United States recognizes that Jerusalem is a deeply important issue for Israelis and Palestinians and for Jews, Muslims and Christians.  We believe that through good faith negotiations, the parties can mutually agree on an outcome that realizes the aspirations of both parties for Jerusalem and safeguards its status for people around the world.  Unilateral action taken by either party cannot prejudge the outcome of negotiations on permanent status issues.   As George Mitchell said in announcing the proximity talks, "we encourage the parties and all concerned to refrain from any statements or actions which may inflame tensions or prejudice the outcome of these talks.""