The White House

Office of the Vice President

Readout of Vice President Biden's Calls Today with Iraqi Leaders

Vice President Biden spoke today to Iraqi leaders to commend them for working together to find a solution to the election law impasse.  He encouraged them to finalize an arrangement that would be fair to all sides and that would allow national elections, as desired by the Iraqi people and as outlined in Iraq's constitution.

The White House

Office of the Vice President

Statement by Vice President Biden on the 10th Anniversary of the International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women

“Violence against women is found in every culture around the world. It is one of our most pervasive global problems, yet it is preventable.  When gang rape is a weapon of war, when women are beaten behind closed doors, or when young girls are trafficked in brothels and fields - we all suffer. This violence robs women and girls of their full potential, causes untold human suffering, and has great social and economic costs.  On this 10th anniversary of the International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women, I urge all Americans to join with the international community in calling for an end to these abuses.”

The White House

Office of the Vice President

Readout of Vice President Biden's Call with Ambassador Hill

The Vice President and U.S. Ambassador to Iraq Christopher Hill conferred by telephone today about the status of Iraq’s election law.  Amb. Hill updated the Vice President on the situation and they discussed efforts to ratify the law so that elections can go forward in Iraq early next year.

The White House

Office of the Vice President

Readout of Vice President Biden’s Call to Georgian President Saakashvili

Vice President Biden called Georgian President Saakashvili on November 18, 2009, to discuss democratic reform in Georgia and to reiterate the United States’ strong support for Georgia’s sovereignty and territorial integrity. The Vice President underscored the importance of sustaining the commitment to democratic reform to fulfill the promise of the Rose Revolution. He also emphasized that all parties should live up to their August 12th and September 8th ceasefire commitments and avoid destabilizing actions.

The White House

Office of the Vice President

Vice President Biden Hosts Conference Calls with Govenors, Mayors, and County Officials to Discuss Recovery Act Implementation

Earlier today, the Vice President hosted two conference calls with governors, mayors, and county officials from across the country to discuss implementation of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act.

The following elected officials participated:

GOVERNORS:
• Governor Jim Gibbons (R-NV)
• Governor Jack Markell (D-DE)
• Governor Deval Patrick (D-MA)
• Governor Mark Sanford (R-SC)

MAYORS & COUNTY OFFICIALS:
• Mayor Robert Cluck (R – Arlington, TX)
• Mayor Bob Duffy (D – Rochester, NY)
• Mayor Ed Tauer (R – Aurora, CO)
• County Executive Brian Hughes (D – Mercer County, NJ)
• County Commissioner Donald Larson (D – Brookings County, SD)
 

The White House

Office of the Vice President

Recovery Act Reaches 10,000 Transportation Projects Nationwide

Washington, DC – Vice President Joe Biden and Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood today announced that the Department of Transportation has jumpstarted more than 10,000 transportation projects across America thanks to its swift allocation of Recovery Act dollars.  As of this week, state agencies reported a total of 10,041 approved

“Just nine months in, tens of thousands of people are on the job at highway, bridge, rail and airport improvement projects across the country thanks to the quick action by the Department of Transportation putting Recovery Act dollars to work,” said Vice President Biden.  “These projects are not only providing new opportunities for hard-hit workers and businesses during tough economic times, but helping lay a strong foundation to support our 21st century economy.  This is a significant milestone on the road to recovery, but we continue to work every day to create more jobs and drive economic growth.”

“From the beginning of the Recovery Act, it has been our top priority to get money out the door quickly to create jobs and boost the economy,” said Secretary LaHood. “In less than ten months, we have spurred construction of 10,000 transportation projects across the country – many of which would have been stalled or shelved altogether without Recovery Act dollars. In addition to being economically crucial, these projects are critical investments in our national infrastructure.”

In the last week, the DOT has approved hundreds of additional transportation projects across the country, topping 10,000 projects. In Florida, a $71.2 million Recovery Act funded project will construct a new four-lane highway to relieve traffic congestion in the Jacksonville area. In Kentucky, a $25.5 million project will reconstruct approximately 5 miles of US 150 through Rockcastle County. A $37.6 million project in Lee County, North Carolina will widen the 1.8 mile Sanford Bypass to ease congestion on one of the state’s most critical highway corridors. In Schuylkill County, Pennsylvania, a $22.9 million project will repair and replace pavement along I-81.

To date, the U.S. Department of Transportation has made $48.1 billion available for highway, road, transit, bridge and airport construction and repairs nationwide.  Of that, $30.6 billion already has been obligated to fund 10,041 approved projects in 53 U.S. States and Territories, with 6,547 transportation projects underway.

DOT agencies have been doing their part to make Recovery Act funds available to states as quickly as possible for local shovel-ready transportation projects. The FAA has awarded 99 percent of its funding, $1.2 billion, for 355 airport improvement projects; FHWA has approved $20.2 billion for more than 8,500 road, bridge and highway projects; FTA has awarded $7.4 billion to state and local transit agencies for new vehicles, facility renovations and maintenance; FRA has approved 93 percent of funding available under the Amtrak Capital Grants program; and MARAD has spent 96 million, or 100 percent of its ARRA program funds, for capital improvements to small shipyards. This winter, DOT will also announce $8 billion in grants to launch high speed rail in America, and another $1.5 billion in TIGER Discretionary Grants.

The White House

Office of the Vice President

Remarks by the Vice President at Memorial Service at Fort Lewis

Fort Lewis Chapel, Fort Lewis, Washington

THE VICE PRESIDENT:  My name is Joe Biden.  And on behalf of the President of the United States, I'm here to express my condolences to all those we honor today, and others who are here -- Gold Star families, who I had the opportunity to meet; and to this base, which has suffered an extraordinary loss. 

"Of courage undaunted, possessing a firmness and a perseverance of purpose which nothing but impossibilities could divert from its direction."

Thus spoke Thomas Jefferson, describing Meriwether Lewis -- the namesake of this fort.  Lewis's undaunted courage, his firmness and perseverance of purpose -- it lives in every corner of this base, and I suspect in the character and heart of all of you who serve in this base.  And now it will be eternally embodied by the service and sacrifice of Sergeant First Class Gonzalez, Sergeant Fernando Delarosa, Sergeant Dale Griffin, Sergeant Issac Jackson, Sergeant Patrick Williamson, and Specialist Jared Stanker, and Private First Class Christopher Walz.

Just before walking into this chapel, I had the honor to meet, as I said, some Gold Star families, in addition to the families represented here of those we honor today.  And they're all -- they're all incredible people.  It amazes me, getting the chance to talk to each of them, their courage in being able to deal with what is the most tragic of losses.  They all suffer from the loss of someone who meant the world to them:  Captain John Hallett; Captain Cory Jenkins; Sergeant Andrew McConnell; Specialist Aaron Aamat; Specialist Kevin Graham; Specialist Joseph White. 

Like every Blue Star family member, as my wife and I are, you realize that but for the grace of God we could be a member of that organization -- Gold Star parents.  In a sense, those of us who've had children, husbands and wives who served in Afghanistan and Iraq, I guess we all share a sense of relief and a sense of guilt that we're here, having our loved ones back.

I've unfortunately had the occasion to be at more than one memorial service as both Vice President and as a grieving father and husband.  As Vice President, I'm here to praise and honor your sons, your husbands, your fathers, your brothers, and let you know that the President and all the United States of America honors the sacrifice they've made and that you made. 

But as a father and a husband, I'm here to share with you the pain and to grieve with you, for I know there is nothing that any of us can say, clearly nothing I can say, that is likely to heal you today -- no solace I can offer to numb the grief consuming the wives and children and parents of those who are left behind -- that void you feel in your chest, that deep black hole that feels like it's sucking you in.

I wish I could.  I wish I knew the words to say.  But from my experience, no one could say them to me, and I doubt whether I can say them to you.

The poet William Cowper said -- and I quote -- "Grief is itself a medicine."  It's a bitter medicine, but perhaps the only medicine for a time like this, the only method of the human heart to heal itself from wounds of such incredible depth. 

Not today but someday, God willing, there will be some consolation you'll find in the knowledge that your son, your husband, your brother, your father gave his life in the pursuit of the noblest of all earthly goals:  defending his family, defending his country, defending and fighting for what he believed in.  That pursuit defined each of the warriors we honor today; each of the fallen angels that we brought home.  And it will define them, and has defined them, until the very end. 

Although I had not had the occasion to meet these fallen heroes on my trips to Afghanistan, I know them.  I know them because I've read about them, I've seen where they fight and fought and died, and I've had a chance to meet some of their family members.  And I'm struck by the fact that, to a man, being a soldier wasn't just something each of them did -- it was who they were.  They were heroes.  They were warriors.  They knew the risk, yet day after day they'd saddle up and go out into no man's land and do the job.
 
I always marvel back to the days when I was with you, General Chiarelli, in Iraq -- to watch true heroism as a man or a woman gets up every morning, goes out and does the same thing they did the day before, knowing the risk that they're taking.  I marvel at all of you.  I marvel at, the 17 times I've been into those two theaters, how we trained -- you have trained.  It seems like it's in the DNA of the women and men of this country to go out, day after day, and do that job.

William Shakespeare said, "Cowards die many times before their death.  The valiant never taste death but once."  There is no greater valiance than to serve your country, to sacrifice your precious time here on Earth for the ideals that will, because of your heroism, eventually light the darkest corners of the globe. And I might add, for all of you who stayed behind, the famous quote, "Those also serve who stand and wait."  So many of you, so many of you have given so much, so much to this country, at a time when there are so few people making the sacrifice.

The country honors what has been done and what continues to be done, and honors your husbands and your wives and your daughters and your sons.  But their life goes on after they honor. But you, every single day, continue.  You understand the loneliness of being separated, the danger that your spouse or son or daughter is undertaking, and you go on every day, like every day is normal.  You're an amazing, an amazing group of people.

General Shalikashvili, you told me a long, long time ago about the spirit of these kids -- they're not kids, they're grown men and women -- but it's amazing to me, it's amazing how so few do so much for so many.  It's that valiance that animates our memories of the 833 men and women who have sacrificed their lives in Afghanistan, and of the 4,360 who we've lost in Iraq. 

It's that valiance that we remember here today at Fort Lewis.  It's that valiance that we honor today at Fort Hood.  And it's that valiance that we'll celebrate tomorrow, our nation's 91st Veterans Day.

Today, these seven men take their place on the rolls of the greatest American heroes.  And the rest of us -- all the rest of America -- should once again be reminded and rededicate ourselves to a simple proposition:  The only sacred responsibility we have as a nation -- the only sacred responsibility we have as a nation -- is to give all those we send all they need, and care for them and their families when they come home.  That's the only truly sacred obligation our government has.  

Meriwether Lewis -- soldier, explorer, a leader of men -- when speaking of his historic expedition, said of those under his command, “With such men I have everything to hope, but little to fear.”

Well, I say to all Americans today:  Knowing these seven men are watching over us now, and that our military is filled with thousands upon thousands of women and men like them -- I think we can believe that, even as we struggle with tragedy, even as we grapple with the profound loss and devastating grief, we can look up at the heavens, think of those heroes, and know with certainty that we have everything to hope, but little to fear, thanks to them.

And I say again to the families that I've had the chance to meet and those that I will not have a chance to meet:  I know these men were a great deal more than soldiers and warriors to you.  They were the father who tucked you in at night; they're the husband who knew your fears before you expressed them; they're the brother who lifted you up; they're the son that made you laugh, and made you proud.
 
They loved their classic cars, their snowboarding, their country music, rap, video games, motorcycles.  They played spades, dominoes.  They were decent, ordinary -- but yet extraordinary -- young men.  They were so much more to their country as well:  They are our warriors; they are our heroes.  They are all of our sons; and they are all of our brothers. 

And, as a nation, as hollow as it sounds to say, we grieve with you.  We don't have the sense of the profound grief you're experiencing today, but we grieve with you.  And we owe you -- we owe you more than you can ever be repaid.

Let me close on a personal note, if I may, to the family members I met today.  Although there's no way to fathom this now -- I promise you, from my own experience, that the day will come that the memory of your son, your brother, your husband will immediately bring a smile to your lips, and not a tear to your eye.  That day will come, I promise you.  But my prayer for all of you is it comes sooner than later.

May God bless you all, and may God protect our troops.

END

The White House

Office of the Vice President

Readout of Vice President Biden’s Calls to Iraqi Leaders Today

The Vice President today called several Iraqi leaders to congratulate them on the passage of amendments to Iraq’s election law, paving the way for national elections in January.  He described the vote as a victory for the people of Iraq as it will help consolidate Iraq’s democracy and security.  He looked forward to prompt approval of the law by Iraq's Presidency Council.  He expressed continuing U.S. support to the United Nations Mission in Iraq and     underscored unwavering U.S. commitment to the Iraqis as they prepare for their upcoming elections.

The White House

Office of the Vice President

Statement by Vice President Joe Biden on Today's Passage of Amendments to the Iraq Elections Law

"I congratulate Iraqi political leaders on today’s passage of amendments to the Iraq elections law.  Today’s vote by the members of the Council of Representatives will allow for parliamentary elections in January 2010, as mandated under the Iraqi constitution.  I commend the Council of Representatives for coming to agreement on the various difficult issues of considerable importance to Iraqis.  I also extend my appreciation to the United Nations Assistance Mission in Iraq for its important role in providing technical advice.  These elections will be a critical step forward in advancing national unity and forming an inclusive government.  Our commitment and friendship to Iraq remain strong."

###

 
 

The White House

Office of the Vice President

Remarks by President Obama and Chancellor Merkel of Germany before Meeting

Oval Office

9:14 A.M. EST

PRESIDENT OBAMA:  Hello, everybody.  Well, I'm just going to make a brief statement.  I am thrilled to have Chancellor Merkel here today.  I want to congratulate her again for her victory in her recent election, the formation of a government, and we are honored to have her visit the Oval Office. 

But the main reason she's here is that a great honor has been bestowed upon her.  She is going to be the first German chancellor in 50 years to address Congress -- the first chancellor ever to address a joint session of Congress.  And it is, I think, a very appropriate honor that's been bestowed on Chancellor Merkel.  Obviously the alliance between the United States and Germany has been an extraordinary pillar of the transatlantic relationship. 

We are now moving towards the 20th anniversary of the Berlin Wall coming down and Germany being reunified after so many painful years.  And this is a special moment for Chancellor Merkel, as somebody who grew up in East Germany, who understands what it's like to be under the shadow of a dictatorial regime, and to see how freedom has bloomed in Germany, how it has become the centerpiece for a extraordinarily strong European Union.

I think all of these things converge, and we are very pleased that she's going to be here to spread her view of what's taking place in the world, the many challenges we face, to members of Congress and the American people.

I should just note that Germany has been an extraordinarily strong ally on a whole host of international issues.  We appreciate the sacrifices of German soldiers in Afghanistan, and our common work there to bring peace and stability to Afghanistan and to create the environment in which the Afghan people themselves can provide for their own security.

Chancellor Merkel has been an extraordinary leader on the issue of climate change.  And the United States, Germany, and countries around the world I think are all beginning to recognize why it is so important that we work in common in order to stem the potential catastrophe that could result if we continue to see global warming continuing unabated.

And on economic issues, on issues like nuclear proliferation, consistently I found Chancellor Merkel to be thoughtful, to be energetic, and to have a strong vision of how we can move forward in the future.

So I am very pleased to be working with her as a partner.  We are thankful, Chancellor, for your leadership not just in Europe but around the world.  And I'm looking forward to many more years in which the American people and the German people are working together to expand the boundaries of freedom and to create prosperity for ordinary men and women on both sides of the Atlantic.

So thank you so much for coming.

CHANCELLOR MERKEL:  (Speaking in German.)

PRESIDENT OBAMA:  I think what she said was good.  (Laughter.)  I'm teasing.

CHANCELLOR MERKEL:  (As translated.)  First of all, I would like to thank you very much for the opportunity to be able to be here again today.  I would also like to say that it is obviously a very great honor for me to address today the joint session of Congress, both houses of Congress, as it were. 

But I'm also very much looking forward to having an exchange of view with the President again.  We have always had very intensive discussions and we're going to have those today again on issues that are of mutual interest to us and that we have been working on almost daily.  We are working and discussing issues, for example, related to climate change, Afghanistan, Iran, and obviously also the world economic situation.
    
But I wanted to use this opportunity today also to express our gratitude, my gratitude, to the American people for the support that the American people have given us throughout the process leading up to German reunification, and I think it something that I would like to later on say it very clearly also in my speech to both houses of Congress.  And let me tell you that this is something that we, the Germans, shall never forget.

PRESIDENT OBAMA:  All right, thank you guys.

                                                              
END  
9:20 A.M. EST