Tag Archive: Obama


Olivier Douliery / Getty Images

Olivier Douliery / Getty Images
President Barack Obama (C) speaks during a cabinet meeting as U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton (L) and Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta listen in the Cabinet Room at the White House January 31, 2012 in Washington, DC.

Nobody likely envies the challenge President Barack Obama faces getting his “messaging” right on Iran. He must meet the demands of election-year politics and continue to press Tehran’s back to the wall over its nuclear program, all the while avoiding the eruption of a major new Middle East war.

In an NBC interview that aired Sunday, Obama sought to apply a cold compress to the fever of war hysteria that broke out in the media last week over a report that his own Defense Secretary, Leon Panetta, believes Israel will start a war with Iran by launching air strikes on its nuclear facilities before June. The Washington Post’s David Ignatius reported the views attributed to Panetta, and the media frenzy intensified when Panetta pointedly declined to confirm or deny the report.

Obama, by contrast, told NBC’s Matt Lauer he didn’t believe that “Israel has made a decision over what they need to do” on the Iran issue, and vowed that “we are going to make sure that we work in lockstep as we proceed to try and solve this, hopefully diplomatically” – although he added that “all options” remain on the proverbial table.

(PHOTOS: Israel Drills for a Missile Strike)

But the picture remains ambiguous since Israel has long insisted that it retains the right to make its own decisions over whether to take military action – as Obama acknowledged – and it is not directly involved in any diplomatic negotiations with Iran. Israel’s primary contribution to such diplomacy, as currently exists, has been to play the “bad cop” role of threatening military strikes. Its hope is that this would either intimidate Iran into backing down (it hasn’t, despite Israel continuously reiterating the threat of military action over the past five years) or at least press the Europeans into adopting harsher sanctions against Iran in order to restrain Israel from launching a war they’re desperate to avoid. (On that front, Israel has been remarkably successful.)

Given the alarm signals issuing from Israel in recent weeks, U.S. and other Western officials have reportedly been seeking to persuade the Israelis to desist from launching a military attack. While speculating that Israel might attack by the summer, Panetta also said publicly that “we have indicated our concerns” over that prospect. And in a CBS interview last month, he stated that the Pentagon’s priority, in the event of an Israeli strike, would be to protect U.S. troops from any Iranian backlash. One report even alleged that Gen. Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, had told the Israelis on a recent visit that they should not expect the U.S. to fall in behind them if they choose to initiate a war with Iran without coordinating such a step with U.S.

“The administration appears to favor staying out of the conflict unless Iran hits U.S. assets, which would trigger a strong U.S. response,” Ignatius wrote, although he notes that if Israeli cities came under attack, the U.S. commitment to Israel’s security would oblige it to come to Israel’s defense.

(VIDEO: One-Time Nomads in the West Bank Face Eviction)

While Israeli leaders publicly insist that the country must make its own decisions on a matter deemed so vital to its security, Israel’s limited tactical ability to mount the sort of sustained air assault required to inflict serious damage on Iran’s nuclear infrastructure means that it needs a plausible end-game scenario that won’t make things worse. A surprise air strike that did some damage but brought a backlash in which the U.S. stayed largely on the sidelines could be a strategic disaster for Israel. It could leave Israel more isolated, cause international efforts to squeeze Iran to come to an end, and very likely – as Defense Secretary Robert Gates warned last December – prompt Iran to go ahead and build nuclear weapons, which it has not yet decided to do.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has often argued that the only way to get Iran to back down is to present it with a credible threat of military action for failing to do so. But a threat is only credible if both sides believe it will be acted upon, and the danger is that if Iran chooses to ignore the threat, options are considerably narrow for those making it.

(PHOTOS: Heartbreak in the Middle East)

The din created by Israeli saber-rattling, and its echo in the U.S. domestic political arena, has helped shape the Administration’s narrative on Iran – that under President Obama, the U.S. has managed to impose the most punishing sanctions ever imposed on Iran, and garnered the widest support yet for punitive action against the Islamic Republic. Those sanctions are beginning to hurt, and right now the focus should be on strengthening the measures in the hope they force Iran to relent on its nuclear work. In other words, Administration officials argue, sanctions could well succeed and render military action unnecessary. As if to underscore his commitment to tightening the squeeze on Iran economically, President Obama on Monday signed a new executive order impounding all assets of Iran’s central bank traded or held in the U.S.

Toughening sanctions may placate Israel for a time and allow President Obama to demonstrate concrete action to pressure Iran as distinct from the campaign-trail saber-rattling of his Republican challengers. But the prospects are, at best, uncertain that tougher sanctions combined with the threat of military action will force Iran to back down from developing a nuclear program that would put strategic weapons within reach, even if it stopped short of building and testing a bomb. Many Iran analysts doubt that the leadership in Tehran would allow itself to be seen as buckling under pressure, and some Israeli analysts fear that if Iran’s leaders believe an attack is inevitable and imminent, they may choose to strike first and start a war on terrain of their choosing.

(PHOTOS: This is what a stealth drone looks like.)

The least-developed aspect of the Obama Administration’s strategy may be the diplomacy. Currently, the primary public channel for communicating with Iran is via the European Union-led “Permanent Five + 1″ talks, involving the U.S., Britain, France, Russia, China and Germany. Until now, that forum has been used largely to test Iran’s readiness to accept previous demands that have been backed by ever-escalating sanctions.

If Iran were to cry uncle, it would easily find channels through which to concede defeat in the nuclear standoff. And if Tehran shows no interest in engagement, then the question of diplomatic channels is moot. But if Iran doesn’t cave, yet indicates a willingness to engage in a search for a compromise designed to strengthen guarantees against the militarization of its nuclear program, that would present new political and diplomatic challenges for the Administration. Those range from potentially differing bottom lines between the U.S. and its “lockstep” partner Israel on acceptable outcomes (particularly on the question of whether Iran retains the capacity to enrich uranium under international monitoring), fear of Iranian time-wasting balanced against the reality that diplomacy requires patience and sustained engagement and, inevitably, election-year political considerations that necessitate not appearing “soft” on Iran.

VIDEO: Why They Protest: Egypt, Libya and Syria

PHOTOS: TIME’s Pictures of the Week

Read more: http://globalspin.blogs.time.com/2012/02/07/obama-seeks-to-cool-war-fever-while-keeping-up-pressure-on-iran/?hpt=hp_c2#ixzz1lidSk2AY

President Obama: “The economy is growing stronger and the recovery is speeding up”

US President Barack Obama challenged Congress to keep the economic recovery going as new data showed unemployment down to its lowest rate in three years.

The unemployment rate dropped to 8.3%, beating analyst forecasts, and was down from 8.5% in December.

Speaking at a fire station in Virginia, the president warned Congress: “Do not slow down the recovery that we’re on.”

A Department of Labor report showed 243,000 new jobs were created in January, the highest in nine months.

The figures are a political boost for Mr Obama, whose re-election prospects hinge on a sustained economic recovery.

‘True recovery’?

“Now, these numbers will go up and down in the coming months, and there’s still far too many Americans who need a job, or need a job that pays better than the one they have now,” Mr Obama said.

“But the economy is growing stronger. The recovery is speeding up. And we’ve got to do everything in our power to keep it going.”

“Now is not is not the time for self-inflicted wounds to our economy. I want to send a clear message for Congress. Do not slow down the recovery that we are on, don’t muck it up.”

Mr Obama also urged congressional Republicans to pass legislation extending a payroll tax break for 160 million Americans through to the end of the year.

Leading Republicans acknowledged the improvement in the labour market, while adding that even more could be done to improve the state of the US economy.

Continue reading the main story

image of Paul Adams Paul Adams BBC News, Washington

As always, the numbers are complex. But it’s hard not to see this as good news – for the economy and Barack Obama’s re-election chances.

The figures don’t take account of those who are no longer looking for work. And the Congressional Budget Office has warned that the rate of unemployment may creep back up during 2012, growth will be sluggish and trillion dollar deficits aren’t about to disappear.

But you can’t argue with a quarter-million new jobs, or with an unemployment rate that is dropping. Right now, it’s back where it was when Barack Obama took office three years ago.

How does this translate politically? If this pattern continues, it’s hard to see how he isn’t heading for a second term. The Republican message, for now, is “the recovery could have been so much swifter without this president”. That is a much harder message to sell than what is actually happening.

Obama’s challenge now is to turn raw data into a general belief that things are getting better.

“These numbers are encouraging, especially for those millions of Americans out of work, but we should aim even higher. We shouldn’t settle, we can do more,” House Majority Leader Eric Cantor said.

Meanwhile, Speaker of the House John Boehner said: “Our economy still isn’t creating jobs the way it should be and that’s why we need a new approach.”

On the campaign trail, frontrunning presidential candidate Mitt Romney said: “Unfortunately, these numbers cannot hide the fact that President Obama’s policies have prevented a true economic recovery.”

Election prospects

Friday’s data from the Labor Department showed job growth had been widespread, with large gains in business services, leisure and hospitality, and manufacturing.

The report was also buoyed by revisions to November and December data, which showed 60,000 more jobs created across the two months than previously reported.

The figures add to a range of data pointing to a gradual US economic recovery.

Last week, it was announced that the US economy expanded at a 2.8% annual pace in the October-December quarter, a full percentage point higher than in the previous quarter.

Earlier this week, a survey from the Institute for Supply Management (ISM) indicated that the US manufacturing sector expanded at its fastest pace in seven months in January.

But a report on Wednesday by the US Congressional Budget Office, a federal agency, forecast that unemployment would climb to nearly 9% in the last three months of this year and peak at 9.2% early next year.

Unemployment and economic recovery has been a dominant issue in the campaign for November’s US presidential elections.

Although the downward trend in joblessness augurs well for Barack Obama’s prospects of a second term, he is still likely to face more voters out of work than any post-war president.

When Ronald Reagan won re-election in a landslide victory in 1984, joblessness in the US stood at 7.5%.

In 1932, in the midst of the Great Depression, Herbert Hoover was voted out of office in a year when unemployment was at 23.6%.

His successor, Franklin Roosevelt, faced joblessness rates of 16.9% in 1936 and 14.6% when he was re-elected four years later, according to data from the US Bureau of Labor Statistics.

In a Pennsylvania suburb, one small business owner is unimpressed with Obama’s speech, and laments the presidential campaigning so far

US President Barack Obama is beginning a three-day swing-state tour, as he seeks to hammer home his State of the Union speech in election battlegrounds.

Mr Obama will visit manufacturing companies, a university and give two high-profile television interviews.

The visits to Iowa, Michigan, Colorado, Nevada and Arizona aim to spread the message Mr Obama outlined on Tuesday.

His speech to Congress renewed a call for higher taxes on the wealthy, something Republicans strongly oppose.

The US economy is on the mend, but unemployment remains high at 8.5%.

Correspondents say Mr Obama’s itinerary for the next couple of of days closely matches the re-election strategy sketched out by his campaign team.

One state in particular – Michigan – features in each of five “paths to victory” imagined by Obama re-election strategists.

‘Reclaim American values’

As Mr Obama flew to his first stop in Iowa, Republican presidential hopefuls attacked the speech.

Cannot play media. You do not have the correct version of the flash player. Download the correct version

Obama renewed his call higher taxes on millionaires

Mitt Romney repeatedly called the president “detached” from the country’s reality, telling supporters: “This is a president who talks about deregulation, even as he regulates. Who talks about lowering taxes, even as he raises them.”

Forced by political pressure, Mr Romney released his tax returns on Tuesday, the same day in which Mr Obama called for higher taxes on the wealthy.

The forms revealed the former private equity tycoon earned nearly $22m in 2010 and paid an effective tax rate of about 14%, a lower rate than most other Americans pay.

As part of Mr Obama’s larger theme of economic inequality, he made a renewed call for his Buffett Rule – a principle that millionaires should not pay a lower tax rate than typical workers.

The idea is named after billionaire investor Warren Buffett, who famously complained that his secretary pays a higher rate of tax than he does.

Mr Buffett’s secretary, Debbie Bosanek, watched Tuesday’s speech from the gallery alongside First Lady Michelle Obama.

Continue reading the main story

“Start Quote

At the heart of this speech is a president, defiant. Defending the role of government and what he wants it to do”

image of Mark Mardell Mark Mardell North America editor

Pledging no tax increases for those earning under $250,000 (£160,000), Mr Obama said: “If you make more than $1 million a year, you should not pay less than 30% in taxes.”

Mitt ROmney’s Republican rival Newt Gingrich also hit out at the State of the Union, saying in a statement that Mr Obama “proposed nothing in the way of policy changes that will get us to robust job creation and dramatic economic growth”.

While the speech was made with one eye squarely on November’s election, Mr Obama also sounded a warning to his conservative opponents in Congress, who has repeatedly opposed his policy agenda since winning control of the House in 2010.

“I intend to fight obstruction with action, and I will oppose any effort to return to the very same policies that brought on this economic crisis in the first place.”

“Now, you can call this class warfare all you want,” he added. “But asking a billionaire to pay at least as much as his secretary in taxes? Most Americans would call that common sense.”

Continue reading the main story

US media reaction

For the New York Times, Mr Obama went in the right direction in challenging the Republican notion that excessive government spending was to blame for the country’s economic plight. “He sounded many of the same themes as last year, but his tone was sharper and he was far more willing to apportion blame,” it says approvingly.

There was a very different view in the Wall St Journal, which accuses him of trying to campaign as an incumbent whose every move has been stymied by Congress. “For two years he had the largest Democratic majorities in Congress since the 1970s and achieved nearly everything he wanted.” But those achievements have resulted in such weak, unpopular results, the paper argues, that he is forced to resort to the “politics of envy”.

For Time, Mr Obama’s “startlingly blunt” insistence that America was not in decline was not, according to polls, shared by the vast majority of the American people. And this optimism characterised the whole of the speech. “He came out swinging, with positive data, happy anecdotes and an energy that he rarely displays these days when he’s off the campaign trail.”

Fox News’ depiction of this optimism was laced with a little more scorn. “Don’t worry, America,” writes Rich Lowry. “There’s nothing that ails this country that can’t be made right by a catalogue of piddling proposals that will be forgotten tomorrow – and oh yeah, more taxes on the rich. Such was the message of President Obama’s State of the Union address.”

Republicans have repeatedly rejected Mr Obama’s call for higher taxes on the wealthy and accuse him of resorting to class warfare to get elected again.

Mr Obama also proposed:

  • tax reforms to make it less attractive for US companies to transfer jobs overseas
  • allowing homeowners with privately held mortgages to refinance at lower interest rates
  • a new trade enforcement unit dedicated to deterring unfair practices by rival economies, such as China.

A wave of unity swept over the chamber as Democratic Representative Gabrielle Giffords, who was shot by a lone gunman in Arizona shortly before the last state of the union, attended during her last week serving as a congresswoman.

Ms Giffords, who announced on Sunday that she would resign to focus on her recovery, was embraced by Mr Obama, amid rousing cheers.

‘Pro-poverty’

Indiana Governor Mitch Daniels, delivering the Republican Party’s response to Mr Obama’s speech, called it “pro-poverty”.

He said: “No feature of the Obama presidency has been sadder than its constant efforts to divide us, to curry favour with some Americans by castigating others.”

Opinion polls show Mr Obama’s approval numbers languishing beneath 50%, with most Americans disapproving of how he has handled the economy.

Mitch Daniels gives Republican reaction

More than 13 million people are out of work and government debt stands at a record high of $15.2 trillion, up from $10.6 trillion when he took office.

However, surveys also show that Congress is far less popular than Mr Obama, with many blaming Republicans more for the gridlock in Washington.

Partisan warfare on Capitol Hill almost shut down the federal government three times last year.

President Barack Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama walk to the White House on 14 December 2011
Michelle Obama said it would not surprise her if the president relayed her thoughts to staff

US First Lady Michelle Obama has challenged a new book’s account of her role in the White House, saying critics have long attempted to portray her as “some kind of angry black woman”.

The Obamas, by New York Times reporter Jody Kantor, portrays her as a behind-the-scenes force in the White House.

It also describes tensions between her and ex-chief of staff Rahm Emanuel.

In an interview with CBS News, Mrs Obama said she loved being First Lady, but had concerns for her two daughters.

Mrs Obama said Mr Emanuel, who left the White House a year ago and is now mayor of Chicago, was a dear friend who she “never had a cross word” with.

While she pushed back against the notion she sits in political meetings, Mrs Obama did not deny being an important voice to her husband.

“I am his biggest ally,” Mrs Obama said. “I am one of his biggest confidants. But he has dozens of really smart people who surround him. That’s not to say that we don’t have discussions and conversations.

Continue reading the main story

Review of The Obamas

In the opening pages of The Obamas, Kantor sets out the terms of her project: “In public, they smiled and waved, but how were the Obamas really reacting to the White House, and how was it affecting the rest of us?” The questions are at once labored and absurd. The state of a marriage is a poor guide to the course of a presidency.

David Remnick, The New Yorker

“I guess it’s more interesting to imagine this conflicted situation here and a strong woman. But that’s been an image that people have tried to paint of me since the day Barack announced [he would run for president] – that I’m some angry black woman,” she said.

“I just try to be me. And my hope is that over time people get to know me,” she told CBS. “And they get to judge me for me.”

She told CBS that she had not read the book, or similar reports.

Neither Obama granted an interview for the book, but Ms Kantor said that she had based her accounts on interviews with both current and former White House staff.

“It’s a game, in so many ways, that doesn’t fit,” Mrs Obama said. “Who can write about what I feel? What third person can tell me what I feel?”

If conflicts do arise, she said, communication happens between the two staffs at the White House – Mr Obama’s in the West Wing and Mrs Obama’s in the East Wing.

Related Stories

%d bloggers like this: