Complete Obama Press Conference on NSA Surveillance, Snowden & US-Russia Relations - August 9, 2013
President Obama held a news press conference Friday afternoon on a
number of topics including the national surveillance program, terror
threats and Russia.
Obama says he'll work with Congress to change
the oversight of some of the National Security Agency's controversial
surveillance programs and name a new panel of outside experts to review
technologies.
Specifically, Obama says he wants to work with
Congress to insert an opposing voice into arguments before the secret
court that approves massive government surveillance efforts. The court
currently hears only from Justice Department officials who want the
surveillance approved.
The secret court and other surveillance
programs have been under scrutiny since NSA leaker Edward Snowden
revealed classified programs in June. The government has defended these
programs as necessary to prevent terror attacks.
Speaking to reporters, Obama says the government can and must be more transparent in how it conducts surveillance.
"It's
not enough for me as President to have confidence in these programs.
The American people need to have confidence in them as well."
Obama
says he's encouraging Russian President Vladimir Putin to, quote,
"think forward instead of backwards" in strained relations with the
United States.
Obama says he realizes relations between the two
super powers have been difficult lately. He says progress was being made
until Putin regained the Russian presidency. Now Obama says there have
been "a number of emerging differences," including over Syria and human
rights.
The White House this week cancelled a planned summit
between Obama and Putin next month in Moscow. That's in part because
Russia is refusing to return National Security Agency leaker Edward
Snowden to the U.S. to face charges of leaking national security
secrets.
Obama says Snowden is not a patriot for revealing widespread government surveillance programs.
Obama
says he called for a review of the secret surveillance programs before
details of documents Snowden leaked to reporters were publicized in
June. He says Snowden's disclosures prompted a faster and more
passionate response than if Obama had just appointed a board to review
the policies.
Obama says he wants more oversight of the
intelligence community's surveillance programs to strike a balance
between protecting Americans safety and their privacy.
President
Obama says the main al-Qaida terrorist group is "on its heels" and
"decimated," but its regional groups are powerful enough to attack U.S.
interests.
Obama says the core of al-Qaida is less able to
carry out a terrorist attack on the scale of 9/11. But he says offshoots
like the one in Yemen have the capacity to go after U.S. embassies and
businesses around the world.
It was the threat of such an
attack that prompted the U.S. government to close 19 diplomatic posts in
the Middle East and North Africa last week.
U.S. intelligence
officials had intercepted a message between a top al-Qaida official and
his deputy in Yemen about plans for a major terror attack targeting
American or other Western sites abroad.
Obama is vowing to bring
to justice those responsible for last year's deadly assault on a U.S.
diplomatic post in Benghazi, Libya.
Obama says his
administration is intent on capturing those who carried out the attack,
noting that it took him longer than 11 months to make good on his
promise to find Osama bin Laden.
Obama also says his government has a sealed indictment on some suspected of involvement.
Officials
said earlier this week the Justice Department filed the first criminal
charges as part of its investigation of the September attack that killed
Ambassador Chris Stevens and three other Americans.
Republicans have criticized the administration's response to the attack and its shifting explanation of what happened.
-
President
Obama says he has a range of outstanding candidates to lead the Federal
Reserve and calls Lawrence Summers and Janet Yellen highly qualified to
become the next Fed chairman.
Obama says he decided to push
back against people who are urging him not to pick Summers because he
saw his former economic adviser, in his words, "getting slapped around
the press for no reason."
Summers served as the head of the National Economic Council during Obama's first term. Yellen is the vice chair of the Fed.
Obama says he will decide in the fall whom to nominate to succeed the Fed's outgoing chairman, Ben Bernanke.
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