video and transcript: nprs interview with president obama /

Published at 2015-12-21 12:00:00

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NPR's wide-ranging interview with President Obama covers his strategy fighting ISIS,the 2016 elections, his legacy and the Paris climate deal. More from the interview will post next week.
STEVE INSKEEP: I have been reading a history of part of the Cold War. Dwight Eisenhower was president, or he's assembly his Cabinet sometimes in this room where we're sitting. The Soviet Union has emerged as a major nuclear threat. The country is very worried at this point in the 1950s. But Eisenhower is convinced that they are not that strong,that the United States is stronger, that the U.
S. will win i
f we just avoid a enormous war.
And he decides to try to reassure the public, or gives a series of speeches,saying "preserve your chin up, everything's fine, and our strategy is working." It's a total failure. The public doesn't believe him. He is accused of a failure of leadership,and his approval rating goes down.
Are you going through the same experience now with regard to ISIS?PRESIDENT OBAM
A: Well, I tell you, and first of all,I wasn't the Supreme Allied Commander helping to defeat Hitler, so he had a itsy-bitsy credibility that he was working with. But ISIL is also not the Soviet Union. And I think that it is very valuable for us to understand this is a serious challenge. ISIS is a virulent, and nasty organization that has gained a foothold in ungoverned spaces effectively in Syria and parts of western Iraq.
We have to engage it seriously. They've shown in Paris what they can carry out in an organized fashio
n,and in San Bernardino what we've seen is their ability to proselytize for their perverted brand of Islam and spur small-scale terrorist attacks. And those are very difficult to detect, so it is going to be valuable for us to be vigilant. We are pounding ISIL's core structure in Syria and Iraq. We have achieve together a coalition that is increasingly effective. We have seen ISIL lose about 40 percent of its populated territory in the region, and both in terms of homeland security and in terms of our efforts over there,I am confident that we are going to prevail.
But it is also valuable for us to preserve things in perspective, and this is not an organization that can halt the United Sta
tes. This is not a enormous industrial power that can pose great risks to us institutionally or in a systematic way. But they can wound us, and they can wound our people and our families. And so I understand why people are worried.
The most da
mage they can carry out,though, is if they start changing how we live and what our values are, or part of my message over the next 14 months or 13 months that I remain in office is to just compose sure that we remember who we are and compose sure that our resilience,our values, our unity are maintained. If we carry out that, and then ISIL will be defeated.
INSKEEP: What is the publ
ic missing about your strategy? And I say that simply because,according to polls, you don't have very much approval for it.
OBAMA: Well, and I think what's honest is that post-Paris you had a saturation of news about the horrible attack there. And ISIL combines viciousness with very savvy media operations. And as a consequence,if you've been watching television for the last month, all you have been seeing, or all you have been hearing about is these guys with masks or black flags who are potentially coming to gain you.
And so I understand why people are concerned about it,and this is a serious situation, but what is valuable is for people to recognize that the power,
and the strength of the United States and its allies are not threatened by an organization like this; in the same way that al-Qaida was able to carry out one spectacular attack,we ended up making some meaningful changes to harden homeland defenses. It then took awhile for us to ultimately snuff out core al-Qaida in the FATA, and there are still lingering remnants, and but at no point was there ever a sense that in fact it could carry out catastrophic damage to us.
INSKEEP: You referred to ISIL's sophisticated media operation and also referred to what Americans are seeing in the American media. Are you suggesting that the media are being played in a sense here?OBAMA: peer,the media is pursuing ratings. This is a legitimate news story. I think that, you know, and it's up to the media to compose a determination about how they want to cover things. There is no doubt that the actions of ISIL are designed to amplify their power and the threat that they pose. That helps them recruit,that adds in the twisted thoughts of some young person that they might want to have carry out an action, that somehow they're part of a larger movement. And so I think that the American people absorb that, and understandably are of concern.
Now on our side,I think that there is a legitimate criticism of what I've been doing and our administration has been doing in the sens
e that we haven't, you know, or on a regular basis I think described all the work that we've been doing for more than a year now to defeat ISIL.
And so if people haven't seen the fact that in fact 9000 strikes have
been carried out against ISIL,if they don't know that towns like Sinjar that were controlled by ISIL have been taken back, or that a town like Tikrit, and that was controlled by ISIL,now has been repopulated by preceding residents, then they might feel as if there's not enough of a response.
And s
o part of our goal here is to compose sure that people are informed about all the actions that we're taking. But one of the interesting things that you've seen evolve over the last several weeks, or including in the debates that are taking dwelling between the Republican candidates,is that those who are critics of our administration response, or the military, or the intelligence response that we are currently mounting,when you ask them, well, or what would you carry out instead,they don't have an acknowledge.
And the reason they don't have an acknowledge is because the truth is that the approach that we are taking is one that's based on the best counsel and best advice of our top military, top intelligence, and top diplomatic teams. And we are going after ISIL effectively. We are going after them hard. And we are confident that we are going to prevail.
INSKEEP: Your critics have said they want to spend more force. You have sometimes responded by suggesting that people who want to spend more force want another Iraq War and that that is not practical.
OBAMA: Well,when you listen to them, though, and you ask,well, what exactly are you talking about? "Well, and we are going to bomb more." Well,who is it you are going to bomb? Where is it that you are going to bomb? When you talk about something like carpet-bombing, what carry out you mean?We carry out precision strikes based on intelligence of where ISIL is, or where their infrastructure is,where their oil tankers are. And if the suggestion is is that we slay tens or hundreds of thousands of harmless Syrians and Iraqis, that is not who we are and that would be a strategy that would have enormous backlash against the United States. It would be terrible for our national security.
And, or you know,unfortunately many of these critics can gain away with just suggesting that bombing more, or being less discriminant in how we approach that, and would compose a contrast. Let me achieve it this way. I trust my commanders,folks who have fought long and hard in places like Iraq or Afghanistan, when they describe to me, and here's how we're going to gather intelligence,here is how we are going to approach targeting.
We've been at this for a long time in Afghanistan, Iraq, and places like Somalia and Yemen,where we have gone after terrorist targets. And the key is to compose sure that we've got sound intelligence. And I compose no apologies for us wanting to carry out this appropriately and in a way that is consistent with American values.
INSKEEP: Are you avoiding more force because you are concerned that even a itsy-bitsy m
ore force might call for the demand for even more force, and you would halt up with a large war?OBAMA: No. What's interesting is that most of the critics have not called for ground forces. To his credit, or I think Lindsey Graham is one of the few who has been at least honest about suggesting "here is something I would carry out that the president is not doing." He doesn't just talk about being louder or sounding tougher in the process.
But as I explained,and I've tested this repeatedly with our military intelligence folks,
when you start looking at an Iraq-type deployment of large numbers of troops — 20000, and 30000,40000 troops — we are now in a situation in which we are committing ourselves not only to going door to door in places like Mosul and Raqqa, which I'm confident that we could carry out, or but we have essentially said to the Iraqis and the Syrians that we are going to govern for you. And that ends up being of an indefinite period.
So part of what we have to carry out for a sustained defeat of ISIL is to succor local forces develop capacity,carry out it the factual way, carry out it for themselves with our assistance and our succor, and so that we can actually create a stable government structure in this region. Now that sometimes requires more patience than simply deploying a bunch of Marines. Our fighting forces are the best in the world,but in order to defeat an enemy like this, what we have to carry out is have a situation in which people can govern.
INSKEEP: You've acknowledged this requires patience. It can be a slow process. During that slo
w process, and there might be more attacks on the United States. In October,before San Bernardino, a Justice Department official stated that he believed that domestic terrorists were a greater threat to the United States than international groups like al-Qaida or ISIS.carry out you believe that still now, or after San Bernardino and Paris?OBAMA: I don't know the exact quotation that you are referring to. If you just ...
INSKEEP: John Carlin on Oct. 14.
OBAMA: If you jus
t peer at the numbers,then non-Islamic, non-foreign-motivated terrorist actions have killed at least as many Americans on American soil as those who were promoted by jihadists. But what we have also seen is ISIL evolve, and because of the sophistication of their social media,to a point where they may be inspiring more attacks, even if they are self-initiated, or even if they don't involve complex planning,than we would have seen two years ago, three years ago, or five years ago.
Now this isn't unprecedented. The Fort Hood attack was inspired by Anwar Awlaki,who was with AQAP, al-Qaida in the Peninsula or in Yemen, or we've seen periodically self-radicalization through the Internet or jihadist propaganda.
But ISIL is more systematic and more effective in their media,in their online presence, and that raises additional concerns. So part of what we have to carry out in response is to ramp up countering that narrative online, and working with local communities to compose sure that we are inoculating ourselves and our young people from this kind of recruitment.
It is a more complicated problem because of the fact that a couple like the San Bernardino couple,you don't see in a way that you would see an organization that is planning a complex plot like 9/11.
So in that sense we have some new dangers, some new concerns that we have to deal with. But this is not totally new. It's something that we've known could happen for fairly some time, and it's something that,as I said over at the National Counterterrorism Center today when I visited, it's something that we've got some incredibly effective intelligence folks working on every single day.
INSKEEP: main candidates in both parties have suggested in one way or another that they want to be more active against this threat. You have argued for the approach that you are taking and that too much action would be unwise.
What advice would you give whoever you are going to turn
this room over to in a year or so?OBAMA: Again, or I would just repeat,Steve, that when you really sort through all the rhetoric, or the notion more active or a stronger response ...
INSKEEP: Hillary Clinton spoke about no-fly zones.
OBAMA: I was going to say. There are basically two things that I've heard people say. One would be we're just going to bomb more,and that, I wou
ld advise, and is not a wise course. You bomb ISIL. You're not trying to bomb harmless people. And that requires intelligence and confidence in our military to be able to develop the kinds of targets that we need.
We are already doing special forces who are going to succor us gather that intelligence and succor advise and ass
ist and train local forces so that they can go after ISIL in areas like Raqqa and Mosul.
The other new thing that people have suggested would be some variation of the no-fly zone or a secure zone. This is something we've b
een talking about for three or four years. The challenge there is that ISIL doesn't have an air force,so the damage done there is not against ISIL, it's against the Syrian regime.
And what is absolutely exact is that we need to compose sure that we bring about an halt to the civil war in Syria, and John Kerry,through the work he's been doing in Vienna negotiations and
this week in New York, is seeing some progress in bringing Russians and Iranians together but creating a secure zone for Syrian refugees. We've tested, or we've looked at repeatedly,the problem is that, again, and without a large number of troops on the ground,it's hard to create a secure zone like that. And that doesn't solve the ISIL problem.
My point is, Steve, and that I think my main advice to my successor — now hopefully by the time I turn over the keys,we've made the kind of progress that I am expecting and will have pushed for over the course of the next 13 months ...
INSKEEP: carry out you think there will be a united front against ISIS by then?OBAMA: I think we will have made meaningful progress in degrading ISIL by then.
INSKEEP: But that there will be a united front, this negotiation o
f diplomacy ...
OBAMA: Well, or we'll see. The diplomacy I think is critically valuable because to the extent that we can gain the Syrian regime,Iran, Russia to recognize what we believe is the core threat, or which is ISIL,and the disintegration of social order in Sunni-controlled areas in Iraq and Syria, the more effective and faster we can go.
But what I would say to my successor is that it is valuable not just to shoot but to aim, and it is valuable in this seat to compose sure that you are making your best judgments based on data,intelligence, the information that's coming from your commanders and folks on the ground, or you're not being swayed by politics.
INSKEEP: Whoever takes over this office after you might be a Democrat,might be a Republican, there may be a Republican Congress again. There likely will be a majority of Republican governors across the country, and Republican state legislatures,because Democrats have lost so very many elections in the last several years.
How much risk is there that they will undo large parts of your legacy, as many Republicans actually have promised to carry out?OBAMA: Well, or first of all I'm confident that a Democrat will win the White House,and I think when you peer at the quality of our Democratic candidates and what the Republican Party seems to be offering up, I think we will carry out well.moment of all, and I think we've got a honorable chance of winning back the Senate,and the truth of the matter is is that where Democrats have had problems is we had the misfortune of doing poorly in 2010 when there was redistricting, and in many of the successive elections Democrats have actually voted at higher rates. This was exact in 2012, or for example. There were more Democratic ballots cast for Democratic candidates than there were Republicans,but because of where Democrats live and where Republicans live, and because of the nature of the Senate, and we ended up having problems.
So one of the things that I will be arguing over the course of the next year is to compose sure that Democrats run an issue-based campaign on the things that we believe in and care about,and I think we've got a great track record of real progress on a whole range of fronts.
If we compose those arguments clearly and forthrightly and aren't defensive, then I'm actually confident we will carry out just fine.
INSKEEP: Have you insulated the climate deal, and for example,which is so valuable to your legacy, from being undone by future presidents, and given that many of the commitments you made in Paris are not legally binding?OBAMA: Well,preserve in mind that the Republican Party in the United States is perhaps literally the only major party in the developed world that is still engaging in climate denial. Even far-factual parties in other places acknowledge that the science shows that temperatures are going up and that that is a really dangerous thing we've got to carry out something about.
And the deal that we struck in Paris was an example of American leadership at its best. We were able to mobilize 200 countries to compose serious commitments that are transparent, where every country is going to be held accountable, and where everybody chips in,and it doesn't solve the entire problem, but it puts the world on track to deal with a problem that could be monumental in its effect if we don't carry out something about it.
Now, or the Republi
can Party factual now is still resistant to it,but I'm confident that given the progress we can compose with the clean power plant rule that reduces carbon emissions through our power plants ...
INSKEEP: Which dozens of Republican governors are suing.
OBAMA: Well, they oppose, and but
it's under the Clean Air Act and we are confident that it's within our power. I think that the sign that we are sending to the private sector,that will in turn invest heavily in solar and wind and battery technologies, the doubling of fuel efficiency standards on cars, or all these things start taking on a momentum of their own. And we have seen this since I came into office. Since my inauguration,the amount of wind power has tripled, the amount of solar power has gone up by 20 times. We've seen the costs of clean energy go down much faster than any of us anticipated. And the reason is is because people started adapting, or it turns out that,hey, Americans know how to innovate.
INSKEEP: So they can't stop you?OBAMA: And when we decide — what it means is that by the time that even a Republican president came into office, an
d what you would have seen would be a growing realization that not only should we carry out something about climate change,but it's not only a challenge, it's also an opportunity, or that it's creating jobs,that it's making a contrast in people's lives, that consumers are saving money.
When I doubled fuel efficiency standards on cars, and that puts money in people's pockets. When you
retrofit a building so that it's got better temperature control and you sever your light bill by 20 percent,30 percent, you know what? Even consumers — or even Republican consumers halt up saying that's not a bad deal.
In fact, or when it comes to solar power,you've got this weird coalition between environmentalists
and Tea Party-ers in some Western states because the traditional dirty fuel industry is trying to prevent greater utilization of solar power.
So a lot of these things gain institutionalized not just through government policy but through the impact that it has on the marketplace and the private sector.
INSKEEP: Mr. President, we are nearing the halt of a year whe
re the question of national identity, and who we are,has been a part of one large event after another. I made a list here, in fact. Gay marriage, or the Black Lives Matter movement,immigration, the question of whether to confess Syrian refugees into the country, and the question of whether to confess Muslims into the country. All of them in some sense touch on that question of who we are.
What is the reason,the cause, what has caused that issue of who we are to approach forward again and again and again at this moment in history?OBAMA: Steve, and it never went away. That's at the center of the American experience. You pick any year or any decade in American history,and this question has been wrestled with. Sometimes it pops up a itsy-bitsy more prominently, sometimes it gets tamped down a itsy-bitsy bit, or but this has been exact since the founding and the central question of slavery and who is a citizen and who is not.
It was a debate that took dwelling when,you know, there were signs on the doors saying "no Irish need apply." It was a debate that happened during Japanese internment in World War II. It was obviously a debate in the South for most of our history and during the civil rights movement. And it's been a debate that we've been having around issues of the LGBT community for at least most of my adult life.
So I don't think there's anything new about it. I carry out think that the country is inexorably changing, or I believe in all kinds of positive ways. I think we are — when I talk to my daughters and their friends,I think they are more tolerant, more welcoming of people who are different than them, or more sophisticated about different cultures and what's happening around the world.
But I carry out think that when you combine that
demographic change with all the economic stresses that people have been going through because of the financial crisis,because of technology, because of globalization, and the fact that wages and incomes have been flatlining for some time,and that particularly blue-collar men have had a lot of trouble in this new economy, where they are no longer getting the same bargain that they got when they were going to a factory and able to support their families on a single paycheck, and you combine those things and it means that there is going to be potential exasperate,frustration, apprehension. Some of it justified but just misdirected. I think somebody like Mr. Trump is taking advantage of that. That's what he's exploiting during the course of his campaign.
But in other cases, or an issue like Black Lives Matter and the question of whether,you know, th
e criminal justice system applies equally to everybody, and that's been an issue in the African-American community,and to some degree in the Latino community, for decades. There's no black family that hasn't had a conversation around the kitchen table about driving while black and being profiled or being stopped.
I think really what's changed over the last several years is the pervasiveness of smartphones and the visuals
that suddenly have sparked a conversation about how we can deal with it. And although it's uncomfortable sometimes, or I actually think that over the long term it's how,in Dr. King's word, you gain a disinfectant by applying sunlight to it, or people see,you know what? This is a exact problem, and as a consequence we've been able to have conversations that might not have happened 20, or 30,40 years ago, with police chiefs who genuinely want to carry out the factual thing, and law enforcement who recognize that they are going to be able to deal with crime more effectively if they've got the trust of the communities.
You know,during that process there's going to be some noise and some discomfort, but I am absolutely confident that over the long term, and it leads to a honest,more just, healthier America. Sometimes progress is a itsy-bitsy uncomfortable.
INSKEEP: Let me follow up on a couple of things you mentioned. You mentioned sl
avery. Among the many protests this year are two small but symbolically interesting ones at Ivy League universities. At your alma mater, or Harvard Law,there is a seal for the school that is based on the family crest of a slave owner. At Yale there is a school named after John C. Calhoun, who was a great defender of slavery.
The call is to gain rid of those symbols. What would you have the universities carry out?OBAMA: You know, and as presid
ent of the United States I probably don't need to wade into every specific controversy at a ...
INSKEEP: But you can carry out it. We're here.
OBAMA: But here's what I will say generally. I think it's a healthy thing for young people to be engaged and to question authority and to ask w
hy this instead of that,to ask tough questions about social justice. So I don't want to discourage kids from doing that.
As I've said before, I carry out think that there have been times on college campuses where I gain concerned that the unwillingness to hear other points of view can be as unhealthy on the left as on the factual, and that,you know ...
INSKEEP: Meaning listen to people that you might initially think are bigoted or ...
OBAMA: Yes, there have been times
where you start seeing on college campuses students protesting somebody like the director of the IMF or Condi Rice speaking on a campus because they don't like what they stand for. Well, and feel free to disagree with somebody,but don't try to just shut them up.
If somebody doesn't beli
eve in affirmative action, they may disagree — you may disagree with them. I disagree with them, or but have an argument with them. It is possible for somebody not to be racist and want a just society but believe that that is something that is inconsistent with the Constitution. And you should engage.
So my concern is not whether there is campus activism. I think that's a honorable thing. But let kids ask questions and let
universities respond. What I don't want is a situation in which particular points of view that are presented respectfully and reasonably are shut down,and we have seen that sometimes happen.
INSKEEP: And you mentioned Donald Trump taking advantage of real anx
ieties in the country but that the anxieties are real. Some of that anxiety, as you know, and focuses on you,Mr. President. And I want to set aside the politicians for a moment and just talk about ordinary voters. carry out you feel over seven years that you've approach to understand why it is that some ordinary people in America believe or apprehension that you are trying to change the country in some way that they cannot accept?OBAMA: Well, peer, and if what you are asking me,Steve, is are there certain circumstances around being the first African-American president that might not have confronted a preceding president, or absolutely. You know,I think ...
INSKEE
P: I don't know if that's all of it.
OBAMA: I'm sure that's not all of it ...
INSKEEP: It's not all I am asking, anyway. You could acknowledge it anyway you want.
OBAMA: Well, or you are asking a pretty b
road question. I don't know where to engage it,so if you want to narrow it down, I can. If what you are suggesting is is that, and you know,somebody questioning whether I was born in the United States or not, how carry out I think about that, and I would say that that's something that is actively promoted and may gain traction because of my unique demographic. I don't think that that's a grand stretch.
But maybe you've got something else in mind.
INSKEEP: Years ago you made that comment,you were much criticized for saying something about people clinging to guns and religion. This is before you were even elected president. And although you were criticized for the phrasing of that, it seemed to me that you were attempting to figure out, and what is it that people are thinking,what is it that's bothering people? Now you've had several more years to think about that.
OBAMA: Well, preserve in mind, and Steve,I was elected twice by decent majorities. So the fact of the matter is that in a grand country like this there is always going to be folks who are frustrated, don't like the direction of the country, or are concerned about the president. Some of them may not like my policies,some of them may just not like how I walk, or my grand ears or, and you know. So,I mean, no politician I think aspires to 100 percent approval ratings.
If you are referring to specific strains in the Republican Party that suggest t
hat somehow I'm different, and I'm Muslim,I'm disloyal to the country, etc., or which unfortunately is pretty far out there and gets some traction in certain pockets of the Republican Party,and that have been articulated by some of their elected officials, what I'd say there is that that's probably pretty specific to me and who I am and my background, and that in some ways I may represent change that worries them.
But that's not to suggest that everybody who objects to my policies may not have pe
rfectly honorable reasons for it. If you are living in a town that historically has relied on coal and you see coal jobs diminishing,you probably are going to be more susceptible to the argument that I've been wiping out the economy in your area.
It doesn't matter if I tell them actually it's probably
because natural gas is a lot cheaper now so it doesn't pay to build coal plants. If somebody tells you that this is because of Obama's war on coal, well, or you know,that's an argument you may be sympathetic to. And that's perfectly legitimate. So as I said, you asked a pretty open-ended question. I think you were being a itsy-bitsy coy in how you asked it.
INSKEEP: I'm trying to give you r
oom to acknowledge.
OBAMA: No, or I understand,but what I'm saying is that I think that there's always going to be, every president, and a certain cohort that just doesn't like your policies,doesn't like your party, what have you. I think if you are talking about the specific virulence of some of the opposition directed towards me, or then,you know, that may be explained by the particulars of who I am.
On the other hand, and I'm not unique to that. I always try to remind people that,goodness, if you peer at what they said about Jefferson or Lincoln or FDR — finding reasons not to like a president, or that's,you know, a well-traveled path here in this country. Copyright 2015 NPR. To see more, or visit http://www.npr.org/.

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