Archive for the ‘Obama’ Category

Obamas White House alumni fight Trump tweet for tweet …

Some Democrats may think former President Barack Obama has been too quiet since leaving office on Jan. 20 particularly on the subject of his controversial successor, Donald Trump.

The same cannot be said of the people who worked for him.

In the days since Trump assumed the presidency, an increasingly ardent and even aggressive army of formerly buttoned-up Obama administration alumni aides, advisers, speechwriters, spokespeople have taken to their own social media platforms to rail, loudly and publicly, against pretty much every move Trump has made, undaunted by his 23.5 million followers and determined to tweet fire with fire.

This is a new development in American politics.

Colin Kahl, then-U.S. deputy assistant defense secretary for the Middle East, participates in a panel discussion about Irans nuclear program on Feb. 21, 2012. (Photo: Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

There are more than a few of us who believe deeply in holding this administrations feet to the fire especially when they offer falsehoods to the American people and distort our record, a former senior administration official tells Yahoo News. We have an email chain going where we share impressions, etc.

The latest to enter the fray is Colin Kahl, a Georgetown University professor who served as a national security official under Obama. Angered by the current administrations attempts to blame Obama for the first counterterrorism misstep to occur on Trumps watch a botched Jan. 29 raid in Yemen that left one American commando dead Kahl on Thursday fired off a flurry of tweets explaining that Obama neither planned nor approved the mission and that any reports saying otherwise were totally false.

Trump and his team owns the process and the ultimate decision and the consequences, Kahl snapped.

Kahl isnt alone. Former senior adviser Dan Pfeiffer, speechwriting directors Jon Favreau and Cody Keenan, speechwriter Jon Lovett, longtime Obama spokesman Tommy Vietor, Deputy National Security Adviser Ben Rhodes and many othersare flaming and fact-checking the new president up to a dozen times a day.

Former White House senior adviser Dan Pfeiffer, left, and Deputy National Security Adviser Ben Rhodes. (Photos: Carolyn Kaster/AP, Pablo Martinez Monsivais/AP)

Its not that previous White House graduates refrained from countering or criticizing their bosses successors. They didnt, of course. But the current go-round is different faster and more furious for several reasons.

First, theres Trump himself, who has never been shy about picking fights (and who has shown no sign of backing off as president). His incessant Twitter spats with enemies, with allies, even with Arnold Schwarzenegger have set a coarser and more combative tone for presidential discourse and given his opponents little choice but to turn their own volume knobs up to 11.At the same time, his immediate blitzkrieg of provocative executive orders has invited an equally rapid response.

Then theres the sour mood of the country to consider. Previous presidents enjoyed honeymoons with the public. Not Trump. A popular-vote loser who refused during his transition to reach out to the nearly 73 million Americans who cast ballots for other candidates and who has catered exclusively to his base as president, inspiring worldwide protests Trump has seen his job-approval rating crater much faster than any of his predecessors. According to Gallup, Obamas disapproval rating didnt surpass 50 percent until 936 days after his inauguration. For George W. Bush, 1,205 days. Before him, Bill Clinton, 573; George H.W. Bush, 1,336; and Ronald Reagan, 727. Trump, however, crossed the same unfortunate threshold just eight days into his White House tenure. Its not just Obama alumni. More people oppose the new president, period and theyre spoiling for a fight.

From left, former Obama speechwriters Jon Favreau, Cody Keenan and Jon Lovett (Photos: Evan Agostini, AP, WH Gov, Marvin Joseph/Getty Images)

But perhaps the most important factor here is technology.

The last White House exodus took place in 2009. Social media existed, but it was hardly dominant. Twitter had about 2 million active users; today it has more than 300 million. Facebook had 150 million; now it has 1.86 billion. Instagram wouldnt launch for another year and a half. If Obama was the first social-media president, the alumni of his administration represent the first generation of White House staffers to learn the ropes of social engagement while on the job, then emerge into the wider world fully immersed in the new media environment and prepared to harness its power and reach for their own political ends.

This is really the first time in history where you have a huge cadre of former staff who can all broadcast their thoughts whenever they have them and fact check the current administration in real time, says former Justice Department spokesman Matt Miller, who frequently rebukes the Trump administration over law enforcement issues on Twitter.

By way of comparison, George W. Bushs chief strategist, Karl Rove, didnt join Twitter until Jan. 8, 2009, a few days before Bush left office; between then and early February 2009, he didnt tweet a single direct criticism of Obama. Dana Perino, Bushs last press secretary, didnt sign up until May 2009; her feed was similarly muted. Bush speechwriter Michael Gerson, meanwhile, tweeted only four times that entire year none of his tweets were political while former Bush press secretary Ari Fleischer tweeted only once. Savoring the Dolphins great win last night, Fleischer wrote on Oct. 13, 2009. Go fins.

When the Bush folks did tweet, it was mostly to promote their work for establishment media outlets: a Wall Street Journal column, a National Review blog post, a hit on Fox News.

I was at DOJ at the time, says Miller, and I dont remember anyone no former Bush administration official pushing back at us on social media.

Thats not the case anymore.

On Feb. 3, alone, Tommy Vietor (87,900 followers) implied on Twitter that Trump is a lunatic; questioned the legality of Trumps doctor talking to the New York Times; and referred to the presidents tweet about putting Iran on notice as chest-thumping bulls***.

Dan Pfeiffer (154,000 followers) retweeted a story about Trump rolling back financial regulations and sarcastically asked readers to remember when Trumps working class base flocked to his rallies to demand fewer rules and bigger pay days for Wall Street. Ben Rhodes reminded his 29,600 followers that revoking 100,000 visas, as Trump has done with his travel ban, is not keeping out the bad; hours earlier he linked to an Instagram post by former White House photographer Pete Souza showing Obama laughing last September with Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull, a close ally whom Trump had just blasted over the phone. For his part, Souza has all but transformed his Instagram feed (740,000 followers) into animplicit critique of the new president, posting archival images of Obama talking with young refugees and hanging out in the Oval Office with Merrick Garland, his stymied Supreme Court nominee a kind of alternate Democratic reality where every Trump outrage is met with an image of Obama doing the exact opposite.

Then-National Security Council spokesman Tommy Vietor at the White House on Feb. 3, 2011. (Photo: Charles Dharapak/AP)

Not all of these ex-Obamians are new to the so-called resistance: Vietor, Favreau and Lovett hosted a 2016 campaign podcast for the Ringer called Keepin It 1600, which laughed off the possibility of a Trump presidency until the bitter end. Distraught by the outcome, they recently launched anotherpodcast Pod Save America under the banner of their own company, the pointedly titledCrooked Media. Their goal? To stop being analysts and start being activists.

I woke up feeling like sitting on the sidelines wasnt an option anymore, Vietor told the Daily Beast. I wanted to be part of whatever is going to happen over the next four years to preserve the things we fought for at the White House.

Other members of the Obama administration, however, are just getting started mainly because, up until a few weeks ago, they were still working for the president (who was, in turn, urging a gracious transition).

What all these former White House staffers share is a strong desire to use the sizable media platforms they built while serving the leader of the free world and the authority they accrued as people who actually know how the U.S. government works to repudiate policies they disagree with and set the record straight when necessary.

When there are specific issues we need to take on, well consult with the relevant experts, says the former Obama administration official. For example, [former Homeland Security Adviser] Lisa [Monaco] provided a detailed tick-tock of what actually went down with regard to Yemen. Everyone is interested in batting down some of this nonsense, and those weve reached out to have been more than happy to help (even those who were in career posts).

Just about every Democrat in the country feels incredibly motivated to speak out right now, says Miller. But while a lot of Dems are motivated, people who worked for the Obama administration people who have a little bit of a voice feel something else: a deep sense of obligation to use those voices for good.

And as Trump himself has demonstrated, political combatants no longer need to rely on, say, CNN to be heard. I think the lesson from Trump is if youre filtering every message and idea you have through traditional media, he will swamp you with a tweet, Vietor recently told Politico. So we need to build up infrastructure that allows people to communicate directly with young people across the country.

This means, says Miller, that Americans should expect more Obama-era staffers to start speaking out against Trump in the weeks and months ahead, creating an unprecedented sense of direct conflict between one administration and the next.

I imagine this is going to break down agency by agency, eventually, he predicts. What youre going to see is someone from Obamas Environmental Protection Agency pushing back on something that Trump has done or said that is wrong or not true. Youre going to see someone from Labor, and so on. Nobody knew who Colin Kahl was before this week. But now they will.

With Olivier Knox

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Obamas White House alumni fight Trump tweet for tweet ...

There’s a greater meaning behind those "Missing Obama" posters you’re seeing online – SFGate

By Heather Leighton, Houston Chronicle

Since President Trump's inauguration, "Missing Obama" posters have been shared in neighborhood streets across the nation and around the world, too.

Source: Instagram

Since President Trump's inauguration, "Missing Obama" posters have been shared in neighborhood streets across the nation and around the world, too.

Source: Instagram

Continue clicking to see the sweetest moments between Barack and Michelle Obama during the Obama presidency.

Continue clicking to see the sweetest moments between Barack and Michelle Obama during the Obama presidency.

The Obamas have no problem showing affection for each other, even when the world is watching.Keep clicking to see photos of some of their sweetest moments over the years.

The Obamas have no problem showing affection for each other, even when the world is watching.Keep clicking to see photos of some of their sweetest moments over the years.

At their Chicago home in 2004, then-Sen. Obama and his wife, Michelle, get ready for an event at the Chicago Economic Club.

At their Chicago home in 2004, then-Sen. Obama and his wife, Michelle, get ready for an event at the Chicago Economic Club.

The famous "fist bump" at a campaign event in St. Paul, Minn., in 2008.

The famous "fist bump" at a campaign event in St. Paul, Minn., in 2008.

Campaign rally in Pueblo, Colorado, in 2008.

Campaign rally in Pueblo, Colorado, in 2008.

Daughter Sasha gets caught in the middle of an embrace between her parents at a campaign event in Des Moines, Iowa, in 2008.

Daughter Sasha gets caught in the middle of an embrace between her parents at a campaign event in Des Moines, Iowa, in 2008.

Sharing a tender moment inside a freight elevator while on their way to an inaugural ball in Washington, D.C., in 2009.

Sharing a tender moment inside a freight elevator while on their way to an inaugural ball in Washington, D.C., in 2009.

The president and first lady pass their photos on the wall at the Hilton Washington prior to the MTV & ServiceNation: Live From The Youth Inaugural Ball in January 2009 in Washington, D.C.

The president and first lady pass their photos on the wall at the Hilton Washington prior to the MTV & ServiceNation: Live From The Youth Inaugural Ball in January 2009 in Washington, D.C.

President Obama's first inaugural parade in Washington, D.C., in 2009.

President Obama's first inaugural parade in Washington, D.C., in 2009.

At a 2012 campaign rally at the University of Iowa in Iowa City.

At a 2012 campaign rally at the University of Iowa in Iowa City.

On the final day of the Democratic National Conventionin Charlotte, North Carolina, in September 2012.

On the final day of the Democratic National Conventionin Charlotte, North Carolina, in September 2012.

After the president's re-election victory speech in Chicago, Nov. 7, 2012.

After the president's re-election victory speech in Chicago, Nov. 7, 2012.

Campaigning in Des Moines, Iowa, the night before Election Day in November 2012.

Campaigning in Des Moines, Iowa, the night before Election Day in November 2012.

The Obamas show off for the "Kiss Cam' at the U.S. Men's Olympic basketball team's game against Brazil in Washington, D.C., in 2012.

The Obamas show off for the "Kiss Cam' at the U.S. Men's Olympic basketball team's game against Brazil in Washington, D.C., in 2012.

The First Couple arrives to deliver toys and gifts for the Marine Corps Toys for Tots campaign at Bolling Air Force Base in Washington, D.C., in 2014.

The First Couple arrives to deliver toys and gifts for the Marine Corps Toys for Tots campaign at Bolling Air Force Base in Washington, D.C., in 2014.

At the Eisenhower Executive Office Building, next to the White House in January 2014.

At the Eisenhower Executive Office Building, next to the White House in January 2014.

The Obamas show off dance moves as they visit with Girl Scouts camping overnight on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington, D.C., in June 2015.

The Obamas show off dance moves as they visit with Girl Scouts camping overnight on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington, D.C., in June 2015.

The Congressional Black Caucus Foundation's 45th Annual Legislative Conference in Washington, D.C., in September 2015.

The Congressional Black Caucus Foundation's 45th Annual Legislative Conference in Washington, D.C., in September 2015.

Awaiting the arrival of Chinese President Xi Jinping and his wife, Madame Peng Liyuan, at a state dinner at the White House in September 2015.

Awaiting the arrival of Chinese President Xi Jinping and his wife, Madame Peng Liyuan, at a state dinner at the White House in September 2015.

At the White House in May 2016.

At the White House in May 2016.

Hanging out with kids during an event in Yosemite National Park, California, in June 2016.

Hanging out with kids during an event in Yosemite National Park, California, in June 2016.

The first lady primps the president as they wait to welcome Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong and Mrs. Lee Hsien Loong, of Singapore, to the White House in August 2016.

The first lady primps the president as they wait to welcome Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong and Mrs. Lee Hsien Loong, of Singapore, to the White House in August 2016.

There's a greater meaning behind those "Missing Obama" posters you're seeing online

Since President Donald Trump's inauguration on January 20, there have been missing posters popping up for former President Barack Obama.

"Missing. Have you seen this man?" the poster's header reads in all caps. It continues to describe details about the 44th president, such as "last seen walking out of a large white house" and "likes basketball and health care."

The posters have not only flooded American neighborhoods throughout the nation - and even across the world - they have also gone viral throughout social media. The posters have been tagged in Instagram posts in cities in California, New York City and even Stockholm.

TEARS, CHEERS, SHADE: Social media weighs in on Obama's last speech

There are even designated social media accounts in charge of coordinating the hunt for the former president, as well as a website to headquarter the search. According to MissingObama.org, the "missing" title doesn't actually refer to Obama physically being missing, but rather because they miss Obama's leadership and social example. To see the sweetest moments during the Obama administration, click through the gallery above.

"The role he played as president for eight years is also 'missing.' Trump is severely unqualified to act as the President and Commander in Chief of the United States of America," the description reads. "This poster also represents the importance of freedom of expression. It encourages us to be vocal and engage in political conversation. The election is over, but democracy isn't. Speaking up can mean anything, from something as simple as liking a post to something more interactive like organizing a protest. Expression is vital on every level."

These are among the thousands of ways Americans are using their freedom of expression to the fullest extent. Since Trump's inauguration, there have been multiple gatherings of protests calling out the 45th president for is rocky election campaign and controversial policy changes.

CURRENT DEBATE:What is an executive order? And how do Trump's stack up?

Even as millions of Americans are looking forward to the Super Bowl, hundreds of others are hitting the streets protesting the controversial executive orders Trump has signed in his first two weeks in office.

Continued here:
There's a greater meaning behind those "Missing Obama" posters you're seeing online - SFGate

Donald Trump is using Barack Obama as a security blanket – CNN

What a difference a few months makes.

Trump and his White House advisers are now using Obama as a security blanket, making almost identical moves he made during his tenure and defending possible mistakes by arguing that they were initially made by Barack Obama.

The tactic is familiar: Obama, eight years after he succeeded President George W. Bush, was still blaming the 43rd president for some of the pockmarks on his legacy.

But what is remarkable about Trump is how vehemently he ran against Obama. Not only did Trump describe the Obama presidency in near apocalyptic terms during the campaign, he was the leader of the "Birther" movement, an attempt to delegitimize the president he is now using as a shield.

In the aftermath this week of the botched raid in Yemen that left one US Navy SEAL dead and three more wounded, as well as another three hurt in an Osprey crash, the Trump White House pointed the finger at the previous administration.

White House press secretary Sean Spicer, laying out how the raid came together, was clear to note that it was approved by the Obama administration before it was passed off and approved by Trump.

"Clearly, that was under the last administration," Spicer said while going through the key dates in the raid. And White House officials, speaking with the benefit of not identifying themselves, were quick to note that Pentagon officials had discussed and even signed off on the plan.

This has Obama allies accusing the new commander in chief of passing the buck.

Ned Price, former special assistant to Obama and the National Security Council, tweeted Thursday that the operation was "never presented to or considered by the Obama Admin for approval."

Another former senior government official involved in Obama's National Security Council told CNN: "In a nutshell, Trump and his team owns the process and the ultimate decision -- and the consequences."

Obama's team is also wondering why Trump, who repeatedly criticized the unemployment figures issued under the Democratic president, is suddenly taking credit for new job growth at the end of Obama's term.

"Don't believe these phony numbers," Trump said in February 2016. "The number is probably 28, 29, as high as 35 [percent]. In fact, I even heard recently 42%."

Friday, when the latest numbers were released, Spicer touted the figures from the White House podium.

"Speaking of good numbers," Spicer said before reading out the January jobs report that found America added 227,000 jobs in January, well ahead of December's gain of 157,000 jobs.

"Today's report reflects the consumer confidence that the Trump presidency has inspired," Spicer said. Kellyanne Conway, one of Trump's top aides, tweeted that "jobs numbers already like POTUS."

Trump, during a meeting with business leaders on Friday, said he was "very happy" with the jobs report.

"I think that' it's going to continue big league. We're bringing back jobs," he added.

While this is the first jobs report released under Trump, the Labor Department conducted the survey in the second week of January, while Obama was still in office.

And Obama officials -- many of whom left their offices weeks ago -- were left to laugh at how Trump is taking credit for the jobs numbers.

"It was, indeed, remarkable that the unemployment rate fell from 42% to 4.8% on January 20th," said Austan Goolsbee, the former chair of Obama's Council of Economic Advisers.

And on Iran, Trump is responding to the nation's ballistic missile test in nearly the same way Obama's administration responded.

After Trump's national security adviser puts Iran "on notice," the Trump administration announced it was applying sanctions on 25 individuals and companies connected to Iran's ballistic missile program.

"Iran is playing with fire - they don't appreciate how "kind" President Obama was to them," Trump tweeted on Friday. "Not me!"

National Security Adviser Michael Flynn said in a statement that the sanctions show "the days of turning a blind eye to Iran's hostile and belligerent actions toward the United States and the world community are over."

Responding to the Iranian's testing ballistic missiles by implanting sanctions, however, is exactly what the Obama administration did in January 2016.

"We will continue to enforce these sanctions vigorously," Obama said when his Treasury Department sanctioned 11 people with ties to the missile program. "We are going to remain vigilant about it."

Jake Sullivan, the top policy adviser on Hillary Clinton's campaign and a former Obama administration official, said Thursday that Trump took a page out of Obama's playbook.

"When the Iranians tested Ballistic Missiles in the Obama administration, the Obama administration imposed sanctions," Sullivan said. "So, this is consistent with steps that have been taken in the past."

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Donald Trump is using Barack Obama as a security blanket - CNN

Tancredo: The Disgusting Media Double Standard Between Obama and Trump – Breitbart News

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The political bias of the establishment media has never been more outrageous than what we see in the presss double standard for covering President Donald Trump. For contrasts that will make your head spin and your heart ache, compare Trumps treatment to the presss idolatrous treatment of President Obama.

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The medias fan-club attitude toward Obama was unprecedented in the modern era. Not even handsome Jack Kennedy or war hero Eisenhower got the kids-glove treatment that Obama got. Obamas frequent goofy statements and embarrassing gaffes were either overlooked entirely or treated as amusing sidebars.

Will any historian ever catalog Obamas frequent misstatements of elementary facts? How many do you remember? Here are few of the gems liberal historians will overlook:

Such historical ignorance and efforts at personal myth-making were routine for Obama - and never challenged by the working press.

Obamas hilarious mispronunciations and stupid asides were a regular feature of his speeches and interviews, at home and abroad. And yet, they did not tarnish his reputation in the White House press corps as a great intellectual and perhaps the smartest man to ever sit in the Oval office. Oh, really?

Now, compare the worshipful treatment of Obama to what Trump has experienced since winning the election on November 8. The establishment press wont even accept the legitimacy of Trumps election, much less the strong points of his policy initiatives. They wont let go of the popular vote versus the Electoral College. That is not ignorance of Civics 101; it is part of a political strategy to demonize and delegitimize the entire Trump program.

The media has openly joined the campaign by the Democratic Party and the Social Justice left to deny that President Trump has any policy mandates whatsoever. The narrative is this: since his presidency is illegitimate to begin with, it is okay to use violence to obstruct him at every point.

Trump is justified and very smart to communicate with the American people directly and not expect the media to convey his messages fairly. Too many of them have become angry partisans in the lefts demonization strategy, and they need to be short-circuited.

Conservatives and constitutionalists have seen media bias for half a century, and America has survived it. Yet, never has that bias and that vituperation been so uniform and vicious as what we see waged against President Trump. When it is coordinated with the near-uniform cultural bias in the entertainment and educational institutions, a triad of treachery emerges to challenge the very foundations of civic order.

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Tancredo: The Disgusting Media Double Standard Between Obama and Trump - Breitbart News

Lavrov: Undoing Obama-inflicted damage to Russia-US ties will take great effort – RT

Serious efforts are required to overcome the severe damage done to US-Russia relations under Barack Obama, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov told Austrian magazine Profil, adding that the need for dialogue, voiced by Donald Trump, gives hope for improving ties.

Of course, we kept close tabs on what Donald Tramp said about Russia on the campaign trail and after the elections. The stated stance of the need to build a good dialogue between the two countries gives some hope for positive developments in our bilateral relations, Lavrov said in an interview with Austrian weekly news magazine Profil.

As President Putin repeatedly stressed, we are ready to go our part of the way for the recovery of our relations with the United States. Their degradation in recent years is not our fault but a result of purposeful actions of the previous administration in Washington. For our part, we have always stayed open to development of predictable cooperation, based on the principles of equality, mutual respect and consideration of each other's interests.

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Improving bilateral ties could prove to be a real challenge, Lavrov said.

We realize that serious efforts from both sides are required to overcome the severe damage done to our relations under Barack Obama. Its probably still too early to talk about how work on specific issues will go with the [new] Republican team. It is necessary to wait until the key officials of the new administration feel comfortable in their seats and clarify their foreign policy priorities. After that it will be possible to draw conclusions for the future.

In their first phone conversation that lasted nearly an hour late last month, Russian President Vladimir Putin and new US President Donald Trump outlined their intent to cooperate on issues ranging from defeating Islamic State to mending bilateral economic ties.

Both sides expressed their readiness to make active joint efforts to stabilize and develop Russia-US cooperation on a constructive, equitable and mutually beneficial basis, as well as build up partner cooperation on a wide range of international issues, according to a Kremlin statement following their discussion.

The White House also acknowledged that the positive conversation was a significant start to improving the relationship between the United States and Russia that is in need of repair.

Both President Trump and President Putin are hopeful that after todays call the two sides can move quickly to tackle terrorism and other important issues of mutual concern, the official US statement added.

Lavrov said Moscow and Washington can jointly attempt to resolve some of worlds most pressing issues.

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We are convinced that wherever there is mutual interest, Russia and the United States can definitely move forward in resolving bilateral issues and make a joint contribution to the effective resolution of the key problems of today. Especially in demand is the [joint] coordination of our countries efforts in the fight against international terrorism.

On top of it, we have a big untapped potential of mutually beneficial cooperation in trade, investment, innovation and technological spheres. Its a good sign that despite the sanctions and pressure from the Obama administration, the majority of US companies did not want to leave the promising Russian market. It has proved to be very profitable for them. Were also interested in expanding cultural and humanitarian exchanges.

I repeat: it is possible to establish effective cooperation between Russia and the United States, but only on the basis of mutual respect and interests, the top Russian diplomat said.

When asked under what conditions Russia could lift its sanctions against the EU, Lavrov replied: This question should not be addressed to me. We didnt initiate the sanctions, its not up to us to lift them, the Russian FM said.

We have imposed [our] sanctions as a countermeasure for one simple reason. European sanctions restrict the ability of our banks to receive loans for the financing of agriculture, which would mean that the EU farmers would benefit from conditions of unfair competition on the Russian market. We had to do everything possible to stay honest. That's all.

READ MORE: Putin & Trump signal new Russia-US partnership with 1st phone call on ISIS, trade & Ukraine

Speaking of Austrias upcoming presidency at the OSCE, Lavrov expressed hope that it will primarily help in settling the Ukrainian crisis.

Speaking of Syria, Lavrov described the negotiations that took place on January 2324 in Kazakhstans Astana as an important and a whole new step in the peace-making progress.

We managed to strengthen the ceasefire regime introduced in Syria under the December 29 agreement At the same time, we do not plan to replace the Geneva talks with those in Astana, Lavrov said, adding that Astana has given an additional momentum to the Geneva process.

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Lavrov: Undoing Obama-inflicted damage to Russia-US ties will take great effort - RT