צילום: AP // The scene of the Jan. 9 attack at the kosher supermarket in Paris

White House struggles with Obama comment on 'random' Paris attack

Outcry erupts in the U.S. after President Barack Obama says "a bunch of folks" were "randomly" shot at the kosher supermarket in Paris on Jan. 9, ignoring the anti-Semitic motivations of the Islamic terrorist who carried out the attack.

The White House and State Department struggled Tuesday to clarify President Barack Obama's suggestion that last month's deadly shooting at a kosher supermarket in Paris was random, despite the administration's earlier assertions that the attack was anti-Semitic.

Four people, all Jews, were killed in the Jan. 9 attack, carried out by Islamic terrorist Amedy Coulibaly.

Obama, in describing terror threats during a lengthy interview with the news site Vox, said the American people were right to be concerned "when you've got a bunch of violent, vicious zealots who behead people or randomly shoot a bunch of folks in a deli in Paris."

Administration officials at first defended Obama's comments, with White House spokesman Josh Earnest saying that while the administration was aware of the "motivation" of the gunman, the president was making the point that those killed in the kosher supermarket "were not targeted by name."

"There were people other than just Jews who were in that deli," Earnest said.

His comments were echoed by State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki, who noted that the four victims of the attack were not all from one background or nationality. She also declined to say whether the attacks were anti-Semitic, deferring to the French government, which has used that language.

Administration critics quickly challenged that explanation, saying Obama was ignoring the gunman's motivations.

"French President Francois Hollande has consistently called the January shooting at the kosher deli in Paris an 'appalling anti-Semitic attack,' so why can't the administration do so too-" Sen. Mark Kirk (R-Ill.) said. "The administration's inability to speak consistently and clearly about Islamic terror threats reflects not only muddled thinking, but also muddled policies."

Matt Brooks, the executive director of the Republican Jewish Coalition, said the statements by Obama and his advisers "send the wrong message to both the Jewish community and the terrorists who are responsible for these heinous acts."

Soon the Obama administration's spokespeople took to Twitter to try to clean up their earlier explanations.

Earnest wrote that the administration's view "has not changed. Terror attack at Paris kosher market was motivated by anti-Semitism." And Psaki wrote, "We have always been clear that the attack on the kosher grocery store was an anti-Semitic attack that took the lives of innocent people."

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