White House denies that it invited Charlie Hebdo staff to see Obama

Charlie Hebdo cartoonist Rénald Luzier after the funeral service of Charlie Hebdo editor and cartoonist Stéphane Charbonnier. (Photo: Aurelien Meunier/Getty)

The White House on Friday denied a report in a French magazine that the administration invited staffers from the satirical weekly Charlie Hebdo to meet with and draw President Barack Obama in the aftermath of the bloody terrorist attack on the publication’s offices in Paris.

Rénald Luzier, better known by his pen name, Luz, told the French magazine Les Inrockuptibles that U.S. officials conceived of the visit as a way to make up for the absence of a top American official at a march in support for Charlie Hebdo on Jan. 11, one week after the attack.

U.S. Ambassador Jane Hartley attended the demonstration, along with leaders of Germany, Israel and the Palestinian Authority.

But the absence of Obama, Vice President Joe Biden or Secretary of State John Kerry led to accusations from American conservatives that the president was turning his back on freedom of speech. The attack, by two brothers of Algerian descent, was in apparent retaliation for cartoons that many Muslims saw as blasphemous. Twelve people were shot to death and 11 injured.

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French President François Hollande, center, is surrounded by heads of state including, from left, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Malian President Ibrahim Boubacar Keïta, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, European Council President Donald Tusk and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas as they attend the solidarity march in the streets of Paris. (Photo: Philippe Wojazer/Reuters) 

“Obama didn’t send an important representative, and sending John Kerry to see [French President François] Hollande wasn’t enough,” Luzier said.

“The idea was to have folks from Charlie to the White House. An interview? Awesome. We would have gone there directly. Except that they wanted to have a cartoonist come to draw Obama. This isn’t Montmartre,” he said, referring to caricaturists who draw tourists for money near the Sacré-Coeur. “I said, ‘If he comes to Paris, I’ll put Budweiser in the fridge and I’ll draw him.’”

Ultimately, Luzier said, the Charlie team decided that “paying homage to the world’s number one military power would have been awful and dangerous” and that “it wasn’t our job to bandage the wounds of American diplomacy.”

According to Luzier, Obama’s staff responded, “Really, we just don’t understand the French.”

On Friday, a White House official denied Luzier’s account.

“We have seen some reports that a Charlie Hebdo staffer claims to have received, and declined, an invitation to the White House,” said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity. “These reports are not true. No such invitation was ever extended.”