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US wants partnership with Europe, says Bush
Foreign Desk Report
ROME—President Bush is urging Europe to more aggressively partner with
the United States to look beyond trans-Atlantic issues and focus on
global problems such as Mideast peace, curtailing the rise of radical
Islamic terrorists and keeping regimes such as Iran in check.
“Instead of dwelling on our differences, we are increasingly united in
our interests and ideals,” Bush was to say in a speech Friday in Paris.
“In leaders like Berlusconi and Brown, Merkel and Sarkozy, I see a
commitment to a powerful and purposeful Europe that advances the values
of liberty within its borders, and beyond.”
The White House released a portion of Bush’s remarks on Thursday, while
the president was still in Rome. He is on a weeklong European trip,
where he is meeting with Italian Premier Silvio Berlusconi, British
Prime Minister Gordon Brown, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French
President Nicolas Sarkozy.
On his visit here, Bush was getting a hearty welcome from the
charismatic Berlusconi, his old friend, and Pope Benedict XVI. That’s
not what was found on the streets, however, where anti-Bush sentiment
over the war in Iraq still lingers.
Anti-war activists and hundreds of other demonstrators marched through
the Italian capital on Wednesday as Bush arrived for a visit that was to
include meetings with Berlusconi on Thursday and the pope on Friday.
The president, as usual, kept about his business. He encountered scant
signs of protest on his motorcade route on Thursday.
At the elegant hillside Villa Aurelia, part of the American Academy in
Rome, Bush met with young Italian entrepreneurs who receive training in
the United States through an exchange program. He encouraged them to
come get the “firsthand truth about America” and disputed what he called
misinformation and propaganda about the United States.
“We are compassionate, we are an open country, we care about people, we
are entrepreneurial,” Bush said. “We love the entrepreneurial spirit.” A
short time later, Bush was greeted by Italian President Georgio
Napolitano at Quirinale Palace, situated atop the highest hill in Rome.
Originally built as a summer home for popes at the end of the 16th
century, the palace is now the official residence of the president.
Also on the trip, Bush attended a U.S.-European Union summit, will see
Queen Elizabeth II at Windsor Castle and go to Belfast, Northern
Ireland. The White House has billed the Paris speech at the Organization
for Economic Cooperation and Development as the centerpiece of the trip,
as a way for the president to lay out his view that relations between
the United States and Europe are now in a “new era.” With his own
country and all the ones he is visited far more interested in the race
to find his successor than in his doings, Bush claimed a success that he
would be passing on to the next president.
“When the time comes to welcome a new American president next January, I
will be pleased to report to him that the relationship between the
United States and Europe is the broadest and most vibrant it has ever
been,” Bush said.
Security is extremely tight for Bush’s two-day stay in Rome. Commercial
flights have been banned over the city. Dozens of buses and trams have
been rerouted. Thousands of policemen have been deployed as part of a
plan to monitor any further protests, though Wednesday’s march drew far
fewer demonstrators than previous visits by Bush.
Slovenia and Germany, the first two stops on Bush’s trip, were devoid of
demonstrators. That was evidence that trans-Atlantic relations,
fractured over the U.S.-led invasion in Iraq, are on the mend, that
European leaders have moved beyond their anger over the war. The Rome
protests are evidence that the Italian public still opposes the Bush
administration.
Unlike other European leaders, such as former German Chancellor Gerhard
Schroeder and former French President Jacques Chirac, Berlusconi
supported Bush on Iraq from the start.
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