Wednesday,
November 7, 2001
Bush:
Terrorists are seeking nuclear weapons
By
Scott Lindlaw
Associated Press
WASHINGTON
President Bush on Tuesday compared Afghanistans
terrorist-harboring regime and its mad global ambitions
to the totalitarian leaders who enslaved Europe for much of
the last century.
He asked
Europes new leadership to join his anti-terrorism campaign.
No
nation can be neutral in this conflict, Bush told officials
from Eastern Europe, the former Soviet republics and the Balkans.
He said terrorists behind the Sept. 11 attacks are seeking
chemical, biological and nuclear weapons, posing a threat
to civilization itself.
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Chuck
Kennedy/KRT
President Bush speaks words of welcome to French President
Jacques Chirac in the Rose Garden following their meeting
in the Oval Office, Tuesday. Opening a 10-day diplomatic
offensive, Bush met with Chirac for more than an hour.
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The address,
delivered via satellite to a 20-nation gathering in Poland,
marked a harsh turn in the U.S. rhetoric against Afghanistans
Taliban regime and the al-Queda network. Bush hopes to reverse
doubts among allies about the U.S.-led military action in
Afghanistan. He also hopes to calm American anxieties and,
on Thursday, will travel to Atlanta for what the White House
bills as a major address on Americas homeland defenses.
Opening
a 10-day diplomatic offensive, Bush arranged to meet Tuesday
with French President Jacques Chirac and Serbian Prime Minister
Zoran Djindjic.
For
more than 50 years, the people of your region suffered under
repressive ideologies that tried to trample human dignity.
Today our freedom is threatened once again, Bush said
from the White House Blue Room. Like the Fascist totalitarians
before them, these terrorists al-Queda, the Taliban
regime that supports them and other terror groups across the
world try to impose their radical views through threats
and violence.
We
see the same intolerance of dissent, the same mad global ambitions,
the same brutal determination to control every life and all
of life. We have seen the true nature of these terrorists
in the nature of their attacks, said Bush, who urged
the people of Afghanistan to help finger terrorists.
He issued
a long indictment of the Taliban regime and its terrorists
allies: They kill, then rejoice over the murders; steal food
from their own people; destroy religious monuments; forbid
children to fly kites, sing songs or build snowmen.
A 7-year-old
girl, Bush said, can be beaten for wearing white shoes.
And
now theyre trying to export terrorism throughout the
world, in some 60 nations, he warned.
These
terrorist groups seek to destabilize entire nations and regions.
Theyre seeking chemical, biological and nuclear weapons.
Given the means, our enemies would be a threat to every nation;
and, eventually, to civilization itself, Bush said.
We
act now because we must lift this dark threat from our age,
he said.
He received
fresh words of caution Monday from Algerian President Abdelaziz
Bouteflika, who pledged support but said the military operation
in Afghanistan must minimize civilian deaths.
Bush
sought to allay such concerns Tuesday, saying, Our efforts
are directed at terrorists and military targets, because unlike
our enemies, we value human life.
By invoking
the ghosts of communism in his speech, Bush walked a fine
line between stirring listeners to his cause and inflaming
officials from countries, such as Russia and the former Soviet
satellites, where communists still enjoy some support. Bush
hopes to strike a deal later this month with Russian President
Vladimir Putin, allowing U.S. missile defense tests.
The leaders
gathered at the invitation of Polish President Aleksander
Kwasniewski to discuss ways they can cooperate in fighting
terrorism.
Heads
of state from Albania, Bosnia, Croatia, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania,
Moldova, Romania, Slovakia, Ukraine and Macedonia confirmed
participation, said Andrzej Majkowski, a senior aide to Kwasniewski.
Bulgaria,
the Czech Republic, Slovenia and Yugoslavia planned to send
senior government representatives, he said. Hungary also was
expected to participate, but had not decided whom to send.
Observers were expected from Russia, Belarus, Turkey, the
European Union, NATO and the Organization for Security and
Cooperation in Europe.
Bush
said the U.S.-led efforts requires sincere, sustained
actions from other nations.
Previewing
his remarks this weekend at the United Nations, the president
said, I will put every nation on notice that these duties
involve more than sympathy or words. No nation can be neutral
in this conflict because no civilized nation can be secure
in a world threatened by terrorism.
Many
of the nations represented have a powerful incentive to cooperate:
They are seeking NATO admission. But administration officials
said Bush was not promising to promote their membership in
exchange for cooperation.
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