Don't listen to extremists who lie about the US: Bush
UNITED NATIONS: President George W. Bush sought to blunt
anti-Americanism across the Middle East asserting that extremists are
trying to justify their violence by falsely claiming the U.S. is waging
war on Islam. He singled out Iran and Syria as sponsors of terrorism.
Bush, in an address Tuesday to world leaders at the U.N. General
Assembly, tried to advance his campaign for democracy in the Middle East
against a backdrop of turmoil in Iraq, Afghanistan and other nations
that have embraced the very changes he seeks for the region.
Solidly aligned with Israel, the United States is viewed with anger
and suspicion by Muslims across the Middle East.
Addressing that hostility, Bush said, "My country desires peace.
Extremists in your midst spread propaganda claiming that the West is
engaged in a war against Islam. This propaganda is false and its purpose
is to confuse you and justify acts of terror. We respect Islam."
Hours after Bush spoke, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad told
the General Assembly that the U.S. and Britain were abusing the U.N.
Security Council to achieve their own ends. He described Iran's disputed
nuclear activities as "transparent, peaceful and under the watchful eye"
of U.N. inspectors.
Ahmadinejad was also critical of the U.S.-led war in Iraq, declaring
that "the occupiers are incapable of establishing security in Iraq" and
that every day hundreds of people are killed "in cold blood."
Bush's address earlier in the day was the latest in a series of
speeches on the war on terror, linked to last week's fifth anniversary
of the Sept. 11 attacks and aimed at setting the tone for the final
weeks of U.S. elections that will determine control of Congress.
Bush said past stability in the Middle East has been achieved at the
expense of freedom, and he disputed critics who claim his push for
democracy has destabilized the region.
"The reality is that the stability we thought we saw in the Middle
East was a mirage," Bush told the more than 80 prime ministers and
presidents assembled in the cavernous hall of the U.N. headquarters.
"For decades, millions of men and women in the region have been
trapped in oppression and hopelessness. And these conditions left a
generation disillusioned and made this region a breeding ground for
extremism."
New York, Wednesday, AP |