Blair Calls for World to Unite
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Thursday, Nov. 4, 2004
LONDON Prime Minister Tony Blair, trying to bridge the
trans-Atlantic rift over Iraq, urged a "fractured, divided and
uncertain" world to unite in the wake of President Bush's re-election
victory.
Blair, Bush's strongest international ally in the invasion of
Iraq, congratulated the president and tried to
nudge him toward re-engaging with the stalled Middle East peace
process.
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Speaking at his 10 Downing Street office Wednesday after talking
to Bush by phone, Blair said working toward Israeli-Palestinian
peace was "the single most pressing political challenge in our
world today."
"Therefore we must be relentless in our war against terrorism
and in resolving the conditions and causes on which the terrorists
prey," Blair said. "We should work with President Bush on this
agenda. It is one which all nations of goodwill would surely
agree."
Those remarks appeared aimed at Britain's European neighbors,
many of whom opposed the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq and were wary of
a second Bush presidency.
Bush's perceived unilateralism, his refusal to sign the Kyoto
Protocol on global warming, his rejection of an international
criminal court and the incarceration of detainees at the U.S.
military base in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba also have also to his
unpopularity among Europeans, including many Britons.
Blair said Bush's re-election "comes at a critical time. A
world that is fractured, divided and uncertain must be brought
together to fight this global terrorism in all its forms, and to
recognize it will not be defeated by military might alone."
The loyalty of the centrist Blair to the right-wing Republican
Bush has angered many Britons, especially among left-wing sections
of the governing Labour Party. Many Britons believe Blair slavishly
follows U.S. foreign policy without exerting real influence, and he
is frequently mocked as Washington's poodle.
Blair tried to dispel that image Wednesday, painting the
trans-Atlantic relationship as a two-way street.
While pledging support for the U.S.-led war on terror, Blair
also stressed the importance of bringing democracy to Iraq, as in
Afghanistan, and to fighting poverty and injustice in Africa and
elsewhere in the world.
And he called for renewed commitment to Israeli-Palestinian
peace.
It is widely assumed in Britain that Blair backed Bush over Iraq
in return for a pledge that Washington would push harder for peace
in the Middle East. The "road map" peace plan for Israel and the
Palestinians put forward by Bush last year has largely stalled.
Blair said he "have long argued that the need to revitalize the
Middle East peace process is the single most pressing political
challenge in our world today."
Blair's remarks were echoed by Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak
and German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder, who appealed to the United
States to push for the "road map" plan.
After meeting with Mubarak in Bonn, Schroeder said peace efforts
would go more smoothly with cooperation from Europe, Russia "and
above all, the United States of America, so that this process can
be implemented better."
Blair called on Europe and the United States to "build anew
their alliance" in the wake of Bush's victory.
"All of us in positions of leadership, not just President Bush,
have a responsibility to rise to this challenge. It is urgent that
we do so," Blair said.
© 2004 Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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