Like the other meetings in Europe or anywhere else for any meeting, Bush did it again:
Attention folks, Let's focus in the "War on Terror" NOW!
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Bush Intensifies Security Push at APEC Sun October 19, 2003 11:15 PM ET By Jane Macartney and Darren Schuettler BANGKOK (Reuters) - President Bush intensified his drive to put the war on terror at the heart of a Pacific Rim summit on Monday, despite the resentment of some Asian nations who want the forum to stick to freeing trade.
Bush, seeking practical as well as diplomatic support in his campaign against terror, appeared likely to be successful in making the issue the focus of a 21-member Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit held under extraordinarily tight security.
"This is still a dangerous world," Bush said on Sunday, using the latest threats on a tape purportedly made by Osama bin Laden to bolster his case for greater cooperation by a grouping that has traditionally focused on economic issues.
His argument that terrorism poses "a direct and profound" challenge to freeing trade and increasing prosperity is already at the heart of the declaration being drafted for issue at the end of the two-day summit on Tuesday.
The draft declaration calls for increased security coordination, tighter controls at ports and a campaign to stop militants moving money around the world.
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But some in Asia were clearly upset.
They were led by outspoken Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad, who told reporters: "APEC was formed as an economic cooperation group. But we don't agree (to) taking away economic matters into security, military or politics."
Some worried that the focus on security would cause serious friction.
"If the talks go beyond economic issues, we don't want to see the relationship among members in the forum deteriorate," said Thai Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, the host of the summit and whose country has long been a close U.S. ally.
APEC includes several countries struggling to contain militancy within their own borders, including Indonesia, the world's most populous Muslim nation, Russia and the Philippines.
NORTH KOREA
Bush, who visited Japan and the Philippines on the way to the Bangkok summit, started his day at breakfast with South Korean President Roh Moo-hyun and declared "good progress" on ending North Korea's nuclear ambitions.
In a shift aimed at jumping stalled six-party talks on Pyongyang's nuclear weapons program, Bush said on Sunday he was willing to provide security assurances -- but no non-aggression treaty -- in exchange for North Korea abandoning it.
"We're making good progress on peacefully solving the issue with North Korea," Bush said as he sat down with Roh, who praised the U.S. leader's efforts "to make process in the areas related to North Korea."
Roh expressed hope the talks -- which also include Russia, China, Japan, all present at the APEC summit, and North Korea -- would resume "in the near future."
U.S. officials said the final summit communique was likely to include a reference that the Korean Peninsula be nuclear weapons free. This was short of the separate statement that had been issued at APEC last year and which Japan had wanted this year.
CHINA PANEL
Nevertheless, trade issues were still prominent at a summit of a group spanning a wide range of countries from the United States to Papua New Guinea.
Bush, facing re-election in November 2004 and under pressure from hard-pressed U.S. manufacturers who blame what they see as an unfairly undervalued Chinese currency for the loss of 2.7 million jobs in the past three years, tackled Chinese President Hu Jintao on the thorny issue.
Hu agreed to a joint panel to study the way to floating the yuan, but, significantly did so after China's central bank chief issued a long defense of Beijing's current policy of effectively pegging the yuan to the dollar.
However, APEC ministers working over the weekend to prepare the final communique seemed to have produced little more than rhetoric on reviving world trade talks which collapsed in Cancun, Mexico, last month.
APEC, which includes some countries which clashed bitterly in Cancun, agreed at the weekend that fresh efforts were needed to put back on track talks deemed crucial to completing the so-called Doha round of World Trade Organization talks.
reuters.com |