SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: calgal who wrote (470907)10/4/2003 11:17:45 AM
From: calgal  Respond to of 769670
 
Powell Criticizes Israel on Security Fence Construction
Friday, October 03, 2003

WASHINGTON — Israel's plan to build 565 new homes in Jewish enclaves on the West Bank (search) drew criticism and an implicit threat Friday from the Bush administration.

Settlement activity is unhelpful to peacemaking with the Palestinians (search), and the construction will be taken into account as the Bush administration reviews its promises of loan guarantees to Israel, the State Department spokesman Richard Boucher said.

Secretary of State Colin Powell (search) also criticized Israel on the Jewish state's announced intention to construct a security fence extending into Palestinian terrority.

In an interview with The Washington Post, Powell said Israel's proposal to leave large gaps in the fence would not satisfy U.S. concerns. He said U.S. officials were having "intense discussions" on their response. The interview was being published in Saturday editions of the Post.

The new homes would be built deep inside the West Bank, which the Palestinians, with support from President Bush, intend to take over for a state. The U.S. view is the more territory Israelis live in, the harder it will be to unscramble the area and establish lasting borders.

Even so, the Bush administration continued to give highest priority Friday to the formation of a Palestinian government with the resources to "carry out action" against terrorists.

While public U.S. criticism of Israel was relatively mild, the State Department's frustration with the stalled peace effort was apparent.

New housing construction "is unhelpful in terms of the process of movement on peace as well as the achievement of the president's vision of two states living side by side," Boucher said.

Besides, he said, "It puts people in areas that need to be negotiated."

The threat of punishment involves a review of how much to reduce in $9 billion in loan guarantees that the Bush administration promised Israel to help offset its weak economy.

Under law, the guarantees, which help Israel obtain favorable commercial rates, can be reduced dollar-for-dollar by what Israel spends on expanding settlements.

Incoming Palestinian Prime Minister Ahmed Qureia has accused Israel of trying to circumvent peace talks by seizing land the Palestinians want for a state.

The West Bank was held by Jordan after World War II until Israel defeated Arab armies in 1967 and took over the territory. Most residents are Palestinian Arabs.



To: calgal who wrote (470907)10/4/2003 2:00:21 PM
From: calgal  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
Bush Touts Latest Jobs Report







Friday, October 03, 2003

WASHINGTON — President Bush, buoyed by good news on the jobs front, said Friday his administration's efforts to spur a healthier economy are starting to take hold.





"One of the reasons I'm optimistic about the future of our economy is because of our entrepreneurial spirit," Bush told about 1,000 people in a convention hall here. "The tax relief plan puts more capital in the pockets of the small business owners -- which means somebody is more likely to find a job."

Bush spoke just a few hours after the Labor Department (search) reported that the unemployment rate (search) held steady in September at 6.1 percent of the labor force and that businesses added some 57,000 jobs.

Both Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney also were hitting the money trail Friday to raise more campaign cash for the Republican presidential primary, in which Bush faces no opponent.

Bush was adding a projected $800,000 to his $84 million re-election war chest at a lunchtime event in Milwaukee. Cheney was headlining a fund-raiser at the Wakonda Club, a private golf club in Iowa, after an appearance in Malvern, Pa., where he was raising money for Rep. Jim Gerlach, a first-term Republican up for re-election next year.

Bush's event drew stern criticism from state Democrats.

"He's raising $800,000 from rich contributors in a town that's increasingly becoming poorer and poorer every year," said Seth Bofelli, a spokesman for the Wisconsin Democratic Party. "That's something that's going to take a lot more than a nice, fancy backdrop and a campaign stop to fix."

But Bush argued that his tax cut package, which increased the child tax credit (search) from $600 to $1,000 and accelerated several income tax cuts previously scheduled to take effect later in the decade, was helping.

As evidence of progress toward a recovery, the president cited the new report. Economists had expected the overall civilian unemployment rate to rise to 6.2 percent, with a loss of 25,000 more jobs.

"Things are getting better," Bush said, standing in front of a huge poster of Milwaukee's downtown, emblazoned with the White House theme "Strengthening America's Economy."

"But there's still work to do," he said.

That work includes lawsuit reforms to lower health care costs, streamlined regulations, a comprehensive energy plan (search), expanded trade and more tax breaks, said Bush. He challenged Congress to make recently enacted tax cuts permanent rather let them expire on schedule.



"The government giveth, and the government taketh away," he said, mocking the built-in provisions for the breaks to expire.

Earlier, Bush met privately with local business owners, sessions the White House often uses to provide fodder for favorable news coverage by local outlets and for the individual examples Bush sprinkles into his public speeches.

Before leaving Washington, Bush met with Bernard Kerik, the former New York City police commissioner who was in Iraq until last month to help rebuild the country's police force. Kerik challenged criticism that the reconstruction was moving too slowly. He said 35 police stations have been established with 40,000 police in four months.

"Try to stand up 35 police stations in New York City," he said. "It would take you about 11 years, depending on who's in city council. It takes awhile."

The president's trip to Wisconsin was his eighth to the state, which he lost narrowly in 2000.