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| Bush delivers a speech in Nampa,
Idaho. | WASHINGTON, Aug. 24 (Xinhuanet) -- Amid growing
public skepticism on the Iraq war, US President George W. Bush vowed on
Wednesday to"stay on the course" on the anti-terrorism war as long as he is
president.
"So long as I am president we
will stay, we will fight and we will win the war on terrorism," Bush said in a
speech in Nampa, Idaho, to members of the Idaho National Guard and their
families.
This was the second speech in a week by the president
to rebuild support for the Iraq war. In a speech to the national convention of
the Veterans of Foreign Wars in Salt Lake City, Utah, on Monday, Bush defended
his policy on the Iraq war, saying that the only way to defend the United States
was to "go after the terrorists where they live."
"We'll complete our work in Afghanistan and Iraq,"
Bush said in his speech in Idaho.
Dismissing critics' call for US military withdrawal
from Iraq, he said "an immediate withdrawal of our troops in Iraq, or the
broader Middle East ... would only embolden the terrorists and create a staging
ground to launch more attacks against America andfree nations."
Bush emphasized the sacrifices that military families
have made,and spotlighted a military mother who has five sons and husband serve
or have served in Iraq.
After the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, said the
president, "I madea decision. America will not wait to be attacked again. We
will confront emerging threats before they fully materialize."
Bush was to meet privately with some relatives of
American soldiers serving in Iraq and Afghanistan, before returning in the
evening to his ranch in Crawford, Texas, where anti-war Cindy Sheehan has been
staging a protest and is demanding a meeting withhim to discuss her soldier
son's death in Iraq last year.
Bush, whom Sheehan met shortly after her son was
killed in Iraq in 2004, has criticized her as unrepresentative of most military
families he talked to. "She expressed her opinion. I disagree with it," Bush
told reporters Tuesday at a resort in Idaho.
With US causalities in Iraq rising, recent polls
found low public support for Bush's handling of the Iraq war. A poll by polling
agency Ipsos early this month showed Bush's approval rating on the Iraq issue at
38 percent, the lowest point in recentmonths, and his overall job approval at 42
percent. Enditem |