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BEIJING, Sept. 13 (Xinhuanet) -- Michael
Brown, head of the Federal Emergency Management Agency in charge of the U.S.
response to natural disasters, resigned Monday just three days after losing his
onsite command of the Hurricane Katrina relief effort.
Former chief of the Miami-Dade Fire Rescue Department
R. David Paulison was nominated by President Bush to head the Federal Emergency
Management Agency.
Brown, under fire for FEMA's performance in the Gulf
Coast, said he feared he had become a distraction.
"The focus has got to be on FEMA, what the people are
trying to do down there," Brown said.
His decision was not a surprise. Brown was abruptly
recalled to Washington on Friday, a clear vote of no confidence from his
superiors at the White House and the Homeland Security Department.
Brown had been roundly criticized for FEMA's sluggish response
to the hurricane, which has caused political problems for Bush and fellow
Republicans. He also was accused of padding his resume, which Brown denied
Friday.
Bush, touring Gulfport, Miss., refused to comment on
the resignation, saying he had not had a chance to talk to Brown or Brown's
immediate boss, Michael Chertoff, secretary of the Department of Homeland
Security.
Bush plans to go to New York tomorrow in advance of
his speech Wednesday to the United Nations and will meet with a number of
foreign leaders. Asked if he was ready to switch to foreign policy issues from
the hurricane, he said, "I can do more than one thing at one time." Enditem
(Agencies) |