Special Report: U.S. presidential election
2008
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U.S Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama (C) greets a U.S. soldier during a visit to Camp Eggers in Kabul in this July 20, 2008 handout picture by the U.S. Combined Security Transition Command Afghanistan. Obama had breakfast with U.S. troops in the Afghan capital on Sunday and talked about their experiences in the country that has seen a sharp rise in violence this year. (Xinhua/Reuters Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
WASHINGTON, July 19 (Xinhua) -- U.S. Democratic
presidential candidate Barack Obama has embarked on a multi-stop overseas trip
for meetings with a number of heads of states, his campaign said Saturday.
For security reasons, there is no public schedule for
the visit but the campaign's spokesman Robert Gibbs said the senator from
Illinois has actually left Washington on July 17 and made a brief stop in Kuwait
before arriving in Afghanistan on Saturday.
In Kuwait, he visited a U.S. military camp and played
basketball with some soldiers.
Accompanied by two Senate colleagues, Democrat Jack
Reed and Republican Chuck Hagel, Obama is now in Afghanistan and plans to visit
Iraq.
He will also visit Jordan, Israel, Germany, France
and the United Kingdom next week.
King Abdullah II of Jordan is expected to urge Obama,
if elected president, to make Arab-Israeli peace talks a higher priority than
has been the case under President George W. Bush.
In Israel, Obama is expected to meet the country's
top leaders: President Shimon Peres, Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, Defense
Minister Ehud Barak, Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni and Likud Party leader
Benjamin Netanyahu.
He will also visit the Palestinian territories, and
meet Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas and Prime Minister Salaam
Fayad.
Obama can expect a friendly reception in Europe,
where he will meet German Chancellor Angela Merkel on July 23.
In addition, Obama is slated to meet with British
Prime Minister Gordon Brown and Conservative Party Leader David Cameron as well
as French President Nicolas Sarkozy.
The trip is aimed to bolster the U.S. presidential
hopeful's credentials in foreign policy and national security, which is
considered his "weak point" in comparison to his Republican rival John McCain.
In a recent Washington Post/ABC News poll, 48 percent
of registered voters said Obama would make a good commander in chief, compared
with 72 percent for McCain.