Before G-8, Bush Defends Olympics Attendance

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TOYAKO, Japan — President Bush today defended removing North Korea from the list of state sponsors of terrorism and attending the opening ceremonies of the Beijing Olympics as world leaders assembled to address soaring gas prices, climate change, and African aid.

They faced major differences, especially over how far to go in trying to set limits on pollutants that contribute to global warming.

The host of this year’s Group of Eight summit, Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda of Japan, and other leaders would like to see the top industrialized nations and other fast-growing economies such as China and India pledge a 50% cut by 2015 in the emissions that contribute to global warming. The Bush administration has not shown any enthusiasm for such a commitment without cooperation from the Chinese and Indians.

“I’ve always advocated that there needs to be a common understanding and that starts with a goal. And I also am realistic enough to tell you that if China and India don’t share that same aspiration, that we’re not going to solve the problem,” Mr. Bush said at a pre-summit news conference with Fukuda.

The leaders of the America, Japan, Britain, Germany, France, Canada, and Russia planned to kick off the meeting tomorrow at a remote mountaintop resort overlooking a lake formed by a volcanic crater on the northern Japanese island of Hokkaido. The session ends Wednesday with a larger gathering that brings in eight additional countries — Australia, Brazil, China, India, Indonesia, Mexico, South Korea, and South Africa.

Hundreds of protesters rallied under heavy police security today. A demonstration by about 2,500 people yesterday led to a brief clash with police; four people, including a television cameraman, were detained. Protesters have not been able to get near the summit venue, but have scheduled daily rallies about 60 miles north, in Sapporo, the largest nearby city.

Before the G-8 talks, Mr. Bush planned to meet with Russia’s new president, Dmitry Medvedev, who took office last month as ex-President Putin’s hand-picked successor. Mr. Putin still wields enormous influence at home as prime minister.

White House aides said Mr. Bush hoped to bring up areas were the countries could cooperate more, including missile defense and Russia’s bid to join the World Trade Organization.

Mr. Medvedev’s appearance could help him make the case he is emerging from Mr. Putin’s shadow and carving out a leadership role. In an interview with journalists from G-8 countries last week, Mr. Medvedev suggested that he, not Mr. Putin, is in charge.

The Republican presidential candidate, Senator McCain, has urged stripping Russia of its G-8 membership because of autocratic steps by Mr. Putin. Neither fellow Republican Mr. Bush nor the Democratic presidential contender, Senator Obama, shares that view.

Ahead of the Bush-Medvedev meeting, the Kremlin issued a statement suggesting that good personal ties are developing between Mr. Bush and the new president and that a transition period following the change of presidents in Russia “was practically unneeded.” The statement, by the Kremlin press service, mentions that Mr. Bush will be replaced next January, but that in the meantime “we have a lot of work on the current agenda with the Bush administration…”

“The overall balance of the Russian-American strategic dialogue remains positive, but that of course does not mean there are no ‘serious differences,’ said the statement. For instance, on missile defense, the Kremlin said, “our basic approaches still differ.”

At a news conference with Mr. Fukuda, Mr. Bush defended his decision to attend the Olympics opening ceremonies August 8. Among the leaders who plan to skip that event are Prime Minister Brown of Brain, Chancellor Merkel of Germany, and Prime Minister Harper of Canada. President Sarkozy of France is considering not attending.

China’s role as host has focused attention on its human rights record and the security crackdown in Tibet; some American conservatives have criticized Mr. Bush for planning to go to the opening ceremonies.

“The Chinese people are watching very carefully about the decisions by world leaders and I happen to believe that not going to the opening ceremony for the games would be an affront to the Chinese people, which may make it more difficult to be able to speak frankly with the Chinese leadership,” the president said.

Mr. Fukuda announced that he also intended to go.

“There are many aspiring athletes that will be going to Beijing, and I would like to cheer them on, too, which I think is only natural. I don’t think you really have to link Olympics to politics,” the prime minister said.

Mr. Bush also addressed Japanese concerns over the kidnapping of Japanese citizens by North Korea in the 1970s and 1980s. Those abducted apparently were used to train North Korean agents in Japanese language and customs.

Japanese citizens are upset about the American move to remove North Korea from the State Department’s terror blacklist in exchange for the North’s decision to admit to some of its nuclear weapons work and begin dismantling its nuclear facilities.

As a condition for sending aid and improving relations with the impoverished North, Japan long has pushed for the resolution of the issue of the abductions.

Mr. Bush recalled a White House meeting a few years ago with Sakie Yokota, the mother of a 13-year-old Japanese girl kidnapped by North Koreans agents on her way home from school in 1977. “As a father of little girls, I can’t imagine what it would be like to have my daughter just disappear,” Mr. Bush said at the news conference. “So, Mr. Prime Minister, as I told you on the phone when I talked to you and in the past, the United States will not abandon you on this issue.”

Mr. Bush said the two leaders also talked about the gloomy economy. Many of the world’s older economic powers are suffering from low growth.

“With regard to soaring food and oil prices, which are having negative impact on the world economy, we agreed there’s a need for expeditious efforts on these fronts,” he said.

The American economy, he said, “is not growing as robustly as we’d like. … We’re not as strong as we have been during a lot of my presidency.” He hoped the economic aid checks going out to many in America, “will continue to have a positive effect.”


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