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Thursday, Dec. 19
The Indiana Daily Student

world

Bush believes al Qaeda behind bombing

WASHINGTON -- Voicing fresh terrorism fears that stretch from Africa to the Middle East, President Bush said Wednesday he believes the al Qaeda network was behind last week's attacks in Kenya and that terrorists have disrupted the Israel-Palestinian peace process.\nBush, fielding reporters' questions at a White House bill-signing ceremony, declined to criticize the Israeli government, whose troops fired Tuesday on a taxi at a West Bank checkpoint, killing a 95-year-old Palestinian great-grandmother.\n"I am concerned that terrorists have disrupted the ability for peace-loving people to move the (peace) process forward," Bush said. "... And so I fully understand the Israeli government's attempts to stamp out terror, because we'll never have peace as long as terrorists are able to disrupt."\nHe added that he is as worried "about the plight of the Palestinian people, concerned about suffering that has taken place as a result of the activities of terrorists."\n"The net effect of terrorism is to not only stop the peace process, but to cause suffering amongst all the people of the region, and that's why our war against terrorism must remain steadfast and strong wherever terror exists," the president said.\nHe did not directly reply when a journalist asked if he believes the terrorists at work in the West Bank are part of Osama bin Laden's al Qaeda network. But Bush did finger bin Laden operatives for last week's coordinated attacks on Israelis in Kenya -- a hotel bombing and the firing of missiles at an Israeli charter flight.\n"I am concerned about al Qaeda anywhere. I believe that al Qaeda was involved in the African bombings in Kenya. I believe al Qaeda hates freedom. I believe al Qaeda will strike anywhere they can in order to disrupt a civil society and that's why we're on the hunt," the president said.\nWhite House press secretary Ari Fleischer later said that Bush was not speaking definitively about the culprits or ruling out involvement by other possible terror groups. "He's sharing with you suspicions you've heard from previous quarters," Fleischer said.\nQuestioned about world opinion, Bush said the United States is unfairly cast as waging war on Islam because "the propaganda machines are cranked up in the international community that paints our country in a bad light." He ticked off a litany of American accomplishments in postwar Afghanistan, among them the fact that girls can now attend school in that country.\nArmy Lt. Gen. Dan K. McNeil, commander of U.S. forces in Afghanistan, was at the White House earlier Wednesday and gave a briefing in the Situation Room about improved humanitarian conditions, Bush said.\n"The Muslim world will eventually realize -- if they don't now -- that we believe in freedom, and we respect all individuals. And unlike the killers, we value each life in America," Bush said. "Everybody is precious, everybody counts, and to the extent we need to continue to make that message work, we will try to do so. But the best thing we can do is show results from our activities"

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