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Wednesday,
September 26, 2001
Saudi
Arabia severs diplomatic ties with Taliban
By
Christopher Newton
Associated Press
WASHINGTON
President Bush brought congressional leaders up to
date Tuesday on U.S. troop deployments around the globe and
said the government was working to restore confidence in airline
security and help workers thrown off the job. Saudi Arabia
broke diplomatic ties with the terrorist-harboring rulers
of Afghanistan.
Defiant,
Osama bin Ladens al-Qaida organization issued an early
morning statement warning Washington against attacks against
him or Afghanistan. Wherever there are Americans and
Jews, they will be targeted.
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Chuck
Kennedy - KRT
President
George W. Bush, with Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro
Koizumi, speaks to the press following a meeting in
the Oval Office of the White House, Tuesday September
25, 2001.
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The
statement was faxed to news organizations in Pakistans
capital, Islamabad, in the name of al-Qaidas chief military
commander, Naseer Ahmed Mujahed, and released less than 48
hours before the beginning of Yom Kippur, the holiest day
of the year for Jews worldwide.
Consumer
confidence in the U.S. economy fell sharply, fresh evidence
of economic fallout from the worst terrorist attacks ever
on American soil.
White
House spokesman Ari Fleischer said the administration had
not yet decided whether to support a broad-based economic
stimulus package, including tax cuts.
Federal
Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan, meeting privately with senators,
was quoted as saying that to be effective, any plan may need
to be as large as $100 billion.
Two
weeks to the day after attacks on the World Trade Center and
the Pentagon, New Yorkers picked up politically where they
had left off, choosing candidates for a November mayoral election.
Term-limited Mayor Rudolph Giuliani, widely praised for his
stewardship since the attacks, stoked speculation he might
want to stay in the job.
The
number of confirmed dead at the trade center, hit by hijacked
jetliners, rose to 279. The number of missing stood at 6,398.
Another 189 people perished at the Pentagon, hit in a similar
attack, and 44 more died when a hijacked plane crashed in
the Pennsylvania countryside.
I
think the war aims are clear, House Democratic leader
Dick Gephardt said after he and other lawmakers met with Bush
at the White House. In a way, its meeting guerrilla
warfare with guerrilla warfare, but its also meeting
it with financial efforts, and political efforts, and diplomatic
efforts, said the Missouri Democrat.
Saudi
Arabias move left Pakistan as the only nation in the
world to maintain ties with the Taliban and Pakistan
has pledged cooperation with the American-led war on terrorism.
It leaves Afghanistans hard-line Islamic regime ever
more isolated in its showdown with the United States over
bin Laden, the No. 1 suspect in the attacks.
Separate
from Saudi Arabias move, Russian President Vladimir
Putin underlined his countrys commitment to an international
coalition against terror, calling for the complete ideological
and political isolation of international terrorists.
He spoke in Berlin after meeting with German leaders.
Bush
welcomed both actions in remarks to reporters at the White
House after a meeting with Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro
Koizumi. I am most pleased that the Saudi Arabians yesterday
cut off relations with the Taliban and that President Putin,
in a strong statement, talked about the cooperation that the
United States and Russia will have, he said.
He
said Japan will share intelligence that will work cooperatively
the diplomatic war on terrorism. Two Japanese newspapers reported
Japan will send warships to the Indian Ocean as early as this
week to carry out intelligence and surveillance missions.
The squadron may accompany the USS Kitty Hawk, an aircraft
carrier that left its base near Tokyo on Friday, the reports
said.
Fleischer
announced that Bush would travel to Chicago Thursday to pledge
support for the battered airlines industry and urge Americans
to resume normal spending practices.
He
spoke as the Conference Board in New York was providing fresh
evidence that Americans concerns about an already weakened
economy had been redoubled by the attacks. The New York-based
business group said its Consumer Confidence Index sank to
97.6 from a revised 114 in August.
Greenspan
and former Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin met privately with
the Senate Finance Committee, and said a stimulus amounting
to 1 percent of the nations gross domestic product would
be a proper benchmark, according to senators and aides who
attended the session.
There
was also general agreement among the Democrats and Republicans
that any stimulus should be temporary, perhaps limited to
two or three years, to guard against negative long-term effects
such as federal budget deficits and higher home mortgage rates.
At
the White House, Gephardt said Bush was taking the right approach
in targeting terrorist cells rather than civilians. He said
that removing the Taliban from power in Afghanistan is not
necessarily a goal.
I
dont think its anybodys goal to topple governments
in this, Gephardt said.
However,
he added, the fact that the Taliban is supportive of bin Laden
gives us real pause, and obviously wed like to
change that position on their part.
Also
in the meeting were House Speaker Dennis Hastert, R-Ill.,
Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle, D-S.D. and Senate Minority
Leader Trent Lott, R-Miss.
Bush
told reporters he and lawmakers he expected to meet later
in the day with Transportation Secretary Norman Mineta to
review airline security proposals to be put in place in the
wake of this months terror-hijackings. Asked about a
proposal for putting military police on all planes, he said
that was one of the topics that was discussed.
He
also said that displaced workers would be given due
consideration in the halls of government, and that both
the White House and Congress were developing their own ideas
about how to respond.
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