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Wednesday,
October 3, 2001
Taliban
warned to give up bin Laden
By Ron Fournier
Associated press
WASHINGTON
President Bush said Tuesday that Afghanistans
ruling Taliban will suffer certain consequences for the Sept.
11 attacks on America unless it meets his demands that it
turn over Osama bin Laden and his followers. There is
no timetable ... there are no negotiations, he warned.
Bush
also announced that Reagan National Airport in Washington,
the only airport still closed because of the Sept. 11 attacks,
will reopen Thursday under intense security. Flight patterns
take planes close to the White House, Pentagon, Capitol and
the Central Intelligence Agency.
Three
weeks after suicide hijackings stunned the nation, Bush used
the announcement to urge Americans not to shrink from the
threat of terrorism. There is no greater symbol that
America is back in business than the reopening of this airport,
Bush said. Terror will not stand.
Bushs toughly worded warning to the Taliban, made at
a White House meeting with congressional leaders of both parties,
was matched on the other side of the Atlantic by British Prime
Minister Tony Blair.
The Taliban
must surrender the terrorists or surrender power,
Blair said in a speech to his Labor Party in Brighton, England.
This is a battle with only one outcome. Our victory,
not theirs, Blair said.
White
House spokesman Ari Fleischer said the administration welcomes
the prime ministers comments.
But he
stopped short of warning, as Blair did, that the Taliban would
surrender power if they did not heed Bushs
demands.
The
president has said repeatedly that the United States will
act decisively to protect the United States and our friends
from all terrorist attacks, Fleischer said.
As Bush
urged Americans to go about their business, western leaders
were focusing increasingly on the Taliban, the militant Islamic
organization that controls most of Afghanistan and which has
harbored bin Laden.
At NATO headquarters in Brussels, Belgium, the alliances
secretary general, Lord Robertson, said the United States
presented clear and compelling evidence tying
bin Laden and his al-Qaida organization to the terror attacks.
It
is clear that all roads lead to al-Qaida and pinpoint Osama
bin Laden as having been involved in it, Robertson said
Tuesday after a classified briefing given to NATOs ruling
council by U.S. Ambassador at Large Francis X. Taylor.
I
have said that the Taliban must turn over the al-Qaida organization
living in Afghanistan and must destroy the terrorist camps.
They must do so, otherwise there will be a consequence,
Bush said. There are no negotiations. There is no calendar.
House
Minority Leader Richard Gephardt, D-Mo., emerged from the
meeting with Bush carrying a message of his own for the Taliban:
I think the times running short.
Three
weeks after the deadly attacks on New York and Washington,
Bush said America is still vulnerable.
I
say America needs to be on alert, but weve got to get
back to business. Americans know their government is doing
everything it can, Bush said during the Oval Office
session. Were on full alert in America.
The president
announced that he would reopen Reagan National Airport, the
only commercial airport still closed after the Sept. 11 attacks.
Increased security will accompany the reopening.
In Washington,
Bush met with congressional leaders to discuss legislation
to spur the ailing U.S. economy. The meeting came hours before
the nations central bank, the Federal Reserve, was expected
to reduce interest rates for the ninth time this year to prod
the economy.
The president
wants to cut taxes of individuals and businesses. He is open
to Democratic demands to raise the minimum wage, increase
job training and ensure health insurance and unemployment
benefits to laid-off workers.
There
is agreement that weve got to come together with a vision
about how big the package ought to be to make sure we affect
the economy in the short run in a positive way, but dont
affect it in the long run in a negative way, Bush said.
In a
brief question-and-answer session, the president also said
the idea of a Palestinian state has always been part of the
peace process so long as the right to an Israeli state
if respected. He said some progress has been made toward
peace in the Middle East.
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