WASHINGTON, June 7, 2005

Bush, Blair Talk African Aid

Says Africa Aid Needs 'A Lot More' Than $674 Million Offered By Bush

  • Play CBS Video Video Blair Pushes For Africa Aid

    British Prime Minister Tony Blair, who supported the Bush administration's decision to go to war in Iraq, came to D.C. looking for some political payback, reports Bill Plante.

  • Video Blair: More African Aid

    President Bush and British Prime Minister Tony Blair have marched together over the war in Iraq. But they disagreed on aid for Africa and Global Warming. Aleen Sirgany reports.

    • U.S. President George W. Bush and British Prime Minister Tony Blair talk to press Tuesday afternoon at the White House. Photo

      U.S. President George W. Bush and British Prime Minister Tony Blair talk to press Tuesday afternoon at the White House.  (AP)

    • Tony Blair arrives at Andrews Air Force Base outside Washington on Tuesday. Photo

      Tony Blair arrives at Andrews Air Force Base outside Washington on Tuesday.  (AP)

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(CBS/AP)  President George W. Bush on Tuesday pledged to work with British Prime Minister Tony Blair to forgive the debt of developing African nations, and defended a stance on global warming that is at odds with many of America's allies.

As CBS News Correspondent Bill Plante reports, Blair -- who paid a heavy political price for supporting the war in Iraq -- came looking for some help on his own priorities: aid to Africa and global warming. It wasn't exactly payback, but Mr. Bush did offer support for Blair's plan to forgive the debt of African nations willing to embrace reform.

Both leaders pledged that any debt relief deal would include providing additional resources to international financial institutions to replenish their coffers for forgiving the debt they are owed.

"In terms of climate change, I've always said it's a serious long- term issue that needs to be dealt with," Bush said. But he complained about many were pressing for restrictions he considers too severe.

Bush has long opposed the 1997 Kyoto treaty ratified by 140 nations, but not the United States.

Standing alongside Blair, Bush also for the first time addressed a 2002 memo to Blair from a top British intelligence official suggesting that the United States bent intelligence to justify a decision to invade Iraq and sought British cooperation.

"There's nothing farther from the truth," Bush said. "Both of us didn't want to use our military. It was our last option."

Said Blair: "The facts were not being fixed in any shape or form at all."

On African debt, Bush said only those "on a path to reform" should qualify.

"Nobody wants to give money to a country that's corrupt, where leaders take money and put it in their pocket," he said.

The leaders hinted at the outlines of the deal-in-progress.

Bush wants debt relief targeted to countries that commit to open governing and free markets, while Blair wants to ensure that international organizations such as the World Bank and International Monetary Fund are given back what debt they forgive.

Bush said "Our countries are developing a proposal for the G-8 that will eliminate 100 percent of the debt and that by providing additional resources, will preserve the financial integrity of the World Bank and the African Development Bank."

Blair said Britain and the United States were well on the way to reaching agreement on debt relief.

"I hope we're able to conclude a deal at the finance ministers meeting this weekend" in London, "one that will involve 100 percent debt cancellation and also the commityment of the additional funding necessary to make sure that the institutions aren't penalized as a result of that."

Continued



©MMV, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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