Blasts Distract G-8 Summit
Blair Returns To Summit After London Trip To Deal With Bomb Attacks
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Play CBS Video Video Blair: Terrorists Won't Win In Scotland, British Prime Minister Tony Blair, with leaders of the G8 nations alongside him, declared that the terrorists would not prevail.
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Video Deadly Blasts Rock London Explosions rocked the London subway and tore open a double-decker bus during the morning rush hour. The attack left Londoners grieving, shocked and wondering what's next, Sheila MacVicar reports.
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Video Bush Warns Americans President Bush warned Americans to be 'extra vigilant' as they head to work after the deadly explosions in London. He made his remarks at the G8 summit in Scotland.
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Riot police push back a demonstrator who tried to breach the security perimieter surrounding the Gleneagles Hotel, where the Group of Eight summit leaders have been meeting. (AP)
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British Prime Minister Tony Blair, flanked by U.S. President George W. Bush and French President Jacques Chirac, gives statement on London terror attacks Thursday. (AP)
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Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip (right) greet Russian President Vladimir Putin (second left) and his wife Ludmila (left) and British Prime Minister Tony Blair (center) looks on, at the G8 summit. (AP Photo/HM Government)
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Photo Essay G-8 Summit A meeting of the world's biggest powers starts with protests and pauses for a tragedy.
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Photo Essay Live 8 Musicians raise awareness with concerts around the globe.
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Fast Facts United Kingdom Learn about the people, economy and history.
"We shall prevail and they shall not," declared the Group of Eight leaders and the heads of five developing nations meeting with them here. Their joint statement was read by British Prime Minister Tony Blair, flanked by his somber summit colleagues and visibly shaken by the wave of explosions that ripped through London's rush hour.
Blair returned to the G-8 summit Thursday evening after traveling to London to be briefed on the deadly wave of terrorist bombings that swept through the capital.
"We will not yield to these people," President Bush said minutes later.
Speaking at the summit, Russian President Vladimir Putin said the London attacks showed that the world was insufficiently united in the fight against terrorism.
Putin said Russia had suffered terror attacks in the past, and he expressed his country's condolences.
"But what happened today demonstrates yet again that we are doing too little to unite our efforts in the most effective way in the battle against terrorism," he said. He also called for an end to double standards -- an appeal he has made before to fellow world leaders, some of whom he has criticized for underestimating the terrorist ties of Chechen separatist rebels.
The leaders, already protected for their annual summit by extraordinary security measures that local authorities said remained sufficient, said the attacks would not halt their meeting focused on the issues of global warming and African poverty.
"We will not allow violence to change our societies or our values nor will we allow it to stop the work of this summit," Blair said on the leaders' behalf. "We will continue our deliberations in the interest of a better world."
But the impact of the explosions — which Blair said seemed designed to coincide with the meeting — was deeply felt at this exclusive golf resort about 450 miles from London.
Repeated, nearly simultaneous blasts rocked the London subway and tore open at least one packed double-decker bus. Deaths and injuries mounted and officials shut down the entire underground transport network.
G-8 leaders took a long break in their morning opening session so they could get individual briefings on developments and appear for the joint statement. Bush received frequent updates, and conferred briefly via secure video conference from his hotel suite with U.S. homeland security and national security advisers.
Blair rushed from the summit to return to London for briefings, carrying with him to the British people, Bush said, "a message of solidarity" from the rest of the world.
Bush had no plans to return to Washington early, White House spokesman Scott McClellan said.
Blair planned to return to Gleneagles for the summit's final day of talks on Friday.
The attacks also overshadowed the continuing divide between Bush and Blair and the other leaders on how to tackle global warming.
There was no immediate word on who was responsible.
"It is reasonably clear that this is a terrorist attack or a series of terrorist attacks," Blair said.
The joint statement was quickly agreed to by the leaders of the G-8 countries — United States, Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan and Russia — as well as the leaders of China, India, Brazil, Mexico and South Africa who met with them Thursday to discuss ways to combat global warming.
They noted that all their countries had suffered from the impact of terrorism.
"We are united in our resolve to confront and defeat this terrorism that is not an attack on one nation but on all nations and on civilized people everywhere," the statement said.
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