Bush: Russian President Medvedev A "Smart Guy"

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TOM RAUM | July 7, 2008 11:57 PM EST | AP

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U.S. President George W. Bush, right, walks out with Germany Chancellor Angela Merkel, left, following their meeting at the G8 summit, Tuesday, July 8, 2008 in the lakeside resort of Toyako on Japan's northen island of Hokkaido. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

TOYAKO, Japan — President Bush and German Chancellor Angela Merkel pledged Tuesday to keep working together on common problems, but progress appeared slow on reaching a consensus on climate change as the Group of Eight major economies tackled that and other knotty global issues.

Merkel expressed optimism as the two leaders met with reporters after a one-on-one meeting before Tuesday's summit session.

"I'm very satisfied with the work that has gone on on the G-8 documents, as regards progress on the issue of climate change, cooperation in the area of food and oil," she said.

She cited "a very interesting exchange of view, very intensive exchange of view." Merkel also said she hoped that international trade negotiators could make progress on restarting long-stalled trade liberalization talks "over the next few weeks to come."

Bush was more terse after the meeting, not mentioning global warming but telling reporters: "We talked about a lot of common problems, and a lot of common opportunities. We talked about the G-8. We talked about the need to work _ continue to work together on Iran."

He told Merkel he valued her friendship and advice and called her "a constructive force for good."

The two met just before G-8 members plunged into a discussion about the major problems on the agenda: deciding whether to set new targets for reducing emissions that contribute to global warming, and deciding what to do about rising food and oil prices.

After the morning working session, the leaders began a working lunch _ but not before filing outside to pose for a group picture.

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They stood on a platform on the lawn of the mountainside resort hotel, with picturesque Lake Toya far below them. It had been rainy and foggy since their meeting began, but the sun began breaking out as the picture was taken. Bush stood between Russian President Dimitry Medvedev and Japanese Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda.

The summit partners appeared close to a deal for using international food reserves to help the poorest countries cope with soaring grain prices. But divisions remains on climate change that pitted older, more established economies like those in the Group of Eight with fast rising economies like China and India.

Beyond the climate-change standoff, Bush's proposal to base a missile defense system in Eastern Europe was rebuffed on Monday by Russia's new president, Medvedev. And Bush failed to achieve a consensus among African leaders on sanctions against the government of Zimbabwe's Robert Mugabe to protest his widely condemned re-election last month after his opposition-party rival dropped out, fearful for his life.

"You know I care deeply about the people of Zimbabwe," Bush told reporters after a Monday meeting with African leaders who were invited to meet with summit partners. "I'm extremely disappointed in the elections, which I labeled a sham election."

Separately, Merkel said earlier that Mugabe's election was not legitimate. "As for us in Germany, we do not rule out further sanctions," she said, adding that many other G-8 nations feel the same way.

But African nations are deeply divided, with many reluctant to put public pressure on Mugabe despite U.N. and Western calls for tough action.

"There were differences. Not all leaders are there yet in terms of sanctions," said Dan Price, a White House national security aide.

The big issue on Tuesday's agenda was climate change. Merkel is one of the G-8's strongest advocates for tough reductions in the emissions that contribute to global warming.

She succeeded in winning Bush's backing last year, when the summit was held in Germany, to a statement pledging that the group would seriously consider a goal of halving greenhouse-gas emissions by 2050 _ while failing to persuade him to commit to more specific targets.

Now, as then, Bush is insisting that major emerging economies like China and India be included in any plan to cut emissions. But they have so far resisted. Adding to Bush's isolation on the issue, European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso said G-8 nations must reach agreement among themselves and avoid taking the approach that "I will do nothing unless you do it first," which he called a "vicious circle."

Still, Bush has come a long way since his first G-8 summit when he held that evidence was not conclusive that man's activity contributed to the warming of the Earth's climate.

The G-8 _ the U.S., Japan, Russia, Britain, Germany, France, Italy and Canada _ takes up the subject in earnest on Tuesday. On Wednesday, the leaders of these countries will be joined by eight other big-polluting "major economy" nations that are not members, including China and India, to see if a wider agreement is possible.

G-8 leaders are mindful that Bush's days in office are numbered _ and it seems likely they will await Bush's successor rather than push for a strong commitment now.

Meanwhile, Merkel offered Germany's support for an American initiative for a fund that would "promote climate-friendly technology until a follow-up treaty to the Kyoto Protocol would take effect." That pact, which neither the U.S. nor India nor China has ratified, expires in 2012.

Furthermore, "even a new American administration" is going to insist that any climate agreement entail the principle that emerging economies must contribute to stemming global warming, Merkel said in an interview last week with The Associated Press.

Meanwhile, Bush met with Medvedev on Monday. The new Russian president signaled he was no more supportive of Bush's plan to base parts of a missile defense system in eastern Europe than was his mentor, former president _ and now prime minister _ Vladimir Putin.

While agreeing with Bush on curtailing nuclear weapon capabilities of Iran and North Korea, Medvedev said there were other issues "with respect to European affairs and missile defense where we have differences."

After the talks, a Kremlin aide said Bush and Medvedev made no progress on missile defense.

Sergei Prikhodko said Russia is not yet satisfied with steps the United States has offered to take to ease Moscow's concerns the system would be aimed at weakening Russia's defenses. Medvedev also expressed serious concern about media reports that the U.S. has discussed the possibility of deploying interceptors in Lithuania, if its first choice of basing them in Poland doesn't work out.

Poland's foreign minister was in the United States for talks with Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice about Warsaw's latest rebuffs to basing American missile interceptors in Poland for a future missile shield against Iran.

"This is absolutely unacceptable for the Russian Federation," Prikhodko said of the Lithuanian plan. He said Medvedev also spoke to Bush about "the unacceptability" of former Soviet republics Georgia and Ukraine joining NATO, a move pushed by the United States.

TOYAKO, Japan — President Bush and German Chancellor Angela Merkel pledged Tuesday to keep working together on common problems, but progress appeared slow on reaching a consensus on climate chan...
TOYAKO, Japan — President Bush and German Chancellor Angela Merkel pledged Tuesday to keep working together on common problems, but progress appeared slow on reaching a consensus on climate chan...
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- SonnyBono I'm a Fan of SonnyBono 21 fans permalink

So our renowned flying ace calls President Medvedev a "smart guy".

Quick somebody get me an aspirin, all the possible smart aleck responses are causing a brain cramp.

Maybe Secretary Rice told him not to look into his soul like he did with Putin and stick to basics - but honestly how could this moron have any idea that anyone is smart - can Meddvedev walk and chew gum at the same time? Do his lips move when he is reading to himself? Can he read? Does he own books that don't have any pictures?

Wait I got it - Bush thinks that Medvedev is smart because he speaks Russian!!!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:28 PM on 07/07/2008
- Chuckwheat I'm a Fan of Chuckwheat 10 fans permalink
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Did god whisper that in his ear?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:10 PM on 07/07/2008

Listen, you gotta trust his judgment, right?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:00 PM on 07/07/2008

Like the Republican Motto States:

If you can't dazzle them with Brilliance - Baffle them with Bushit!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:46 PM on 07/07/2008
- dr4Will I'm a Fan of dr4Will 10 fans permalink
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anyone would look to be smarter then the mistake running our country!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:45 PM on 07/07/2008

With Bush that means just the opposite is true. Like when he looked into Putin's eyes and saw the soul of a good man. I'd like to know his IQ, I'll bet he is bordering on retardation.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:14 PM on 07/07/2008
- gevan I'm a Fan of gevan 18 fans permalink

Silly Bush. Lithuania and Poland are both wrong. Romania is better sited.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:09 PM on 07/07/2008
- Viper I'm a Fan of Viper 255 fans permalink

And our President Einstein knows "Smart"

Regards

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:07 PM on 07/07/2008
- MizLiz I'm a Fan of MizLiz 59 fans permalink
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Could he say anything more stupid and embarrassing? Oh wait...he told the Pope "awesome speech"!!!
He truly does have the mind of a drunken fratboy.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:58 PM on 07/07/2008
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Not to mention his "presidential joke he made to the Filipino president re: the Filipino cooks whose food he's enjoyed...­....

Mizliz, don't insult drunken fratboys..­....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:21 PM on 07/07/2008
- lisakaz2 I'm a Fan of lisakaz2 82 fans permalink
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Did Medvedev win at "Are you smarter than a 5th grader?" (who in this case is Booo$h)?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:52 PM on 07/07/2008
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