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PRESIDENT BUSH DELIVERS REMARKS AT GEORGIA REPUBLICAN PARTY'S PRESIDENT'S DAY DINNER, COLLEGE PARK, GEORGIA, AS RELEASED BY THE WHITE HOUS...
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PRESIDENT BUSH HOLDS A MEDIA AVAILABILITY WITH PRESIDENT SAAKASHVILI OF GEORGIA
JULY 5, 2006
SPEAKERS: GEORGE W. BUSH, PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED ...
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PRESIDENT BUSH DELIVERS REMARKS REGARDING GEORGIA
AUGUST 15, 2008
SPEAKER: PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH
[*] BUSH: Good morning.
I've just received ...
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WASHINGTON - There is blame to go around as the United States assesses the disastrous consequences of the war in Georgia.
President Bush was overconfident. Georgia's pro-American President Mikhail Saakashvili overreached. And Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin pounced.
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WASHINGTON -- Oval Office
11:58 A.M. EDT
PRESIDENT BUSH: Mr. President, welcome back to Washington. I was just reminiscing with the President abou...
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ATLANTA, March 23 /U.S. Newswire/ -- President Bush's prescription drug plan will cost Georgia taxpayers and beneficiaries $19.3 billion over the next decade, according to a report by the Institute for America's Future. The report outlines the consequences of specific provisions inserted at the request of pharmaceutical and HMO interests in the prescription drug law known as Medicare Part D. A coalition of groups called Americans United released the report today and launched a campaign to fix the president's Medicare Part D disaster.
Americans United -- the group which defeated the president's campaign to privatize Social Security last year -- has turned its guns on Bush's flawed prescription drug plan. The group announced last week that it is launching a national campaign, "The Campaig...
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To: NATIONAL EDITORS
Contact: White House Press Office, +1-202-456-2580
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Sen. Zell Miller, Georgia Democrat, plans to introduce President Bush at a Bush-Cheney fund-raiser in Atlanta tomorrow and actively campaign for the Republican president.
Senator Miller is going to serve as a top surrogate this year and help spread the message of President Bush's leadership," said Bush campaign spokesman Scott Stanzel.
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To: NATIONAL EDITORS
Contact: White House Press Office, +1-202-456-2580
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Russia's attack on Georgia, ostensibly in defense of breakaway South Ossetia and Abkhazia, is being labeled an historic event on the order of Nazi Germany's invasions or, at the very least, the Soviet Union's 1968 invasion of Czechoslovakia.
But the problem with such analogies is that they can preclude current-world analysis and include calls ill-fitted to current realities. Russia's newly emboldened militarism must not be allowed to precipitate either World War III or a return to Cold War stalemate.