Posted on 02/19/2005 2:32:18 PM PST by Wolfstar
PRESIDENTIAL NEWS OF THE DAY: On Wednesday, the President hosted the bipartisan Congressional leadership at the White House. It was an opportunity to talk about a range of issues, including the President's upcoming trip to Europe. The President and First Lady, who are spending a quiet day in the White House today, will leave Washington Sunday enroute to their first stop in Brussels, Belgium. The President will hold summit talks with leaders of NATO and the European Union, and will meet with British Prime Minister Tony Blair, French President Jacques Chirac, German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder, Russian President Vladimir Putin among a number of other leaders. (The President's itinerary does not appear to include time for a meeting with the socialist Spanish PM, however.)
PHONE CALLS WITH FOREIGN LEADERS: Monday, the President spoke with Crown Prince Abdallah...to commemorate the 60th anniversary of the meeting between President Roosevelt and King Abdallah Aziz, that opened the modern period of U.S.-Saudi relations...The President commended the Crown Prince on the successful start last week of municipal elections in Saudi Arabia. He also complimented the Crown Prince on last week's successful counter-terrorism conference in Saudi Arabia. Finally, the two leaders discussed the murder...of former Prime Minister Hariri in Beirut.
THE WEEK AHEAD:
Sunday evening: President Bush and First Lady Laura Bush will arrive in Brussels.
Monday morning: President Bush will meet with King Albert II and Queen Paola of Belgium, Belgian Prime Minister Guy Verhofstadt, and NATO Secretary General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer.
Monday afternoon: The President will deliver a speech on United States and European cooperation at the Concert Noble in Brussels.
Monday evening: The President will have a "working dinner" with French President Jacques Chirac.
Tuesday morning: The President will meet separately with British Prime Minister Tony Blair, Ukrainian President Viktor Yuschenko, and Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi at NATO headquarters in Brussels. The meeting between GWB and Tony Blair will be at breakfast.
Tuesday afternoon: The President will hold a joint press conference with European leaders, including European Council President and Luxembourg Prime Minister Jean-Claude Juncker, European Commission President José Manuel Barroso, and European Union Security Policy Representative Javier Solana. The President will visit the EU headquarters.
Tuesday evening: The President will participate in a working dinner with the European Union representatives.
Wednesday morning: The presidential party will travel to Mainz, Germany, where GWB will meet with Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder. The two leaders will greet American and German soldiers who have served in Afghanistan.
Wednesday afternoon: The President will participate in a roundtable with German citizens and visit the Gutenberg Museum.
Wednesday evening: The President and First Lady will travel to Wiesbaden, Germany, to meet with members of the U.S. Armys 1st Armored Division. They will then travel to Bratislava, Slovak Republic. "We are honored that the President and Mrs. Bush have chosen Wiesbaden to visit soldiers, sailors, airmen, Marines and family members of the U.S. European Command," Maj. Gen. Martin E. Dempsey, 1st AD commander, stated in a news release. [This is the same unit the President visited in Iraq during his surprise Thanksgiving trip.] "Im sure many Iron soldiers still remember with great pride the visit the commander-in-chief made to Baghdad to spend Thanksgiving with us during our deployment," Dempsey stated. Details on what the 1st AD is doing to prepare for the presidents visit have not been released -- but this time, the visit isn't a surprise, so the base is closing schools and facilities, and is giving all non-essential personnel the day off. German schools in the Mainz and Wiesbaden areas also will be closed for the day, according to a statement issued by the Rheinland-Palatinate state chancellors office. [Let's hope the weather's good, because we here on the Dose will be eager for some great photos. I'm sure I speak for most "Dosers" in saying that are hearts are with our troops, not with a bunch of European stuffed-shirt politicians.]
Thursday morning: GWB will meet with Slovak Republic President Ivan Gasparovic and Prime Minister Mikulás Dzurinda, and deliver a speech to Slovak citizens.
Thursday afternoon: GWB will meet with Russian President Vladimir Putin.
Thursday evening: The presidential party will depart for Washington, D.C. [We on the Dose will welcome them home with open arms and hearts grateful for their safe return.]
IN MARCH:
March 7: The President and Mrs. Bush will host the King and Queen of Norway for a lunch at the White House. The visit of their Majesties King Harald and Queen Sonja will mark 100 years of U.S.-Norwegian diplomatic relations.
QUOTES OF THE DAY: During his news conference last Thursday, there were several examples of the President subtly giving the rhetorical version of "the finger" to the media. The following exchange gives us an insight into how the nation's first MBA chief executive manages his people:
Q: Will you back him [Negroponte] if he goes up against Don Rumsfeld, [if] Rumsfeld wants a certain amount of money for his intelligence budget and Negroponte says, I don't think so?
THE PRESIDENT: I don't think it necessarily works -- I know that's how the press sometimes likes to play discussions inside the White House -- X versus Y, and butting of heads and sharp elbows. Generally, it works a little more civilly than that. People make their case, there's a discussion, but ultimately John will make the decisions on the budget.
"Backing" means it's kind of zero-sum; that's not the way our team works. It's not a zero-sum attitude in the White House, it is -- people have strong opinions, by the way, around here...I would hope you'd want your President to have people around who have...strong opinions; people who are willing to stand up for what they believe; people who say, here's what I think is right and it may not be what so-and-so thinks is right. Then the question is, do I have the capacity to pick the right answer, to be able to make a decision. I think people have seen that I'm capable of making decisions. And one reason why I feel comfortable making them is because I get good advice. And John is going to be a great advisor.
The following passage is from Vice President Dick Cheney's speech to the Annual Conservative PAC Conference at the Ronald Reagan Building, Washington, Thursday. [This passage gave me chills, because I didn't know that one of the NYFD men who helped raise one of the flags at Ground Zero was later killed in Iraq.]
Freedom's advance in the broader Middle East is bringing new hope to a troubled part of the world, and freedom's victory in that region will make America safer for generations to come. The effort has been difficult, and there is more hardship and hard work ahead. And our whole nation is grateful to every member of our military, and to the families who share in their sacrifice.
Our deepest debt is owed to the men and women who have fallen in service to America. (Applause.) We think of young volunteers like Jeff LeBrun, the son of Haitian immigrants, who used to ride the A train into Manhattan -- and passed under the World Trade Center every morning on the way to school. After experiencing the events of 9/11, both he and his brother, Stanley, decided they were going to join the military to defend the country. Jeff became an Army specialist, and was serving in Iraq when he was killed by terrorists last month. He was 21.
We think of soldiers like Sergeant Christian Engeldrum. He was a New York City firefighter, and was one of those who helped raise the flag over the ruins at Ground Zero. Last year his National Guard unit was deployed to Iraq. He was killed in action near Baghdad, age 39. At his funeral, the New York Fire Commissioner said that Christian Engeldrum "gave more than most men who live twice as long." [NOTE: At his death, Sgt. Engeldrum left two teenage sons and a wife pregnant with their third child.]
Thanks for the info on Karl Rove and VP's Speech.
Yes, there should be a lot of terrific photos next week. I just hope they're protected well all next week. I know a lot of us held our breath all through that South American trip and some of the others. I'm not QUITE as worried about this one, but still on edge about it.
Love Scotties.
Just found out on our walk that the neighbors across the street with the Scotty are moving. There's a "for sale" sign in front of their house.
I won't miss them, but I'll miss seeing their dog.
That house has a curse on it. Everyone who moves there is weird. Can't wait to see the next family (ha).
Actually, the "white scotties" are West Highland Whites.
We have quite a few of them in the neighborhood. They are very cute also.
We used to have a Cairn Terrier. You don't see them much. They are very similar to Scotties and Westies, but they are brown.
With Dan Bartlett and speechwriter, Mike Gerson
He really gets into practicing
From his 2003 SOTU:
Can't wait to hear Rush's news from Afghanistan .. he's right: we hear NOTHING about what's going on there, so I'm guessing there are a lot of GOOD things happening, and I'm so looking foward to his reports. Hamid Karzai, at the SOTU of 2002, before there were successful elections in Afghanistan, and he was voted in as President, praise the Lord!
Hi Wolfie (can I call you that?),
where do you find the summary of W's schedule?
Does anyone else think Hamid Karzai is just an incredibly handsome and elegant man ?
I see that teleprompter for the President's speech. I was just amazed at the Inauguration when it looked like he had typewritten sheets in a 3-ring binder to read his speech from. I thought surely he would have something more high-tech than that. I think same for the SOTU/
This one proves though he was OK and did not hold anything against the President for dropping him
I'm in total agreement with ya, JAC! Up for Karzai's Kuties?? LOL
These quotes are very special. I loved the fact that our President did not take the bait from Suzanne. LOL!!
I do hope we're planning on a prayer thread beginning tomorrow - which can run through the whole week??
As opposed to an also-ran presidential candidate in 2004.
I think a prayer thread for the President's European trip is an outstanding idea, CyberAnt.
Military Spouses
By Paige Swiney
It was just another harried Wednesday afternoon trip to the commissary. My husband was off teaching young men to fly. My daughters were going about their daily activities knowing I would return to them at the appointed time, bearing, among other things, their favorite fruit snacks, frozen pizza and all the little extras that never had to be written down on a grocery list.
My grocery list, by the way, was in my 16-month-old daughter's mouth, and I was lamenting the fact that the next four aisles of needed items would pass by while extracting the last of my list from my daughters mouth, when I nearly ran over an old man. This man clearly had no appreciation for the fact that I had 45 minutes left to finish the grocery shopping, pick up my 4-year old from tumbling class and get to school, where my 12-year-old and her car pool mates would be waiting.
I knew men didn't belong in a commissary, and this old guy was no exception. He stood in front of the soap selection staring blankly, as if he'd never had to choose a bar of soap in his life. I was ready to bark an order at him when l realized there was a tear on his face. Instantly, this grocery aisle roadblock transformed into a human.... "Can I help you find something?" I asked. He hesitated, and then told me he was looking for soap.
"Any one in particular?" I continued.
"Well, I'm trying to find my wife's brand of soap."
I started to loan him my cell phone to call her when he said, "She died a year ago, and I just want to smell her again."
Chills ran down my spine. I don't think the 22,000-pound Mother of all Bombs could have had the same impact. As tears welled up in my eyes, my half-eaten grocery list didn't seem so important. Neither did fruit snacks or frozen pizza. I spent the remainder of my time in the commissary that day listening to a man tell the story of how important his wife was to him -- how she took care of their children while he served our country. A retired, decorated World War II pilot who flew over 50 missions to protect Americans still needed the protection of a woman who served him at home.
My life was forever changed that day. Every time my husband works too late or leaves before the crack of dawn, l try to remember the sense of importance I felt that day in the commissary. Some times the monotony of laundry, housecleaning, grocery shopping and taxi driving leaves military wives feeling empty -- the kind of emptiness that is rarely fulfilled when our husbands come home and don't want to or can't talk about work. We need to be reminded, at times; of the important role we fill for our family and for our country.
Over the years, I've talked a lot about military spouses..how special they are and the price they pay for freedom too. The funny thing is; most military spouses don't consider themselves different from other spouses. They do what they have to do, bound together not by blood or merely friendship, but with a shared spirit whose origin is in the very essence of what love truly is.
Is there truly a difference? I think there is. You have to decide for yourself. Other spouses get married and look forward to building equity in a home and putting down family roots. Military spouses get married and know they'll live in base housing or rent, and their roots must be short so they can be transplanted frequently. Other spouses decorate a home with flair and personality that will last a lifetime. Military spouses decorate a home with flare tempered with the knowledge that no two base houses have the same size windows or same size rooms. Curtains have to be flexible and multiple sets are a plus. Furniture must fit like puzzle pieces.
Other spouses have living rooms that are immaculate and seldom used. Military spouses have immaculate living room/dining room combos. The coffee table got a scratch or two moving from Germany, but it still looks pretty good. Other spouses say good-bye to their spouse for a business trip and know they won't see them for a week. They are lonely, but can survive. Military spouses say good-bye to their deploying spouse and know they won't see them for months, or for a remote, a year. They are lonely, but will survive.
Other spouses, when a washer hose blows off, call Maytag and then write a check out for having the hose reconnected. Military spouses will cut the water off and fix it themselves. Other spouses get used to saying "hello" to friends they see all the time. Military spouses get used to saying "good-bye" to friends made the last two years. Other spouses worry about whether their child will be class president next year. Military spouses worry about whether their child will be accepted in yet another school next year and whether that school will be the worst in the city ... again.
Other spouses can count on spouse participation in special events ... birthdays, anniversaries, concerts, football games, graduation, and even the birth of a child. Military spouses only count on each other; because they realize that the flag has to come first if freedom is to survive. It has to be that way. Other spouses put up yellow ribbons when the troops are imperiled across the globe and take them down when the troops come home. Military spouses wear yellow ribbons around their hearts and they never go away. Other spouses worry about being late for mom's Thanksgiving dinner. Military spouses worry about getting back from Japan in time for dad's funeral.
The television program showing an elderly lady putting a card down in front of a long, black wall that has names on it touches other spouses. The card simply says, "Happy Birthday, Sweetheart. You would have been sixty today." A military spouse is the lady with the card, and the wall is the Vietnam Memorial. I would never say military spouses are better than other spouses are. But I will say there is a difference. I will say, without hesitation, that military spouses pay just as high a price for freedom as do their active duty husbands and wives. Perhaps the price they pay is even higher. Dying in service to our country isn't near as hard as loving someone who has died in service to our country, and having to live without them.
God bless our military spouses for all they freely give.
God bless America.
Karzai is also an intelligent, honorable and courageous man, from everything I've every observed. That counts for a lot.
I wonder if he will become the George Washington of Afghanistan's democracy. Seems like it's heading that way.
Thanks for these wonderful pictures Wolfstar - they are definitely getting to me.
This is the stuff our reps and senators need to see and read about - they are not even qualified to polish these men's shoes.
Hi everybody!
Gretchen, Wolfstar is having her dinner she advised Ohio the following regarding GWB's schedule
****
To: ohioWfan
Oh, WONDERFUL!! Thanks for the schedule, Wolfstar!!
You're welcome, OWF. There were no WH press briefings Thursday and Friday, but I found the President's itinerary on "Stars and Stripes" website accompanying a story about the visit to the Weisbaden base.
33 posted on 02/19/2005 2:50:14 PM PST by Wolfstar******
Just look at the horror on the faces of the kids (smile)
But Barney bounced back (and got a kiss)
You're welcome, snugs. You should be able to catch it on cspan tomorrow, would it be about 9:30 pm your time?
Helping Barney down the stairs. Boy when Beazley goes with him, he's going to have all kinds of trouble. LOL
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