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Laura Bush's Afghan Visit Preceded by Bomb
AP via The Free-Lance Star (Fredericksburg, VA) ^ | 30 March 05

Posted on 03/30/2005 12:02:15 AM PST by leadpenny

Laura Bush's Afghan Visit Preceded by Bomb

The Associated Press

KABUL, Afghanistan

An apparent car-bomb exploded in an eastern Afghan city Wednesday, killing the driver, hours before first lady Laura Bush was due in the country.

The car exploded at about 8:30 a.m. in Jalalabad, 80 miles east of the capital Kabul, intelligence chief Bahram Khan told The Associated Press. Mrs. Bush was expected in Kabul around noon.

Khan said investigators suspected the driver had been planning a suicide attack, but that the bomb detonated prematurely. No one else was injured.

Mrs. Bush was to spend about five hours in Afghanistan visiting women's projects, meeting President Hamid Karzai in Kabul and dining with U.S. soldiers at Bagram Air Base to the north.

Mrs. Bush had wanted to visit Afghanistan for a couple of years but delayed the journey, mostly because of security concerns. President Bush has not yet visited the country.


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Front Page News
KEYWORDS: afghanvisit; laurabush

1 posted on 03/30/2005 12:02:18 AM PST by leadpenny
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To: leadpenny

Want to see Geroge go ballistic? Mess with his wife.


2 posted on 03/30/2005 12:04:53 AM PST by Echo Talon (http://echotalon.blogspot.com)
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From earlier:

http://fredericksburg.com/News/apmethods/apstory?urlfeed=D89558S00.xml

First Lady to Meet With Afghan Women

By DEB RIECHMANN

Associated Press Writer

KABUL, Afghanistan

Laura Bush says she has been waiting a long time to tell the women of Afghanistan that American women stand with them.

The first lady arrived in the country for a five-hour visit early Wednesday with plans to visit women who are training to be teachers and others who have made a business of selling handicrafts. She was also to meet with Afghan President Hamid Karzai and have dinner with U.S. troops stationed at Bagram Air Base north of Kabul.

Mrs. Bush had wanted to visit Afghanistan for a couple of years but delayed the journey, mostly because of security concerns about travel to the war-torn country, where American forces are still battling a stubborn Taliban-led insurgency. Her trip was kept secret until just before she left from Andrews Air Force Base near Washington.

"I have been so looking forward to going to Afghanistan," she told reporters on the tarmac of the military base in suburban Maryland. "When I really realized the plight of the women under the Taliban, I also found that American women really stand in solidarity with the women in Afghanistan."

"I'm delighted to be able to bring that message to Afghanistan," Mrs. Bush added. "This has been in the planning for quite some time. I didn't tell anyone."

A former teacher and librarian, Mrs. Bush has expressed concern about the limited educational opportunities for Afghan girls under the former Taliban regime.

"We want to encourage them to send their girls to school to get educated," Mrs. Bush said Tuesday. "We are very, very interested in their well-being and then, of course, in the broader Middle East as well. I think it is a message to them that the United States stands with people who are building their democracies."

For most Afghan women, little has changed since the Taliban's ouster. Women's literacy rates are just 14 percent, far below the literacy rate for men, and maternal mortality is about 60 times that of industrialized countries, with an Afghan mother dying every half-hour on average.

Girls outside of cities still do not often go to schools. Some are back to wearing burkas, or all-covering veils. White House spokesman Scott McClellan said the Bush administration is working to advance the rights of women in Afghanistan.

"We will continue to support those efforts and do all that we can," he said Tuesday from the White House as Mrs. Bush was en route to Afghanistan.

The first lady was accompanied by Education Secretary Margaret Spellings. Her twin daughters, Barbara and Jenna, did not go along.

Spellings visited Afghanistan last year and said she was touched by the plight of women.

"They've been abused by the Taliban and sometimes their families, their husbands _ (Afghanistan's) pervasiveness of drugs," Spellings said. "I mean, these gut-wrenching stories. And of course they adore their children, and they want to see about their children, they want a better life, a better future."

About 17,000 U.S. troops are in Afghanistan. More than 120 American soldiers have died since American forces invaded to oust the former Taliban government for harboring al-Qaida militants after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on the United States.

Susan Whitson, the first lady's press secretary, said the White House had worked with security officials to ensure the first lady's safety.

"We want to make sure she is safe as well as the people she is meeting with and all the citizens of Afghanistan," she said. "We've taken all the precautions."

Mrs. Bush was traveling to Afghanistan as part of a delegation of the U.S.-Afghan Women's Council, a group formed in 2002 to promote private-public partnerships between U.S. and Afghan institutions and ensure that Afghan women gain the skills and education denied them under years of the Taliban.

In Kabul, Mrs. Bush was to visit the Women's Teacher Training Institute and hold a round-table discussion with students and teachers. She also was to witness the awarding of a $17.7 million grant to American University in Kabul and $3.5 million to the International School.


3 posted on 03/30/2005 12:05:40 AM PST by leadpenny
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To: leadpenny

Gee, that was a close one !! Sheeeesh.

The AP writes another informative and meaningful article. : )


4 posted on 03/30/2005 12:07:00 AM PST by Peace will be here soon
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To: Peace will be here soon

I guess you could say the guy wasn't on the A-Team. Eighty miles and four hours off and he still only managed to kill himself.


5 posted on 03/30/2005 12:12:10 AM PST by leadpenny
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To: leadpenny
Eighty miles and four hours off and he still only managed to kill himself.

LoL!

My heart bleeds......

6 posted on 03/30/2005 12:24:08 AM PST by EGPWS
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To: Peace will be here soon

LMAO! No kidding. I wonder how this AP journalist knew this car bomb was meant for Mrs. B? Or that it wasn't simply car bomb making class gone wrong?
Maybe this is another journalist who was "in" on the deal, or even paid bomb class drop-outs to "make news". Warrants investigation I would think.


7 posted on 03/30/2005 1:01:43 AM PST by Nuzcruizer
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To: Echo Talon
Want to see Geroge go ballistic? Mess with his wife.

YEAH! Now we are gonna go attack Afghanistan. Oh, wait... WE ALREADY DID THAT! Seriously, what is George gonna do? NOTHING!!!

8 posted on 03/30/2005 3:59:11 AM PST by psychoknk
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To: psychoknk

Yea, George didn't do anything in Afghanistan or Iraq... I forgot he's a wimp. /sarcasm.


9 posted on 03/30/2005 1:09:48 PM PST by Echo Talon (http://echotalon.blogspot.com)
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To: Echo Talon
Yea, George didn't do anything in Afghanistan or Iraq... I forgot he's a wimp. /sarcasm.

Way to change the topic. You said:

Want to see Geroge go ballistic? Mess with his wife.

We didn't attack Afghanistan or Iraq because someone there "messed with his wife". You are very smart /sarcasm.

10 posted on 03/31/2005 3:17:44 PM PST by psychoknk
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To: psychoknk

And you said George wouldnt do anything. As if he never did anything. ala Carter


11 posted on 03/31/2005 3:24:25 PM PST by Echo Talon (http://echotalon.blogspot.com)
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To: Echo Talon
And you said George wouldnt do anything. As if he never did anything. ala Carter

My second and third sentences:

Now we are gonna go attack Afghanistan. Oh, wait... WE ALREADY DID THAT!

Yeah, that really makes it seem like he never did anything /sarcasm.

12 posted on 03/31/2005 3:49:58 PM PST by psychoknk
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