Bush could not debate a Cuban ni
Bush could not debate a Cuban ninth grader
World leaders have their say before U.S. vote
World leaders and top politicians have had various things to say about the U.S. presidential election in the run-up to November 2:
ITALIAN PRIME MINISTER SILVIO BERLUSCONI
''We hope and believe that the next president will again be Bush,'' Berlusconi said on October 22 during campaigning for Italian local elections in southern Italy.
JAPANESE PRIME MINISTER JUNICHIRO KOIZUMI
''I am very close to President Bush. So I want him to do his best,'' Koizumi said on October 14 when asked about the election.
RUSSIAN PRESIDENT VLADIMIR PUTIN
''The attacks of international terrorism in Iraq are directed not only at international coalition forces but at President Bush personally,'' Putin said in the Tajik capital Dushanbe on October 18 in a clear show of support for the president.
''International terrorism has given itself the goal of causing maximum damage to Bush in the election battle, the goal of blocking the re-election of Bush for a second presidential term.''
CUBAN PRESIDENT FIDEL CASTRO
''Bush could not debate a Cuban ninth grader, who knows more than he does,'' Castro said in a speech in February. Castro, who has outlasted nine U.S. presidents, never misses a chance to ridicule the 43rd president.
EUROPEAN UNION EXTERNAL RELATIONS COMMISSIONER CHRIS PATTEN
''Liberation rapidly turned into a brutally resisted occupation. Democracy failed to roll out like an Oriental carpet across the thankless deserts of the Middle East,'' Patten said in a speech to the European parliament in the French city of Strasbourg on September 15 as he prepared to leave his post.
''What I most worry about is that on either side of the Atlantic, we will bring out the worst in our traditional partners ... The world deserves better than testosterone on one side and superciliousness on the other.''
FRENCH PRESIDENT JACQUES CHIRAC
''We are friends (of the United States), we are allies. We are not servants, of course. And when we don't agree, we don't say it aggressively, but we say it in a firm manner,'' Chirac, a critic of the Iraq war, told a news conference on June 29 after France and the United States disagreed at a NATO summit over how to bring security to Iraq and Afghanistan.
GERMAN DEPUTY DEFENCE MINISTER WALTER KOLBOW
''The Americans look more and more like dictators with their unilateral decisions,'' Kolbow said in March 2003, referring to a phrase attributed to the Bush administration: ''Anyone who is not with us is against us.''
ISRAELI PRIME MINISTER ARIEL SHARON
''I think that we never had such relations with any president of the United States ... We never had such cooperation in everything as we have with the current administration,'' Sharon said in October 2002, reflecting on ties with the United States that have remained strong under Bush.
By MINISTER SILVIO BERLUSCONI
Bush could not debate a Cuban ninth grader
World leaders have their say before U.S. vote
World leaders and top politicians have had various things to say about the U.S. presidential election in the run-up to November 2:
ITALIAN PRIME MINISTER SILVIO BERLUSCONI
''We hope and believe that the next president will again be Bush,'' Berlusconi said on October 22 during campaigning for Italian local elections in southern Italy.
JAPANESE PRIME MINISTER JUNICHIRO KOIZUMI
''I am very close to President Bush. So I want him to do his best,'' Koizumi said on October 14 when asked about the election.
RUSSIAN PRESIDENT VLADIMIR PUTIN
''The attacks of international terrorism in Iraq are directed not only at international coalition forces but at President Bush personally,'' Putin said in the Tajik capital Dushanbe on October 18 in a clear show of support for the president.
''International terrorism has given itself the goal of causing maximum damage to Bush in the election battle, the goal of blocking the re-election of Bush for a second presidential term.''
CUBAN PRESIDENT FIDEL CASTRO
''Bush could not debate a Cuban ninth grader, who knows more than he does,'' Castro said in a speech in February. Castro, who has outlasted nine U.S. presidents, never misses a chance to ridicule the 43rd president.
EUROPEAN UNION EXTERNAL RELATIONS COMMISSIONER CHRIS PATTEN
''Liberation rapidly turned into a brutally resisted occupation. Democracy failed to roll out like an Oriental carpet across the thankless deserts of the Middle East,'' Patten said in a speech to the European parliament in the French city of Strasbourg on September 15 as he prepared to leave his post.
''What I most worry about is that on either side of the Atlantic, we will bring out the worst in our traditional partners ... The world deserves better than testosterone on one side and superciliousness on the other.''
FRENCH PRESIDENT JACQUES CHIRAC
''We are friends (of the United States), we are allies. We are not servants, of course. And when we don't agree, we don't say it aggressively, but we say it in a firm manner,'' Chirac, a critic of the Iraq war, told a news conference on June 29 after France and the United States disagreed at a NATO summit over how to bring security to Iraq and Afghanistan.
GERMAN DEPUTY DEFENCE MINISTER WALTER KOLBOW
''The Americans look more and more like dictators with their unilateral decisions,'' Kolbow said in March 2003, referring to a phrase attributed to the Bush administration: ''Anyone who is not with us is against us.''
ISRAELI PRIME MINISTER ARIEL SHARON
''I think that we never had such relations with any president of the United States ... We never had such cooperation in everything as we have with the current administration,'' Sharon said in October 2002, reflecting on ties with the United States that have remained strong under Bush.
By MINISTER SILVIO BERLUSCONI