Bush Slates Billions for Iraq Allies
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - It can pay to be a member of President Bush's coalition against Iraq.
Wrapped into the $75 billion war budget he proposed to Congress on Tuesday were grants and loans worth billions of dollars for what he called "partners and friends" in the Middle East, including Israel, Jordan and Egypt.
Assistance is also being offered to many less obvious members of Bush's so-called "coalition of the willing" from Afghanistan and Colombia to the Philippines and Slovakia, which Bush said will help them "wage the broader war on terror."
Administration officials say the U.S. aid is urgently needed to cushion the economic shock of war in the Middle East and beyond.
"Their economies are directly affected by the war and we are doing what we can to help them," an official said, noting that many countries supportive of the war effort were left out of the war budget and other nations, including Israel and Egypt, received far less money than they were seeking.
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - It can pay to be a member of President Bush's coalition against Iraq.
Wrapped into the $75 billion war budget he proposed to Congress on Tuesday were grants and loans worth billions of dollars for what he called "partners and friends" in the Middle East, including Israel, Jordan and Egypt.
Assistance is also being offered to many less obvious members of Bush's so-called "coalition of the willing" from Afghanistan and Colombia to the Philippines and Slovakia, which Bush said will help them "wage the broader war on terror."
Administration officials say the U.S. aid is urgently needed to cushion the economic shock of war in the Middle East and beyond.
"Their economies are directly affected by the war and we are doing what we can to help them," an official said, noting that many countries supportive of the war effort were left out of the war budget and other nations, including Israel and Egypt, received far less money than they were seeking.
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