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        WORLD / Middle East

        G-8 leaders urge Israel to show restraint
        (AP)
        Updated: 2006-07-16 16:03

        President Bush joined world leaders Sunday in urging Israel to show some restraint after four days of steady bombing against its neighbor Lebanon.


        U.S. President George W. Bush, right, and British Prime Minister Tony Blair, left, shakes hands during their bilateral meeting at the G8 Summit in St. Petersburg, Russia, Sunday, July 16, 2006. [AP]

        "Our message to Israel is, look, defend yourself but as you do so be mindful of the consequences, so we've urged restraint," Bush said.

        World leaders opened their first working session at the Group of Eight summit Sunday, expressing confidence they would emerge with a consensus position calling for peace -- despite differing views on who shares the blame.

        "The international community must address the root causes" of the violence taking place in the Mideast, Bush said as the leaders prepared for their first working session at the summit.

        "This started because Hezbollah decided to capture two Israeli soldiers and fire hundreds of rockets into Israel from southern Lebanon," Bush said. "That's the cause of the crisis."

        British Prime Minister Tony Blair, sitting with Bush for a bilateral meeting on the summit's sidelines, said everyone is going to work hard to find a common solution. "We all want the situation to calm down," Blair said.

        The only way to stop the hostilities, Blair said, is to address the root causes -- the extremists backed by Iran and Syria. "We should be able to agree on a position," he said.

        French President Jacques Chirac said the G-8 nations would call for a show of moderation of all parties involved and for a lasting cease-fire in the Middle East.

        "We share the same views of issues at stake here in the Middle East," Chirac said as he ended a separate one-on-one meeting with Bush.

        Yet Bush and Chirac have taken different views of the violence. Chirac has questioned whether Israel's response to the capture of its soldiers went too far, while Bush has placed blame squarely on Hezbollah and the nations that back it and has declined to call for a cease fire.
        Page: 12

         
         

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