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ARTICLE: Pope, Bush To Discuss Differences
By Peggy Polk

Friday, June 04, 2004 - Page updated at 12:00 A.M.

VATICAN CITY — Pope John Paul II will meet with President Bush today to discuss their differences over Iraq and the
Middle East, and Vatican officials have indicated that Bush might find himself in for a lecture this time.

President Bush arrived in Italy early today for a 36-hour visit to commemorate the 60th anniversary of the city's
liberation in World War II.

John Paul, who is debilitated by Parkinson's disease and painful arthritis, has appeared stronger and more vigorous in
recent months, and has maintained his normal schedule of audiences and religious celebrations.

Bush rearranged his own schedule, leaving for Rome on Thursday night, in order to meet with the pope at midday Friday
for an audience expected to center on terrorism, Iraq and the Middle East — and perhaps win the president some Catholic
votes in November. The president's previous meetings with the pope have been markedly cordial. Bush, a born-again
Christian, and the pope see eye-to-eye on major issues of morality, sharing the same tough anti-abortion stance. It
will be Bush's third papal audience but his first since the U.S.-led intervention in Iraq, which the pope strongly
opposed, and the collapse of the "road map" to end the conflict between Palestinians and Israelis, a high papal
priority.

Vatican officials have said they were appalled by scenes of abuse to which Iraqi prisoners have been subjected, and
they criticized the Bush administration's use of repressive means to fight the war against terrorism. "The struggle
against terrorism does not justify the abandonment of a state of law because the means do not justify the end,"
Cardinal Pio Laghi, a former Vatican envoy to Washington and close friend of Bush's father, said in a recent interview.


Bush will award Pope John Paul II the Presidential Medal of Freedom Friday, the highest U.S. civilian award, a U.S.
official said yesterday.

While in Rome, Bush will also meet Italian President Carlo Azeglio Ciampi and Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, a
staunch U.S. ally in Iraq. Most Italians oppose the war and want Italy to withdraw its 2,700 troops.

Bush will pay tribute at a memorial to one of the worst Nazi atrocities in occupied Italy, when German troops killed
335 innocent Italian men in retaliation for an attack by Italian partisans the day before. The site of the March 24,
1944, slaughter was an abandoned quarry now known as the Fosse Ardeatine, the Ardeatine Graves, off the ancient Appian
Way. The atrocity occurred 24 hours after a partisan-attack in central Rome that killed 33 members of a Nazi military
police unit.

From Rome, Bush travels tomorrow to France, where he will meet with French President Jacques Chirac in Paris before
heading to Normandy on Sunday to participate in a ceremony commemorating the 60th anniversary of D-Day. He will then go
immediately to Sea Island, Ga., to serve as host for the annual Group of Eight economic summit of major democracies.

Later in the month, he travels to Ireland for a European Union summit and to Turkey for a NATO meeting.

Information from The Associated Press and Reuters is included in this report.

SOURCE: The Seattle Times
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/nationworld/2001947329_bush04.html

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