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Bush urges Europe to back Mideast vision

  • Story Highlights
  • President Bush says he wants to transform Mideast like Europe after WWII
  • In France, Bush urged Europe to stay with his Mideast vision
  • Bush also met with pope and visited Vatican gardens
  • Bush is in Europe on last visit as president
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PARIS, France (CNN) -- President Bush on Friday urged Europeans to stand firm with the United States as it seeks to transform the Middle East.

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Bush delivers his speech in France in front of images of Paris landmarks.

He compared the Middle Eastern transition Bush seeks to the one the U.S. helped engineer in Europe with the Marshall Plan after World War II.

"There are moments today when the situation in places like the Middle East can look as daunting as it did in Europe six decades ago. Yet we can have confidence that liberty will once again prevail," Bush said in the keynote speech of his European farewell tour.

"We can have confidence because men and women in the Middle East and beyond are determined to claim their liberty -- just as the people of Europe did in the last century," Bush said.

Earlier in the day, Bush visited Pope Benedict XVI in the Vatican, touring the gardens through which the leader of the Roman Catholic Church walks each night.

It was the second time this year the two men met, after Benedict's visit to the United States in April.

Bush, on what is expected to be his last European visit as president, has been pushing tough rhetoric on Iran.

During previous stops in Italy, Germany and Slovenia, he has warned Iran it faces further isolation unless it suspends its nuclear program which the U.S. believes is geared to developing weapons rather than energy.

First lady Laura Bush briefed the press aboard Air Force One for the first time ever during the flight from Italy to France.

She spoke about her efforts on behalf of Afghanistan, which she visited over the weekend before an Afghan donors' conference.

She said preliminary results indicated the conference had raised between $20 and $21 billion.

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And she pledged to keep up efforts on behalf of Afghanistan after Bush leaves office next year.

"Obviously I'll have an interest in Afghanistan for the rest of my life and in the women and the children of Afghanistan and their success," she told reporters. "And I know how fragile that success will be or can be ... It's going to take a long time for Afghanistan to build the kind of secure and safe country that will respect the rights of women and girls and boys."

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