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Bush and Brown vow co-operation | Bush and Brown vow co-operation |
(10 minutes later) | |
US President George W Bush and UK PM Gordon Brown have held their first formal talks, renewing pledges to fight terrorism and seek progress in Iraq. | |
Mr Brown said both nations had duties and responsibilities in Iraq, and that he would seek military advice before announcing any changes in policy. | |
The pair met at Camp David, near Washington, amid widespread interest about whether they could work together. | |
The talks also focused on Afghanistan, Darfur, world trade and climate change. | |
Ahead of the summit there was speculation about whether the Texan president and the Scottish prime minister would find some common ground. | |
In the event, Mr Bush spoke warmly of the "special relationship" with the UK, describing it as "our most important bilateral relationship" - the same term used by Mr Brown ahead of his trip to the US. | |
Britain and America's policies on Iraq are in step - for now, at least BBC political editor Nick Robinson Read Nick's thoughts in full | Britain and America's policies on Iraq are in step - for now, at least BBC political editor Nick Robinson Read Nick's thoughts in full |
The president said he found Mr Brown a warm, humorous man, far removed from the "dour Scotsman" image sometimes portrayed by the media. | The president said he found Mr Brown a warm, humorous man, far removed from the "dour Scotsman" image sometimes portrayed by the media. |
He also paid tribute to Mr Brown's personal strength in overcoming the death of his first child in 2002. | He also paid tribute to Mr Brown's personal strength in overcoming the death of his first child in 2002. |
And he joked when he learned that six of Mr Brown's newly-appointed cabinet were under 40 years old, telling the prime minister: "You must be feeling old." | |
But the BBC's political editor Nick Robinson, at Camp David, says Mr Brown did nothing to return those personal compliments - even referring to their meetings as full and frank, which is normal diplomatic code for an argument. | |
Iraq debate | |
On Iraq, Mr Brown said any recommendation on the future role of the UK's 5,500 troops in Iraq could be put to parliament after British MPs return to work in October after a summer break. | |
That would leave any decision on UK troop levels until after a final report on the US "surge" in Iraq by Mr Bush's commander in Iraq, General David Petraeus. | |
The consequences of failure would be disaster for Great Britain and the US, something this Prime Minister understands George W BushUS President Current UK policy in Iraq is to hand over power in Basra province to local Iraqi authorities, following successful handovers in three other southern provinces. | |
"Our aim, like the United States is, step-by-step, to move control to the Iraqi authorities," Mr Brown said. | |
Mr Bush then linked the fortunes of both nations to the outcome of events in Iraq. | |
"The consequences of failure would be disaster for Great Britain and the US, something this prime minister understands," the president said. | |
'Common struggle' | |
Mr Brown, who faced a series of attempted bombings in the UK in the days after he assumed office in June, denounced terrorism as a crime, not a cause. | |
Correspondents say Mr Bush used familiar language, including soaring rhetoric on the subject of good and evil, while Gordon Brown was much more specific, detailing a long list of what the two men had talked about. | |
However, Mr Brown denied suggestions that his view of terrorism differed greatly from that of Mr Bush. | |
"We know we are in a common struggle, we know we have to work together, and we know we have to deal with it," he said. | |
"Today in 2007 we see the challenges are radically different to 10 years ago," Mr Brown added, citing climate change, Africa, and the search for a Middle East peace process as key issues. | |
He said both men had agreed on the need for tougher sanctions against Iran, and the importance of restarting the Doha round of world trade talks. |