Bush senses international 'spirit of unity' on Iraq

Speaking at a joint press conference with the Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi this morning, the US President George …

Speaking at a joint press conference with the Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi this morning, the US President George W. Bush said he sensed a "spirit of unity" in the international community to help Iraq's new government and expressed optimism that a UN Security Council resolution will be approved soon.

President Bush thanked Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, one of his closest allies in Europe, for helping draft a new resolution. "I sense a spirit of unity in terms of working with the new Iraqi government," Bush said. Of the resolution, he said: "I'm confident we will get one soon."

In reference to the 20 Italian soldiers killed in Iraq, Bush said: "Their service will help make...the world more secure as a free and democratic Iraq arises in the heart of the Middle East."

Italy has some 2,700 troops in Iraq, the third largest foreign contingent there after the US and British forces.

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Bush and Berlusconi praised each other at the press conference, which concluded the US president's 36-hour visit to the Italian capital.

The trip took place against a backdrop of anti-war street protests and violence in Iraq where another US soldier was killed in a roadside bomb blast on Saturday.

Thousands of protesters opposed to the US-led occupation of Iraq marched in Rome yesterday. There were skirmishes with police, and some bottles and flares were thrown, but it was not the mayhem many had feared. Berlusconi called it a "flop".

However, the possibility of more protests awaited Bush in Paris.

There, Bush was to hold talks and have a working dinner with Chirac, who thwarted Bush's attempt for a UN Security Council resolution last year authorising war against Iraq.

Chirac wants a new UN resolution to have a fixed timetable for withdrawing US-led troops from Iraq.

The United States and Britain yesterday proposed giving Iraq's new leaders the right to send home foreign troops, a concession Baghdad's foreign minister said would speed up adoption of a resolution on Iraq's future.

Tomorrow, Bush goes to Normandy to mark the 60th anniversary of the D-Day invasion. White House aides said that Bush's speech would commemorate World War Two sacrifice and that Iraq was not expected to be mentioned.