A Soldier from the 1st Stryker Brigade Combat Team, 25th Infantry Division, takes time to play with Iraqi children at a medical screening, in Mosul, Iraq.
RECENT CONTENT:
» Earmarks up and down
August 19th, 2008
» Stevens makes nice profit
August 19th, 2008
» Musharraf resigns control
August 18th, 2008
» Downturn is good news
August 17th, 2008
» Russian attacks looming?
August 17th, 2008
US Senate moves toward passage of global aids bill
By: VOA News | Submitted on: 07/16/08CAPITAL HILL (VOA) - The $50-billion measure includes efforts aimed at the prevention and treatment of AIDS, malaria and tuberculosis over five years. The bill reauthorizes and expands a current program, which is due to expire in September.
President Bush first proposed the program in his 2003 State of the Union address. At the time, he sought - and Congress approved - $15 billion for the initiative. The program has been widely praised for helping to treat hundreds of thousands of people suffering from AIDS and putting the United States at the forefront of global efforts to fight the disease.
Senator Joe Biden, a Delaware Democrat and chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, led the debate in support of the bill. A frequent critic of President Bush, Biden says he has no dispute with the president over this program.
"I am often critical of the president's foreign policy and his aid programs," said Senator Biden. "But the President of the United States, George W. Bush, deserves great credit. If the president did nothing else in his administration, this is justification enough for his legacy to be looked back on favorably because of the phenomenal and dramatic impact this initiative has and will have on the rest of the world."
The top Republican on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Senator Richard Lugar of Indiana, says there are a number of reasons why he supports the bill.
"They come down to the saving of hundreds of thousands of lives, the alleviation of extraordinary suffering on this earth, and I would simply say from the standpoint of our foreign policy one of the strongest ways in which the United States has made an impact on a number of countries in which our public diplomacy or diplomacy of any sort has not been very successful in the past," said Senator Lugar. "We make an impact because people in those countries know we care."
Several Republican conservatives expressed concern that the legislation had expanded beyond the original intent of President Bush's proposal in 2003. They offered amendments to limit the scope of the bill, but the measures were voted down Tuesday.
The legislation authorizes the programs, but does not fund them. The money will have to be approved by Congress in a separate appropriations bill. Most of the funding would be spent on aids prevention and treatment, while $5 billion would go toward malaria programs and $4 billion to tuberculosis programs.
President Bush first proposed the program in his 2003 State of the Union address. At the time, he sought - and Congress approved - $15 billion for the initiative. The program has been widely praised for helping to treat hundreds of thousands of people suffering from AIDS and putting the United States at the forefront of global efforts to fight the disease.
Senator Joe Biden, a Delaware Democrat and chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, led the debate in support of the bill. A frequent critic of President Bush, Biden says he has no dispute with the president over this program.
"I am often critical of the president's foreign policy and his aid programs," said Senator Biden. "But the President of the United States, George W. Bush, deserves great credit. If the president did nothing else in his administration, this is justification enough for his legacy to be looked back on favorably because of the phenomenal and dramatic impact this initiative has and will have on the rest of the world."
The top Republican on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Senator Richard Lugar of Indiana, says there are a number of reasons why he supports the bill.
"They come down to the saving of hundreds of thousands of lives, the alleviation of extraordinary suffering on this earth, and I would simply say from the standpoint of our foreign policy one of the strongest ways in which the United States has made an impact on a number of countries in which our public diplomacy or diplomacy of any sort has not been very successful in the past," said Senator Lugar. "We make an impact because people in those countries know we care."
Several Republican conservatives expressed concern that the legislation had expanded beyond the original intent of President Bush's proposal in 2003. They offered amendments to limit the scope of the bill, but the measures were voted down Tuesday.
The legislation authorizes the programs, but does not fund them. The money will have to be approved by Congress in a separate appropriations bill. Most of the funding would be spent on aids prevention and treatment, while $5 billion would go toward malaria programs and $4 billion to tuberculosis programs.
The Voice of America (VOA), which first went on the air in 1942, is a multimedia international broadcasting service that reaches a worldwide audience of more than 115 million people.