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Bush touches on oil, Iraq war

WASHINGTON -- A politically weakened President Bush declared last night that America must break its long dependence on Mideast oil and rebuked critics of his stay-the-course strategy for the unpopular war in Iraq.

America is addicted to oil

which is often imported from unstable parts of the world Bush said as he sought to drive the election-year agenda in his annual State of the Union address.

Rejecting calls for the withdrawal of troops from Iraq, Bush said, There is no peace in retreat. He also slapped at those who complain he took the country to war on the erroneous grounds that Iraq possessed weapons of mass destruction.

Hindsight alone is not wisdom Bush said. And second-guessing is not a strategy.

In an unscripted moment, anti-war activist Cindy Sheehan, the mother of a fallen soldier in Iraq, was taken into custody by police in the House gallery just before Bush spoke to a joint session of Congress. She was escorted from the visitors gallery after she caused a disruption, a Capitol Police official said.

With Congress facing midterm elections in November, there was a partisan mood in the chamber as Bush, hampered by big budget deficits, offered a modest program.

Democrats stood and cheered when Bush said that Congress did not act a year ago on my proposal to save Social Security. Bush shook his finger and continued, yet the rising cost of entitlements is a problem that is not going away.

Switching gears, Bush asked lawmakers to join him in naming a commission to examine the impact of Baby Boom retirements on Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid spending.

He declared that the state of our union is strong despite Americans' anxieties about the war in Iraq, the economy and soaring energy costs. Oil prices are inching toward $70 a barrel, throwing a cloud over the economy and pinching Americans' pocketbooks.

Bush called for increased federal research into alternative fuels such as ethanol made from weeds or wood chips instead of corn.

Rep. Ted Strickland, D-Ohio, said if elected governor of Ohio in November he would pursue similar energy policies to those outlined by the president. For the most part, however, the president's speech was rather uninspired

Strickland said.

The president is out of touch with what is happening in Iraq, and still does not accept the fact that his education bill, the No Child Left Behind Act, is woefully underfunded

Strickland said.

Virginia Gov. Timothy M. Kaine, chosen to deliver the response for the Democrats, scolded Bush on the soaring national debt, the frustrated effort to rebuild the hurricane-battered Gulf Coast, Medicaid cuts and other issues. On Iraq, Kaine said that Americans were given inaccurate information about the reasons for invading and that troops were given body armor that was inadequate.

The federal government should serve the American people

the newly elected governor said. But that mission is frustrated by this administration's poor choices and bad management.

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