UPDATED ON:
Tuesday, June 10, 2008
12:56 Mecca time, 09:56 GMT
 
News Europe
Bush arrives in Slovenia
Janez Jansa, the Slovenian prime minister, right, will meet the US delegation on Tuesday [EPA]
George Bush, the US president, has arrived in Slovenia for his final annual summit with European Union leaders in Brdo Pri Kranju.
 
Climate change, Iran and the EU's ban on imports of US poultry will be on the summit's agenda.
Bush's arrival in Slovenia late on Monday is his first stop on a week-long tour of the European continent which will also take him to Germany, Italy, the Vatican, France and Britain, partners with whom he has enjoyed mixed relations over the past eight years.
Bush and Condoleezza Rice, the US secretary of state, plan to meet Danilo Turk, the Slovenian president, and Janez Jansa, the prime minister, on Tuesday.
 
Later they will meet Jose Manuel Barroso, the European Commission president, and Javier Solana, the EU foreign policy chief, at a castle that Josip Broz Tito, the late Yugoslav leader, once used as a retreat.
 
He also has planned stops in Germany, Italy, the Vatican, France, England and Northern Ireland.
 
Range of issues
 
Dimitrij Rupel, the Slovenian foreign minister, said the EU and US officials would discuss a wide range of issues including the Middle East peace process, global warming and security, efforts to forge a new global trade agreement, Iran's nuclear programme, the food-price crisis and tensions with Serbia over Kosovo's independence.
 
The two sides also were to discuss ways to improve airline safety and broaden a programme that lets people travel in the US without visas for up to 90 days.
 
The visa waivers currently are available for only 15 of the EU's 27 member nations.
 
Officials said the one issue they hoped could be resolved was a long-running dispute over an EU ban on imports of US poultry.
 
Although Bush will meet major European leaders again at next month's summit in Japan of the group of eight major industrialised nations, the Europe is likely to be his last tour across the continent before the US presidential elections in November.
 
Bush's Slovenia visit prompted tough security measures, with Ljubljana airport saying that any movement of vehicles or people would be prohibited 15 minutes before Air Force One was scheduled to touch down on Monday.
 
The Slovenian government also agreed with the US to temporarily deploy American forces to protect Bush against the threat of an air attack.
 Source: Agencies
 
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