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			 Bush, son of former President George H.W. Bush and brother of 
			former President George W. Bush, will address the issue head-on in a 
			speech at the Chicago Council on Global Affairs. He will stress the 
			changed global circumstances that await the next president. 
			 
			It will be his first major foray into foreign policy since the 
			former Florida governor announced in December that he is considering 
			a run for the 2016 Republican presidential nomination. 
			 
			Bush, according to speech excerpts released by his political 
			organization, will say he has been lucky to have a father and a 
			brother who have shaped U.S. foreign policy and that he recognizes 
			"my views will often be held up in comparison to theirs – sometimes 
			in contrast to theirs." 
			 
			"I love my father and my brother. I admire their service to the 
			nation and the difficult decisions they had to make. But I am my own 
			man, and my views are shaped by my own thinking and own 
			experiences," he will say. 
			 
			Bush is casting a wide net for advice on national security. An aide 
			provided to Reuters a diverse list of 20 diplomatic and national 
			security veterans who will be providing informal advice to Bush in 
			the coming months. 
			
			  Many of them are from past Republican administrations, including 
			those of his father and brother as well as that of Ronald Reagan. 
			 
			The list includes people representing a wide spectrum of ideological 
			views in the Republican Party, from the pragmatic to the hawkish. It 
			includes James Baker, known for his pragmatism in key roles during 
			the Reagan and George H.W. Bush presidencies, and former World Bank 
			President Paul Wolfowitz, a hawk as deputy defense secretary who was 
			an architect of George W. Bush's Iraq policy. 
			 
			Among others are two former secretaries of Homeland Security, Tom 
			Ridge and Michael Chertoff, former national security adviser Stephen 
			Hadley and a deputy national security adviser, Meghan O'Sullivan, as 
			well as two former CIA directors, Porter Goss and Michael Hayden. 
			 
			With polls showing Bush a front-runner among Republican candidates 
			jockeying for the 2016 nomination, his aim is to set his own course 
			on U.S. foreign policy without getting entangled in a debate about 
			the legacy of his father and older brother. 
			 
			'CHANGING WORLD' 
			 
			Bush has said in the past that he supports his brother's decision to 
			go to war in Iraq in 2003, which could leave him open to attack from 
			Democrats should he win the nomination. His complaint about the 
			recent past in Iraq is that President Barack Obama has let American 
			influence wane in the region. 
			 
			
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			"Each president learns from those who came before, their principles, 
			their adjustments," Bush will say. "One thing we know is this: Every 
			president inherits a changing world, and changing circumstances." 
			
			Bush's Chicago speech is the second in a series of appearances 
			designed to outline the foundation for what is likely to be a 
			presidential campaign. Two weeks ago in Detroit he discussed his 
			views on reducing income inequality and bolstering the U.S. economy. 
			 
			His Chicago speech comes as the United States grapples with the 
			threats posed by Islamic State militants and Russia's aggression in 
			eastern Ukraine. 
			 
			Obama has relied heavily on air strikes against Islamic State 
			targets in Syria and Iraq, but the militants retain large swathes of 
			territory in both countries. 
			 
			The United States has joined with European allies to impose 
			sanctions on Russia that have had an impact but have yet to force 
			Moscow to pull back. 
			 
			Bush will criticize Obama's handling of foreign policy and say that 
			American leadership must projected consistently. 
			 
			"Under this administration, we are inconsistent and indecisive," he 
			will say. "We have lost the trust and the confidence of our friends. 
			We definitely no longer inspire fear in our enemies." 
			 
			His list of advisers suggests a willingness to listen to a variety 
			of views from people with long experience, including former World 
			Bank President Robert Zoellick. 
			  
			
			
			  
			
			 
			Others include Paula Dobriansky, a former undersecretary of state, 
			Kristen Silverberg, a former U.S. ambassador to the European Union, 
			Lincoln Diaz-Balart, who was a long-time member of the House of 
			Representatives from Florida, and John Hannah who was Vice President 
			Dick Cheney's national security adviser. 
			 
			(Editing by Ken Wills, Robert Birsel) 
			
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