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 | First lady Laura Bush boards her plane at 
 Andrews Air Force Base Tuesday. |   
 
  First lady Laura Bush set out Tuesday for a quick 
 visit to Afghanistan, undertaking a trip to a war-torn country where 
 American forces are still battling a stubborn Taliban-led insurgency 
 
 . 
  Mrs. Bush has wanted to visit Afghanistan for a couple of years but 
 delayed the journey, mostly because of security concerns. Her trip was 
 kept secret until just before she left from Andrews Air Force Base near 
 Washington. 
  She was to arrive in Kabul at midday Wednesday and spend about five 
 hours on the ground, spending most of her time being briefed on 
 educational initiatives for Afghan women. She also will meet with 
 President Hamid Karzai and have dinner with U.S. forces at Bagram Air Base 
 north of Kabul. 
  A former teacher and librarian, Mrs. Bush has expressed concern about 
 the limited educational opportunities for Afghan girls under the rule of 
 the former Taliban regime. 
  "She wants to be able to see the advances made for women in Afghanistan 
 and to underscore the United States' longterm commitment to the people of 
 Afghanistan," said Susan Whiston, the first lady's press secretary. 
  The first lady was accompanied by Education Secretary Margaret 
 Spellings. Her twin daughters, Barbara and Jenna, did not accompany her, 
 Whiston said. 
  About 17,000 U.S. troops are in Afghanistan. More 
 than 120 American soldiers have died since American forces invaded to 
 oust 
 the former 
 Taliban government for harboring al-Qaeda militants after the September 
 11, 2001, attacks on the United States. 
  Whiston said the White House had worked with security officials to 
 insure the first lady's safety. 
  "We want to make sure she is safe as well as the people she is meeting 
 with and all the citizens of Afghanistan," she said. "We've taken all the 
 precautions." 
  Mrs. Bush was traveling to Afghanistan as part of a delegation of the 
 U.S.-Afghan Women's Council, a group formed in 2002 to promote 
 private-public partnerships between U.S. and Afghan institutions and 
 insure that Afghan women gain the skills and education deprived them under 
 years of the Taliban. 
  In Kabul, Mrs. Bush was to visit the Women's Teacher Training Institute 
 and hold a roundtable discussion with students and teachers. She also was 
 to witness the award of a $17.7 million grant to American University in 
 Kabul and $3.5 million to the International School. 
  (Agencies)  |