May 9, 2007, 17:55 GMT
Washington - US President George W Bush on Wednesday toured a Kansas town virtually wiped out by a tornado last week, getting his first look at devastation in which 10 people died.
Television images showed Bush smiling and shaking hands with residents of Greensburg, where the courthouse and a grain elevator reportedly were the only structures left intact by Friday's twister.
Bush wanted to comfort survivors in the small Midwestern town and pledge the federal government's support for rebuilding, the White House said.
The Republican president has been on the defensive about the government's reaction to natural disasters since the bungled federal response to Hurricane Katrina, which flooded the iconic Gulf Coast city of New Orleans in 2005.
The Bush administration has fought charges by Kansas Governor Kathleen Sebelius, a Democrat, that relief efforts were hampered because many of the state's National Guard units were deployed in Iraq.
Sebelius and Bush's national security adviser Frances Townsend discussed the matter by telephone Tuesday, and the governor said there were 'no shortages,' White House spokesman Tony Snow said.
National Guard units are part-time troops who can be called out by states to help in emergencies but also sent abroad on combat duty.
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