From: "Walter Lippmann" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Tue, 15 May 2001 09:46:12 -0700
To: "CubaNews" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [CubaNews] Meeting Between Putin and Chavez

Tuesday, May 15, 2001
Meeting Between Putin and
Chavez Is a Real Gusher

By ROBYN DIXON, Times Staff Writer

MOSCOW--They're both young, sporty world leaders. Both are
busily cultivating America's opponents. Both dislike America's
world domination and both have an interest in high oil prices.

A smile plastered from ear to ear, Venezuelan President Hugo
Chavez literally bounced into the Kremlin on Monday, seized
Russia's Vladimir V. Putin and pumped his arm vigorously,
mimed a judo move and plied the Russian leader with questions
about his black belt in the martial art.

So briskly did the Latin American leader thaw the stiff and
formal Kremlin protocol that Russian journalists were agog.

However, amid the backslapping, laughter and hearty references
to each other's sporting prowess, there were distinct signs of
a raspberry directed at Washington.

"In the world, they characterize us the same way. We believe
in democracy, but not the kind of democracy forced on us,"
said Chavez, a 46-year-old former baseball player who
predicted a warm friendship with the 48-year-old Putin.

Putin and Chavez were both democratically elected but have
raised eyebrows in Washington by energetically pursuing ties
with leaders who are not.

Last fall, Chavez became the first democratically elected
leader to visit Iraq's Saddam Hussein since the Persian Gulf
War, while Putin received Iraqi Vice President Taha Yassin
Ramadan in Moscow last month. Russia is campaigning for
an end to U.N. trade sanctions against Iraq.

Both leaders have visited Cuba, and on Monday they called for
an end to the decades-long U.S.-led blockade against the
Communist nation. Both have cultivated Libyan leader Moammar
Kadafi, and both have ties with Iran.

With Russia negotiating to sell arms to Iran despite strong
U.S. objections, Putin received Iranian President Mohammad
Khatami in Moscow in March.

Putin and Chavez signed a statement calling for a multipolar
world, a diplomatic catch phrase that translates as opposition
to America's world dominance.

After visiting Moscow, Chavez is scheduled to tour fellow
OPEC members Iran and Indonesia, as well as China, India,
Bangladesh and Malaysia. His three-week trip is part of a
foreign policy offensive intended to make him a player on the
world stage.

Despite their worries about Chavez, U.S. leaders have
responded cautiously to him because of Venezuela's
significance. Not only is Venezuela the top supplier of oil to
the U.S., it is a key player in an Andean region convulsed by
political upheaval, violence and poverty.

Chavez, a loquacious former paratrooper who spent two
years in prison for leading a coup attempt in 1992, has shown
affinity for extremists ranging from Carlos the Jackal, a
Venezuelan-born terrorist imprisoned in France, to Argentina's
"painted faces" commandos, an ultra-right group.

Chavez's ideology mixes populism, nationalism and Third World
solidarity. Although he evokes the dream of Latin American
unity, he has clashed with his neighbors. Some Colombian
leaders accuse him of being friendly with Colombian leftist
guerrillas fighting a war financed by drug trafficking and
kidnapping.

The Venezuelan leader's visit comes with Russia-U.S. relations
tense because of plans by the Bush administration to scuttle
the 1972 Antiballistic Missile Treaty--seen by Moscow as the
centerpiece of global nuclear security--and build a national
missile defense shield.

Yet, if Chavez is looking to form a cozy club of democrats
against Washington, Putin might not be quite the man. The
Russian president has been more moderate and cautious.
During Putin's December trip to Cuba, he emphatically
denied an anti-U.S. alliance between Moscow and Havana.

Political analyst Andrei V. Kortunov of the Russian Science
Foundation said the Kremlin did not want Monday's meeting to
come across as a deliberate provocation of the U.S.

"But it is eagerly using this opportunity to stress the
importance of a multipolar world and thus send a message
[to the U.S.] that 'you're not the only big guy in town,' "
Kortunov said.

Aside from once more signaling Russia's determination to
cultivate ties among countries that Washington frowns upon,
Putin had clear, pragmatic reasons for Monday's exchange.

The motive is oil and Venezuela's present leadership of the
Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries. Though
Russia is not a member of OPEC, it is one of the largest
exporters outside the group, and its economy is heavily
dependent on oil.

Russia's budget relies on high oil prices for revenue through
taxes and state ownership or part ownership of various oil
firms.

Chavez thanked Putin for pledging support for high prices,
declaring that it is vital not to allow them to fall.

"Russia is trying to strengthen its ties with OPEC, to become
its real partner and maybe one day to join its ranks. So this
meeting is very important for Russia, which is no longer
satisfied with a limited role as a passive object on the oil
market," Kortunov said.

"This meeting demonstrates that Russia wants to become a
player on the oil market and to get closer to decision-making
in a sphere so vital to the Russian economy," he said.


* * *

Times staff writer Sebastian Rotella in
Buenos Aires contributed to this report.

Copyright 2001 Los Angeles Times



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