http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/5BBD71A5-88CA-4B5D-9F35-42F80B4D8A85.htm

Chavez denies being anti-US


Wednesday 04 October 2006, 21:45 Makka Time, 18:45 GMT    



Hugo Rafael Chavez Frías, the 53rd president of Venezuela, was born on July 28 
1954. He came to power in 1998, promising to help Venezuela's poor majority, 
and was re-elected in 2000. He survived a coup in 2002 and faces a presidential 
election in December.



Since becoming president he has followed a policy of democratic socialism, 
Latin American integration and anti-imperialism. 

 

His reforms have created much controversy in Venezuela and abroad. Most 
Venezuelans are split between those who say he has empowered the poor and 
stimulated economic growth, and those who say he is autocratic and has badly 
managed the economy. 

 

Some foreign governments view Chavez as a threat to world oil prices and 
regional stability, while others welcome his bilateral trade and reciprocal aid 
agreements. 

 

Chavez recently described George Bush, the US president, as "the devil" and 
says Bush has plans to assassinate him and invade Venezuela. He recently talked 
to Aljazeera about his relationship with the US, the Venezuelan army and why he 
gets only a few hours' sleep a night.

 

Aljazeera.net: You are strengthening ties with countries that are dissatisfied 
with Washington, countries such as Iran, Bolivia and Cuba. What is the end game 
of such an alliance?

 

Hugo Chavez: We are not against the US people, where there are children, women, 
intellectuals and students. We have investments in the US, we have eight 
refineries there, we have 14,000 gas stations. I have many friends there, I 
have played baseball there, I even have a nephew there.



What we are against is the imperial elite and that is very different. This is 
not a game. Do you think Iraq is a game, the aggression against Latin America 
for a century is a game, the toppling of Allende, the invasions of Grenada, 
Haiti, Panama, Jamaica, the Dominican Republic, Guatemala, is that a game?



If that's a game, then my goodness that would be awful. This is an aggression 
and every day more and more people are against this hegemony and trying to save 
the world. Look at Lebanon, the aggression against the Palestinian people, why 
do they do that? Because the Israelis are supported by the elite of the US. We 
are against that.

 

Some would say in order for such an alliance to stop these events and counter 
the power of Washington that you refer to, regional powers such as China and 
Russia would need to back it. You hold talks with the leaders of these 
countries, are they ready to come on board for such an alliance?

 

You insist on something that is out of my main focus. I have never said we want 
to build an alliance against the US, so your question is not really focused. 



If you take Moscow, Iran, Vietnam, China, Malaysia, what we are doing is 
getting closer through integration, through energy, oil, gas, trade and respect 
for international law. 



We are today on a campaign around the world asking for support for Venezuela to 
become part of the Security Council as a non-permanent member. The US is in a 
terrible campaign to prevent us being elected. We are defending our interests 
but we are not proposing an alliance against anyone, much less the people of 
the United States. So your question is out of focus.

 

In May 2005, you called for an alliance between Latin America and the Arab 
world. How far has that initiative gone?

 

Not only me, Lula [Brazil's president] has been outspoken in calling for the 
coming together of Latin America and the Arab countries.



In Brasilia in May we had the first ever Arab-South American summit. It was a 
very important meeting. 



In the past, only Venezuela had strong relations with the Arab world through 
Opec and through links with other non-Opec countries such as Egypt. 



But now Lula is convening these meetings, he is coming to the Arab world. Not 
long ago in Venezuela we held a meeting between senior ministers in charge of 
education and social matters in both Latin America and the Arab world. We have 
made serious progress. It is not just an individual proposal of Hugo Chavez, it 
is a proposal of leaders like Muammar al-Qadhafi and the amir of Qatar. As well 
as Lula and Eva Morales [Bolivia's president]. And we want to get our two 
regions together. 

 

You have started an ambitious programme to rebuild your military, you are 
buying new weapons, you are trying to raise, I think, the largest standing army 
in the Americas. If everything goes to plan, you will have two million reserve 
troops. What has prompted this military build up?

 

Let me tell you something. I hardly have time to sleep a few hours a day, but I 
don't care because I've decided to devote my life to taking my people out of 
poverty and misery. 



To make a great effort for all Venezuelans to have access to education, health, 
housing, to life. When we were elected, poverty in Venezuela was over 55 per 
cent based on UN figures, it is now between 30 per cent and 40 per cent. 



We are building a system of Bolivarian schools where children can have 
breakfast, lunch and dinner, gain internet access and take part in sports 
activities. 



I devote a tiny part of my time to being commander-in-chief of the Venezuelan 
army. The imperialists have threatened to invade Venezuela, they have already 
conducted a coup d'etat four years ago. Recently they conducted manoeuvres in 
the Caribbean. We have even captured US soldiers taking pictures of military 
installations and we have expelled them. 



We have much evidence, proof and documents that show there is a plan to invade 
Venezuela. What do you want us to do? That I forget my task of minimum defence 
of the country?



We had old rifles, they were 60-years old. We depended almost totally on US 
supplies. The F16 fighters we bought 20 years ago, they refused to give us 
spare parts, and they were stranded on the ground. So I have bought better 
planes and Kalashnikovs from Moscow. We have a vast border with Colombia, we 
have a huge coastal line along the Caribbean. We have to defend this country. 
We are not going to be aggressors. 

 

Do you feel you are still being targeted and threatened by the US? We know that 
some people in the US have spoken in the past about assassinating you. Do you 
still feel personally targeted by the US?   

 

Yes indeed. People have publicly called for my assassination and that is a 
crime. However, this person is not in jail, he is a close friend of the US 
president. 



Venezuelan terrorists who left for the US after the 2002 coup, who killed 
people in Venezuela, are today living in the US. The US will not extradite 
them. Some of them are organising actions against myself and Venezuela. 



The US is protecting terrorism. They are applying state terror. President Bush 
has left a measure taken by a former president that authorises the CIA, like 
007, with a permit to kill whoever, whenever and however. They have a green 
light. President Carter banned that practice and the current president has just 
reinstated it. I am one of the targets, no doubt about it.

 

If the opposition parties do take part in the forthcoming Venezuelan 
presidential elections will you make a move towards presidency for life?  

 

There is no way I can adopt such a provision. We have a constitution and it is 
only the people who might change the constitution in this direction or any 
other direction. They have the power to hold a referendum to remove the power 
given to me. The people can collect and gather signatures to ask for a 
referendum to recall a government official and that is totally democratic


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



Post message: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subscribe   :  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Unsubscribe :  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
List owner  :  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Homepage    :  http://proletar.8m.com/ 
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/proletar/

<*> Your email settings:
    Individual Email | Traditional

<*> To change settings online go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/proletar/join
    (Yahoo! ID required)

<*> To change settings via email:
    mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
    mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
 

Kirim email ke