Putin deepens ties with Chavez on Venezuela visit

Apr 2 03:19 PM US/Eastern
By FABIOLA SANCHEZ
Associated Press Writer 

CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) - Russia has offered to help Venezuela set up its own 
space industry, including a satellite launch site, as Prime Minister Vladimir 
Putin made his first visit to the South American country on Friday. 
Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez announced the offer by Russia hours before 
Putin arrived, saying officials would discuss the possibility of setting up a 
"satellite launcher and a factory." 

"Russia offers help so that Venezuela can have its own industry for the use of 
its outer space," Chavez said Thursday night. He didn't give details or say how 
much that might cost. 

The two countries are also discussing new weapons deals, Chavez said in 
televised remarks, without giving details. 

Chavez's government has already bought more than $4 billion in Russian weapons 
since 2005, including helicopters, fighter jets and 100,000 Kalashnikov rifles. 
Chavez said last year that Russia agreed to loan Venezuela up to $2.2 billion 
for additional arms deals. 

Russian and Venezuelan officials said they planned to sign new agreements for 
energy projects in Venezuela, as well as industrial, commercial and agriculture 
projects. 

Chavez also reiterated that Russia will help Venezuela develop nuclear energy—a 
plan he has mentioned previously that has yet to take shape. 

"We aren't going to make an atomic bomb, but we are going to develop atomic 
energy with peaceful aims," he said. Chavez, whose country is a major oil 
exporter and OPEC member, says "we have to prepare ourselves for the post-oil 
era." 

Venezuela also intends to buy two Beriev Be-200 amphibious planes, which are 
used for dousing blazes, Chavez said. Fires in El Avila national park in the 
mountains above Caracas have at times blanketed the city with a smoky haze in 
recent days. 

Chavez has grown increasingly close to Russia, Iran and China while fiercely 
criticizing U.S. policies, and his calls for countering U.S. influence to 
create a "multi-polar world" have found resonance in Moscow. 

The U.S. State Department poked fun at Chavez's suggestion that Venezuela may 
set up a space industry with Russian help. 

"We would note that the government of Venezuela was largely closed this week 
due to energy shortages," spokesman P.J. Crowley told reporters. "To the extent 
that Venezuela is going to expend resources on behalf of its people, perhaps 
the focus should be more terrestrial than extraterrestrial." 

Worsening electricity shortages prompted Chavez's government to decree public 
holidays throughout this week to save energy. A severe drought has pushed water 
levels to precarious lows in the dam that supplies most of Venezuela's 
electricity. 

Political analysts in Moscow say Russia is drawn to Venezuela because of the 
its anti-U.S. rhetoric, though business deals have helped cement the growing 
relationship. 

"The only thing that really unites Russia and Venezuela is that they don't want 
to see a unipolar world," dominated by the U.S., said Sergei Mikheyev, an 
analyst at the Center for Political Technologies, adding that President Barack 
Obama's administration hasn't done enough to lure Moscow away from Caracas. 

Obama says he is committed to a "reset" of the U.S. relationship with Russia, 
but Mikheyev said "the Americans haven't compromised with Russia on any 
significant issue ... so it makes no sense for them (the Russians) to change 
priorities." 

Mikheyev noted that the United States has so far failed to react to Russia's 
plea to cut drug traffic from Afghanistan to Russia's Central Asian borders. 
Russia has also spent years trying to convince the U.S. to scrap Cold War 
measures that have restricted U.S.-Russia trade. 

Venezuela is also a very lucrative arms and technology market, and Mikheyev 
said "without the business involved, the anti-American rhetoric wouldn't be 
enough to unite Russia and Venezuela". 

Venezuela and Russia announced a joint venture earlier this week to drill for 
and process heavy crude oil in eastern Venezuela, saying they expect to start 
producing 50,000 barrels a day this year and to build an upgrader facility to 
eventually process about 450,000 barrels a day—giving a significant boost to 
Venezuela's oil output. 

As part of Putin's visit, he and Chavez toured the Russian tall ship 
Kruzenshtern, which is docked in Venezuela on a visit. 

Chavez chatted with Russian sailors through an interpreter and presented a copy 
of a sword used by South American independence hero Simon Bolivar, telling 
Putin he would show him the real sword used by Bolivar—the namesake of Chavez's 
socialist-inspired "Bolivarian Revolution." Putin also visited Bolivar's tomb 
in Caracas before holding talks in private at the presidential palace. 

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