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WIP Issues : 2005 Issues : June 2005

 


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Trudy Springer
Wal-Mart's Trojan Horse?

Letters from Baghdad
Joe Carr
Letters from Baghdad

We must not let our loyalties to groups, leaders, or friends pre-determine our conclusions
Max Brown
We must not let our loyalties to groups, leaders, or friends pre-determine our conclusions

Olympia Community Association
Open Letter to the Olympia City Council

Dave Lindorff
Social Security and Democratic Cowardice: Bush Has Grasped the Third Rail, Now Turn on the Juice

Drew Hendricks
Olympia Police Accountability System under Review by City Council

Alexander Cockburn
Marla Ruzicka, Rachel Corrie and "Credibility"

Nasrallah Family to Visit Olympia
Jennifer Zahn Spieler
Nasrallah Family to Visit Olympia

Molly Gibbs
"Opting Out"

Molly Gibbs
Know All You Can Know: Seeking to create alternatives to the "power over" mode

Jeff Cohen
Buy Your Gas at Citgo: Join the BUY-cott!

New Strategy Needed: "Bringing It Home: Local Organizing Against the War"
Emily Lardner
New Strategy Needed: "Bringing It Home: Local Organizing Against the War"

Andrea Rodriguez
Venezuelan President Says He Will Not Return to U.S. Until Americans "liberate" Their Nation

Holly Gwinn Graham
May 1st Nuclear Disarmament Actions and Mayors for Peace in New York City


Venezuelan President Says He Will Not Return to U.S. Until Americans "liberate" Their Nation

author : Andrea Rodriguez topic : Cuba | petrolium | Venezuela

by Andrea Rodriguez

HAVANA - Declaring that U.S. citizens are oppressed by their own government, Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez promised Friday that he would not visit the United States again until Americans "liberate" their nation.

Chavez, in Havana for trade talks, told an international gathering of activists here that before an earlier trip to Cuba, a U.S. State Department undersecretary he did not identify warned him not to go because he would no longer be received in Washington.

He said he went ahead with that trip anyway, and later traveled to the United States to visit U.S. President George W. Bush, who he said greeted him with a Coca-Cola in his hand.

"I have not returned, nor do I think about returning again, until the people of the United States liberate that nation," said Chavez, saying that Americans are "oppressed" by their government and U.S. media.

While Chavez didn't elaborate, the implication was that he wouldn't return to the United States until the current administration was out of power.

Chavez considers Cuban President Fidel Castro a political ally and close personal friend, and Washington has grown increasingly alarmed by their deepening political and economic alliance.

During Chavez's current visit, the two countries have signed a host of economic and other accords, including a deal for Cuba to buy US$412 million (euro319 million) in goods from the South American nation, with Cuba waiving all import duties.

Venezuela's state oil company also has opened an office here this week, agreeing to help explore for and refine any crude deposits discovered off the island's coast. It also announced that the 53,000 barrels it has been sending to Cuba since 2000 at preferential terms was recently increased to up to 90,000 barrels daily.

Chavez also criticized the current Latin American tour by U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, referring to her as an "imperial lady" who is trying to divide and conquer the hemisphere's developing nations.

Despite Chavez's anti-U.S. comments, his country is the world's fifth largest oil exporter and a top crude supplier to the United States.

Photo: Chavez and Castro in Havana
Photo: Chavez and Castro in Havana

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez and Fidel Castro laugh during an anti-Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA) meeting in Havana April 28, 2005. The two leaders are seeking to build an alternative to the U.S.-backed FTAA, from which Cuba is excluded.