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View Full Version : Bush deflects Chavez's verbal attacks


todaydvd
03-10-2007, 03:29 AM
President Bush refuses to be goaded into a war of words with Venezuela's Hugo Chavez, who is answering the president's five-country trek through Latin America with taunts of "Gringo go home."

Bush is trying to spread a message of U.S. compassion for the region and ignore Chavez, who blames U.S.-style capitalism for poverty and inequality in Latin America.

The second stop of Bush's trip is in Uruguay on Saturday, where he will meet with President Tabare Vazquez.

Asked at a news conference Friday in Brazil whether his trip counters Chavez' influence or stokes the populist leader's support, Bush refrained from even naming his nemesis.

"I bring the goodwill of the United States to South America and Central America. That's why I'm here," said Bush, who also is visiting Colombia, Guatemala and Mexico.

"I don't think America gets enough credit for trying to help improve people's lives. And so my trip is to explain, as clearly as I can, that our nation is generous and compassionate."

The president and his advisers regularly deflect and downplay Chavez' verbal attacks on Bush, whom Chavez has dubbed the "little gentleman from the North."

Calling Chavez the "Bolivarian gentleman," Thomas Shannon, assistant secretary of state for Western Hemispheric Affairs, said he's made it clear that he doesn't see the value of any engagement with the United States. Returning from a trip last month to Brazil and Argentina, undersecretary of state Nicholas Burns said, "We don't obsess about Hugo Chavez."

White House press secretary Tony Snow said that while it's tough to ignore Chavez' verbal attacks, the president is going to concentrate on his meetings with heads of state.

"I know you want to make this trip about Chavez," Snow told reporters aboard Air Force One as it flew to Uruguay. "It's not."

He started to say something else, but decided it was best to stay mum. "I almost rose to the bait," he said.

On Friday night, Chavez led a rally at a soccer stadium in Buenos Aires.

"Oh, ho ho! Gringo go home!" Chavez chanted on Argentine state television before leading what was dubbed as an "anti-imperialist" rally with leftist labor, student and social groups. Chavez argued that Bush's goodwill tour would not burnish America's image.

"I believe the chief objective of the Bush trip is to try to scrub clean the face of the empire in Latin America. But it's too late," Chavez said.

The rally was held just across the Rio de la Plata from where Bush is meeting with Vazquez.

Trade will dominate those talks at Estancia Anchorena, a presidential retreat about 155 miles from the capital city. Vazquez, a practicing oncologist, visited the White House in May 2006.

Vazquez is a left-of-center politician who shares a commitment to democracy and embraces free markets. Uruguay, overshadowed by its larger neighbors, Argentina and Brazil, wants to sell more beef and textiles to the United States, its biggest trade partner for two of the past three years.

The United States recently signed a Trade and Investment Framework Agreement with Uruguay, which could lay the groundwork for a Free Trade Agreement. But that could be a tricky move for Uruguay, which is part of Mercosur, the South American trade bloc that frowns on bilateral side deals outside the regional trade group.

Leftists in Uruguay oppose Bush's visit. Some in the region still blame Washington for tolerating brutal military regimes like the Argentinean dictatorship of 1976-83, when thousands of dissidents disappeared.

They remain wary of what they see as imperialistic tendencies in other parts of the world, such as Iraq. About 80 people marched Friday under a banner reading, "Genocidal Killer, Out of Latin America!" at the site of the Bush-Vazquez meeting.

It was dark when Bush arrived in Montevideo Friday night, yet thousands of people turned out to see his motorcade. It was impossible to miss. His black limousine and more than 50 other support and law enforcement vehicles, sirens blaring, made the 30-minute drive along the coastline and into the city.

A few people gave a thumb's down sign, but the crowds were mostly subdued. People seemed to have ventured out into the streets and onto the balconies of high-rise apartments to watch Bush's entourage, not make political statements for or against U.S. policies.

Phyrex
03-10-2007, 08:58 AM
Venezuelas time will come, lol.

Chavez is a crack pot.

Brooks
03-10-2007, 10:46 AM
It frustrates me when American Presidents don't respond in these situations, but I guess it would only lower him to their level.

This is where I think Barack Obama will have a lot of trouble, if elected.

Vilepagan
03-10-2007, 10:51 AM
It frustrates me when American Presidents don't respond in these situations, but I guess it would only lower him to their level.

This is where I think Barack Obama will have a lot of trouble, if elected.

In what way? Will he respond too often, or not enough? How do you think he'd be deficient in this area and why?

Brooks
03-10-2007, 12:08 PM
I thought his whiney (and illogical) retort to Australia's John Howard was something an American President would never have done.

LionelHutz
03-10-2007, 09:40 PM
I think when the Bush administration ends, Chavez is going to die of a broken heart.

Liberal
03-10-2007, 09:50 PM
The only US president ever welcomed in any country of América was Carter, the rest mean nothing... and at the bottom of the list Nixon, Reagan and the Bushes.

Brooks
03-11-2007, 12:47 PM
But what did Carter do with all that good will?

paulc
03-11-2007, 01:30 PM
Carters goodwill was invested in the Death Squads of El Salvador and Nicaragua by the CIA, now Latin Americans are back hating the US for all the old reasons.

500lbguerilla
03-11-2007, 05:12 PM
"I don't think America gets enough credit for trying to help improve people's lives. And so my trip is to explain, as clearly as I can, that our nation is generous and compassionate." oh, I didn't realize that funding para-military death squads to slaughter women and children was a sign of being 'generous and compassionate'...my bad...

Freethinker
03-11-2007, 06:07 PM
Carters goodwill was invested in the Death Squads of El Salvador and Nicaragua by the CIA

Absolutely.

Although the terror and the genocide those in South America were forced to endure --due to U.S. support for monstrous dictators in that part of the world-- from the death squads while Carter was in office was far worse after Carter, when Reagan took office.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Central America: Death Squads

Central America, circa 1979-87. According to Americas Watch...40,000 to 50,000 Salvadoran citizens were killed by death squads and government forces during those years, along with a similar number during the last year of Somoza and still higher numbers in Guatemala. --- Chomsky, N. (1988). The Culture of Terrorism, p. 101

Central America, 1981-87. Death toll under Reagan in El Salvador passed 50,000 and in Guatemala it may have approached 100,000. ---Chomsky, N. (1988). The Culture of Terrorism, p. 29

Central America, 1982-84. Admiral Bobby Inman complained that the CIA (under Reagan) was hiring murderers to conduct operations in Central America and the Middle East — eventually Inman resigned. --- Toohey, B., and Pinwill, W. (1990). Oyster: the Story of the Australian Secret Intelligence Service, pp. 215-6

water_rat_iii
03-12-2007, 08:18 AM
The only US president ever welcomed in any country of América was Carter, the rest mean nothing... and at the bottom of the list Nixon, Reagan and the Bushes.

You are probably right about Carter, but the real question is WHY would Carter be so "welcomed"? I doubt it had anything to do with "respect". It's kinda like Coco the Clown...he's always welcomed too.