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Entrails Konfetti
4th November 2005, 21:28
Bush faces showdown with Chavez 'the Kid'
By Phil Davison
Published: 04 November 2005
If President Bush thought a weekend beach break in Argentina would get him away from his Washington woes, he is about to be proved wrong. Tens of thousands of South Americans are descending on Mar del Plata to protest against the US President.

Can you imagine one of the leaders at the G8 summit slipping out between sessions, through the security cordon, to join in a street demonstration of bearded anoraks against the summit's most powerful participant, George Bush?

Something similar looks like happening today when Mr Bush attends a summit of 34 western hemisphere leaders - that's everyone in the Americas and the Caribbean except Fidel Castro, who has long been banned - in the Argentinian beach resort of Mar del Plata. Mr Bush's latest nemesis, the Venezuelan President, Hugo Chavez, dubbed "the new Castro," has said he will leave the summit in between sessions to take part in an alternative "People's Summit" and lead, along with the former Argentinian football star Diego Maradona, a protest march against Mr Bush.

It's a nightmare for the 7,500 police and troops that Argentina has drafted into the Atlantic resort for the Americas Summit on Friday and Saturday. Already, US and Venezuelan security agents, armed but in plain clothes, are mingling with the resort's population.

South America's media are billing it as a Wild West showdown between the world's would-be Wyatt Earp - President Bush - and the Billy the Kid-style figure of Mr Chavez. The US President was apparently considering staying away from the summit until Mr Chavez implied that Mr Bush was afraid to face him.

Mr Chavez has called the US a "terrorist administration" and accused Mr Bush of planning to assassinate him and invade Venezuela for its oil. The fact that the American television evangelist Pat Robertson suggested a couple of months ago that it would be a good idea to kill him added fuel to the fire. A Bush spokesman at the time said that Robertson's comments - though not the idea itself - were "inappropriate".

Mr Bush blames Mr Chavez for trying to export his Castro-style "revolution". Like Mr Castro, Mr Chavez undoubtedly aspires to do so, but the fact that five Latin American nations have swung to the left during Mr Bush's presidency has had more to do with mistrust of the free market and monetary policies of Washington than Mr Chavez's growing influence.

Mr Bush's late announcement that he would attend the summit suggested he had thought twice, either for security reasons or through not relishing a confrontation with Mr Chavez.

Argentinians remain traumatised by two terrorist attacks against Jewish targets in the early 1990s - the Israeli embassy and a busy community centre - in which more than 100 died. No one has been convicted but much evidence pointed to Islamic militants from Iran.

If President Bush thought a weekend beach break in Argentina would get him away from his Washington woes, he is about to be proved wrong. Tens of thousands of South Americans are descending on Mar del Plata to protest against the US President.

Can you imagine one of the leaders at the G8 summit slipping out between sessions, through the security cordon, to join in a street demonstration of bearded anoraks against the summit's most powerful participant, George Bush?

Something similar looks like happening today when Mr Bush attends a summit of 34 western hemisphere leaders - that's everyone in the Americas and the Caribbean except Fidel Castro, who has long been banned - in the Argentinian beach resort of Mar del Plata. Mr Bush's latest nemesis, the Venezuelan President, Hugo Chavez, dubbed "the new Castro," has said he will leave the summit in between sessions to take part in an alternative "People's Summit" and lead, along with the former Argentinian football star Diego Maradona, a protest march against Mr Bush.

It's a nightmare for the 7,500 police and troops that Argentina has drafted into the Atlantic resort for the Americas Summit on Friday and Saturday. Already, US and Venezuelan security agents, armed but in plain clothes, are mingling with the resort's population.

South America's media are billing it as a Wild West showdown between the world's would-be Wyatt Earp - President Bush - and the Billy the Kid-style figure of Mr Chavez. The US President was apparently considering staying away from the summit until Mr Chavez implied that Mr Bush was afraid to face him.
Mr Chavez has called the US a "terrorist administration" and accused Mr Bush of planning to assassinate him and invade Venezuela for its oil. The fact that the American television evangelist Pat Robertson suggested a couple of months ago that it would be a good idea to kill him added fuel to the fire. A Bush spokesman at the time said that Robertson's comments - though not the idea itself - were "inappropriate".

Mr Bush blames Mr Chavez for trying to export his Castro-style "revolution". Like Mr Castro, Mr Chavez undoubtedly aspires to do so, but the fact that five Latin American nations have swung to the left during Mr Bush's presidency has had more to do with mistrust of the free market and monetary policies of Washington than Mr Chavez's growing influence.

Mr Bush's late announcement that he would attend the summit suggested he had thought twice, either for security reasons or through not relishing a confrontation with Mr Chavez.

Argentinians remain traumatised by two terrorist attacks against Jewish targets in the early 1990s - the Israeli embassy and a busy community centre - in which more than 100 died. No one has been convicted but much evidence pointed to Islamic militants from Iran.

Source:
http://news.independent.co.uk/world/americ...ticle324583.ece (http://news.independent.co.uk/world/americas/article324583.ece)

ComradeOm
4th November 2005, 23:47
I was moderately impressed, then Maradona popped up. Can anyone smell a publicity stunt?

bolshevik butcher
4th November 2005, 23:53
How long before chavez is banned alongside castro?

drain.you
5th November 2005, 00:05
I was moderately impressed, then Maradona popped up. Can anyone smell a publicity stunt?
Nothing wrong with publicity regarding anti-bush. Good to have Maradona on side, in my opinion.


How long before chavez is banned alongside castro?
In my view, the sooner the better. No, hear me out. If Chavez is banned, what will happen? I don't think it would take long for Chavez and Castro to make sure Latin America is united, they will unite Latin America and remove its financial dealings from the US. Or so I hope.

Master Che
5th November 2005, 00:09
Hope Chavez humiliates Hitler i mean Bush.

Yazman
5th November 2005, 15:50
This meeting should be amusing to say the least.

It will be interesting to see how this turns out - I can't imagine it will conclude on anything even remotely resembling good terms.

As URSB_Revolution has said - I hope Chavez humiliates Bush.

ColinH
6th November 2005, 00:01
Bush humiliates himself. He doesn't need any assistance.

Phalanx
6th November 2005, 06:03
Originally posted by [email protected] 5 2005, 12:05 AM

How long before chavez is banned alongside castro?
In my view, the sooner the better. No, hear me out. If Chavez is banned, what will happen? I don't think it would take long for Chavez and Castro to make sure Latin America is united, they will unite Latin America and remove its financial dealings from the US. Or so I hope.
Chavez is already expanding his popularity throughout Latin America. I definately agree, if he is banned, it would only immortalize him in the eyes of the workers of Latin America. I think right now Chavez is a much more influential leader than Castro. If someone like Chavez can bridge the gap between the rest of Latin America and Cuba, maybe we're getting somewhere....

cccpcommie
6th November 2005, 07:06
this country wont let it "socialism"spread like fire..look at the man they killed in puerto rico..10,000 people went to his burying

Hefer
6th November 2005, 07:09
The summit is really going to help chaves increase his political influence.

Correa
7th November 2005, 03:13
Originally posted by [email protected] 6 2005, 12:06 AM
this country wont let it "socialism"spread like fire..look at the man they killed in puerto rico..10,000 people went to his burying
Filiberto Ojeda was murdered in cold blood. They allowed him to bleed to death for 10+ hours from a gunshot wound in his shoulder. Not to mention the F.B.I. opened fire 1st and riddled his house with bullets and soon after he reached from his handgun. Local authorities cut the electrical power to the entire neighborhood prior to the raid. It was a planned execution. The F.B.I. are cowards!