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Buying Support in Latin America (W.Post)

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Up2Late Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Sep-26-05 01:56 AM
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Buying Support in Latin America (W.Post)
(Who is this Jackson Diehl? From what I just read, this type of Anti-Chavez BullSh*t is typical of this Jack*ss. Note: I do NOT agree with this guys Anti-Chavez BS, I posted this so that those interested in countering this kind of crap would know about it.)

Buying Support in Latin America


By (Columnist) Jackson Diehl

Monday, September 26, 2005; Page A23

Thanks to the United Nations General Assembly, the presidents of three big South American countries visited the United States simultaneously this month. Two are close U.S. allies who, through the diligent pursuit of free-market policies, have overseen impressive economic growth and a reduction of poverty in their nations. The other is a self-declared enemy of Washington who, despite enjoying an extraordinary bonanza of oil revenue, has managed to increase the poor population in his country by a quarter.

Chances are you heard about only one of these guys. Hugo Chavez, the "revolutionary" president of Venezuela, cut a flamboyant swath through New York, touring Harlem and the Bronx, chatting with Ted Koppel, basking in the applause of the General Assembly for his hyperbolic denunciations of American "imperialism" and capitalism.

By contrast, Alvaro Uribe of Colombia and Alejandro Toledo of Peru passed through New York and Washington with barely a ripple. Not only that, they didn't really want to be noticed. True, both agreed to meet with editors and reporters of The Post. But neither one was willing to speak publicly about the biggest development in Latin America in years. That is, of course, the increasingly conspicuous emergence of Chavez as the political and ideological successor to Fidel Castro, and his aggressive attempt to succeed where Castro failed in constructing an anti-American alliance.

It's not that Uribe and Toledo, like the left-wing leaders of Brazil and Argentina, secretly sympathize with Chavez: They don't. Toledo, once a victim of Alberto Fujimori's Peruvian dictatorship-in-the-shape-of-democracy, can hardly admire Chavez's similar destruction of Venezuela's political freedom. Uribe fights a leftist guerrilla movement created with Castro's help decades ago and now backed by Chavez, who granted asylum and even citizenship to one of its top leaders.

<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/09/25/AR2005092501268.html?nav=rss_opinion/columns>
(more at link above)
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