From owner-imap@chumbly.math.missouri.edu Sat Nov 2 16:30:06 2002
Date: Fri, 1 Nov 2002 09:55:13 -0600 (CST)
From: Carol <radred@ix.netcom.com>
Subject: US Rep. Brands Cuba/Brazil/Venezuela 'New Axis of Evil'
Article: 146592
To: undisclosed-recipients:;
From: Ed Herman <hermane@wharton.upenn.edu>
Sent: Thursday, October 31, 2002 3:17 PM
Subject: US Rep. Brands Cuba/Brazil/Venezuela 'New Axis of
Evil'
http://www.insightmag.com/news/308706.html
Warning of the formation of a potential Axis of Evil
in the
Americas, an influential lawmaker has called on President George
W. Bush to support the ouster of left-wing Venezuelan strongman Hugo
Chavez.
Just days before Brazilians elected radical populist Lula da Silva as
their president on Oct. 27, House International Relations Committee
Chairman Henry Hyde (R-Ill.) sent President Bush a powerfully phrased
letter warning that a triumvirate of political extremists leading
economic powerhouse Brazil, oil giant Venezuela and the
terrorist-sponsoring regime of Cuba constitute an emerging Axis of
Evil
that the United States must stop.
Insight obtained a copy of the two-page letter, dated Oct. 24.
Hyde is concerned that da Silva's professed desire to renew Brazil's nuclear-weapons program and his hints at building the country's economy and global stature through proliferation of advanced weapons, is particularly alarming - especially in light of the Brazilian leader's open support for hemispheric terrorist organizations.
Combined with the State Department's continued listing of Cuba as a sponsor of international terrorism and the Venezuelan paratrooper-turned-president's open embrace of Havana and fellow terrorist regimes in Iran and Iraq, Hyde has become alarmed at the administration's apparent inaction.
Hyde recounts the Chavez regime's record, which, according to the
letter, includes fundamental
violation of the Venezuelan
constitution and usurpation of powers of the legislative and judicial
branches; public alliances with state sponsors of terrorism
including Cuba, Iraq and Iran
and subsidizing the Fidel Castro
regime with oil; and support for terrorist organizations attacking
nearby fragile democracies including the FARC [Revolutionary Armed
Forces of Colombia] in Colombia and radical antidemocratic groups
seeking to destabilize Bolivia and Ecuador.
The Clinton administration remained unconscionably silent about the
antidemocratic actions of President Chavez,
according to Hyde, who
urged Bush to stop continuing the Clinton policies and to start
telling the truth about Venezuela:
This is the time for the Bush administration to set the factual and
historical record straight: The current regime of President Chavez is
illegitimate because it is based upon the systematic violation of the
Venezuelan constitution in force in 1999,
Hyde wrote. The Bush
administration should also declare itself in sympathy with the
pro-democratic civil-military coalition in Venezuela which seeks to
restore democracy and should do so at once.
According to Hyde, all the pro-democracy elements of the society,
including the genuinely democratic political parties, the labor
unions, business associations and religious institutions, have been
gathered for two days in coalition with a group of active duty
military officers of flag rank demanding that President Hugo Chavez
resign and that new, free and open elections be held.
Such action might moderate the incoming da Silva government in Brazil.
Hyde is especially concerned that da Silva would make good on his
statements to build and proliferate nuclear weapons.
y
Other lawmakers share Hyde's concern. The International Relations
Committee chairman told Bush, Recently, many of my colleagues in
the Congress wrote you a letter in which they expressed their concerns
about the ten-year-long association of Mr. Lula da Silva with Latin
American, European and Middle Eastern terrorist organizations in a
forum which he convened and organized in silent partnership with
Castro.
They also expressed their concern about Mr. Lula da Silva's
recent statements indicating an interest in reviving Brazil's
nuclear-weapons program, which from 1965-1994 not only wasted enormous
resources that could have helped the poor, but also succeeded in
designing a 30 kiloton nuclear bomb which could be quickly tested if
the program were revived.
There is a real prospect that Castro, Chavez and Lula da Silva
could constitute an axis of evil in the Americas which might soon have
nuclear weapons and ballistic missiles. ... This is the time to
support the pro-democratic coalition in Venezuela and to help the
people of Brazil understand the truth about Chavez so that they do not
make a similar mistake and elect another pro-Castro radical who will
neither help the poor, nor help their economy, nor live at peace with
democratic neighbors.