PANDEMONIUM  SUNDAY  TIMES 


No. 677

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"Once, I said that the "Achilles' Heel" of the USA is the Truth, but, worse even, most of the very champions of anti-globalism, those who most attack the USA, they themselves mostly fear revolutionary critique and constructive, healthy criticism; they just fear the scientific and philosophic consequences of the flowing, ever-flowing, over-flowing Truth. However, without Love for Truth, no Revolution, no Emancipation ever will be possible."  

(Franz J. T. Lee, 31/05/03) 

Q. E. D.,  SEE THE LIES OF THE USA AND BRITAIN BELOW.

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SPANISH & ENGLISH:

*** US government lied about Iraqi weapons to justify war

By Patrick Martin. 

*** Britain: Blair caught in lies over Iraqi “WMDs”

By Julie Hyland

** Aló Presidente

Chávez: La globalización es una forma de imperialismo... América Latina no va a cruzarse de brazos y ver como sus hijos se mueren de hambre
Por: MS - Aporrea.org
Publicado el Domingo, 01/06/03 .
 
** Antiglobalizadores quemaron comercios y destrozaron vidrieras en Ginebra por reunión del G8
Por: AP
Publicado el Domingo, 01/06/03.  

** Chávez: Existe voluntad en Argentina y Brasil para que Venezuela se integre al Mercosur
Por: Venpres
Publicado el Domingo, 01/06/03

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US government lied about Iraqi weapons to justify war

By Patrick Martin
31 May 2003

Use this version to print | Send this link by email | Email the author

US government officials deliberately lied about Iraq’s supposed stockpile of weapons of mass destruction in order to concoct a suitable pretext for war. That is the only politically serious conclusion that can be drawn from the revelations and admissions of the past week.

On Monday, Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld addressed the Council on Foreign Relations in New York City, suggesting that one reason the Pentagon has been unable to find weapons of mass destruction in Iraq is that they may no longer exist. “We don’t known what happened,” he told the group, “It is also possible that they decided they would destroy them prior to a conflict.”

Rumsfeld did not explain how the weapons could have been destroyed so quickly, yet so thoroughly that no trace has been found. The Bush administration claimed before the war began that Iraq possessed as much as 500 tons of mustard gas and nerve gas, 25,000 liters of anthrax, 38,000 liters of botulinum toxin, and dozens of Scud missiles to deliver them.

On Wednesday, press accounts appeared of statements made by Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz, in an interview with Vanity Fair to be published in the magazine’s July issue. Wolfowitz discussed the conflicting views of the Pentagon, State Department and CIA in the run-up to the Iraq war.

The agencies were divided, not so much over whether to go to war, but over how best to justify it publicly and win international support. Various rationales were proposed, ranging from supposed Iraqi links to the Al Qaeda terrorists to the repressive character of Saddam Hussein’s regime. In the end, Wolfowitz said, “For bureaucratic reasons we settled on one issue, weapons of mass destruction, because it was the one reason everyone could agree on.”

Wolfowitz’s comments created a storm, particularly in Europe, where they were taken as proof that the Bush administration deliberately chose the issue of weapons of mass destruction as the most salable rationale for a war whose real impetus was the US drive to seize Iraq’s oil riches and dominate the strategic Persian Gulf region.

The following day Rumsfeld was compelled to go on the defensive over the issue, declaring in a radio interview with Infinity Broadcasting, “I can assure you that this war was not waged under any false pretext.”

“We believed then and we believe now that the Iraqis have, had chemical weapons, biological weapons and that they had a program to develop nuclear weapons but did not have nuclear weapons,” he said. “That is what the United Kingdom’s intelligence suggested as well.”

Rumsfeld’s citation of British intelligence was a particularly weak reed to lean on, since the government of British Prime Minister Tony Blair is under increasing criticism because of evidence that it deliberately falsified intelligence reports in order to make the case for war with Iraq. [SeeBritain: Blair caught in lies over Iraqi ‘WMDs’”] The most notorious example was Blair’s claim last fall—widely publicized in the US media—that Saddam Hussein could launch a chemical or nuclear attack on a chosen target “within 45 minutes.”

On Friday, the commander of US Marine forces in Iraq admitted, “We were simply wrong” about the danger that Iraq might use biological or chemical weapons against invading US troops. Pentagon officials had claimed that Saddam Hussein distributed chemical weapons to some Republican Guard units on the eve of the war. No such weapons have been found.

Lt. Gen. James Conway, in a teleconference with US-based journalists from his headquarters in Iraq, said, “It was a surprise to me then—it remains a surprise to me now—that we have not uncovered weapons in some of the forward dispersal sites.... Believe me, it’s not for lack of trying. We’ve been to virtually every ammunition supply point between the Kuwaiti border and Baghdad, but they’re simply not there.”

Finding nothing—and expecting nothing

Conway’s admission underscores the fundamental problem for Washington’s apologists: after more than a year of increasingly hysterical warnings that Saddam Hussein was threatening the United States and the American people with weapons of mass destruction—going back to Bush’s “axis of evil” State of the Union speech—the US-British occupation forces have been unable to locate so much as a gram or a microbe from Iraq’s allegedly vast stockpile.

The United States and Britain have had essentially uncontested control of Iraq’s territory since April 9, but in those seven weeks they have found nothing—no weaponized chemicals or bacteriological agents, no delivery systems, no documentation that such weapons ever existed, no production facilities. Dozens of top Iraqi officials who would have been in a position to know about an unconventional weapons program have been captured and interrogated by US forces. Every single one has maintained that all such Iraqi operations were shut down in the 1990s under the UN inspection regime.

White House press spokesman Ari Fleischer said April 10, speaking of weapons of mass destruction, “That is what this war was about.” But the US military’s search for these has been a remarkably haphazard and lackadaisical affair, especially when contrasted with the alleged seriousness of the danger. The obvious conclusion is that the military did not look very hard because the top brass was well aware that the whole issue of WMD was concocted, and that no significant stockpiles of weapons were to be expected.

The Pentagon initially promised to flood Iraq with specialized NBC (nuclear/biological/chemical) warfare teams that would locate Iraq’s stockpiles, destroy them and decontaminate adjacent areas. The actual number of troops deployed, however, was a small handful.

Key facilities, such as Iraq’s huge nuclear research facility at Tuwaitha, a frequent target of both UN inspectors and US bombs, were not secured by US troops or seriously examined by the unconventional weapons teams. Many sites were looted by Iraqi citizens long before the arrival of US troops.

Nearly two months into the occupation, US weapons teams had searched only 200 sites out of 3,000 targeted by intelligence agencies, including the 19 locations identified as most important, but found nothing. Among the 19 highest-priority sites were a training facility for Iraq’s Olympic swimming and diving team, a liquor distillery and a factory making license plates and metal signs. On Friday, May 30, the Pentagon announced it was suspending these random searches for weapons of mass destruction.

The same indifference characterized the search for Iraq’s key weapons scientists. Before the war, the Bush administration claimed that if only the UN would remove these scientists to other countries, along with their families, away from the grip of the Hussein regime, it would quickly get the information needed to locate banned weapons. But once the US was in a position to interrogate these scientists, it showed little desire to do so.

Gen. Amir Saadi, who headed Iraq’s chemical weapons program in the 1980s and was the principal liaison to UN inspectors in the months before the war, waited at his home in Baghdad for a week after US troops occupied the capital city. No US personnel knocked on his door or sought to question him. Saadi finally tired of marking time and took the initiative to surrender to the occupation forces. The same story has been repeated for many other scientists who, with Saddam Hussein dead or in hiding, and in no position to retaliate, continue to maintain that Iraq’s unconventional weapons programs had ceased to function by 1998.

Last week, for the umpteenth time since the war began March 20, there was a flurry of press reports claiming that the US military had finally discovered at least a production facility—two converted tractor-trailer trucks which were supposed to have served as mobile germ warfare laboratories.

On closer inspection, however, the evidence was unconvincing. There were no pathogens found in either of the trailers and the equipment, while apparently related to biological experimentation, showed no connection to weapons production. A six-page analysis made public by the CIA described the trucks as “the strongest evidence to date that Iraq was hiding a biological-warfare program.” This claim may be literally true, if only because no other evidence at all has yet been brought forward.

Calls for an investigation

The failure to find any trace of evidence of chemical or biological weapons has begun to produce a reaction in official circles in Washington, where congressional Democrats, and a few Republicans, have demanded an investigation. Most of the Democratic Party critics have chosen to characterize the issue as an “intelligence failure,” suggesting that administration officials put undue pressure on the CIA, rather than saying what is, that the administration deliberately lied and fabricated evidence to overcome public opposition to an unpopular war.

That most establishment of Democrats, Senator John D. Rockefeller of West Virginia, the ranking Democrat on the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, spoke up for the first time May 29, objecting to claims by the Bush administration that it needed more time, months and perhaps years, to find the weapons of mass destruction in Iraq. “You can’t quite say that it’s going to take a lot more time if the intelligence community seemed to be in general agreement that WMD was out there,” he said.

He called for the CIA to investigate itself on the issue of how estimates of Iraqi weapons stocks were developed, and he called for Congress to examine whether the White House intervened in the process to change the intelligence estimates. Whether the White House “intentionally overestimated” or “just misread it,” Rockefeller said, “In either case it’s a very bad outcome.”

The senior Republican and Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee, Porter Goss of Florida and Jane Harman of California, sent a joint letter to the administration asking for information on “how the intelligence picture regarding Iraqi WMD was developed.” Goss, a retired CIA agent, asked for a report from the CIA by July 1. Harman, wife of an electronics multimillionaire, said, “This could conceivably be the greatest intelligence hoax of all time. I doubt it, but we have to ask.”

Senator Joseph Biden of Delaware, the ranking Democrat on the Foreign Relations Committee and a vociferous supporter of the war with Iraq, said in an interview on NBC, “I do think that we hyped nuclear, we hyped Al Qaeda, we hyped the ability to disperse and use these weapons.” He added, touching on the real reason for his concern, “I think a lot of the hype here is a serious, serious, serious mistake and it hurts our credibility.”

Even sections of the CIA itself have demanded an investigation, with one group of retired agents writing to Bush to protest “a policy and intelligence fiasco of monumental proportions.” Former CIA officials were the source for an article by Seymour Hersh, published early this month in the New Yorker, which revealed that the Pentagon created a rival intelligence analysis unit, the Office of Special Plans, because Rumsfeld was unhappy that reports from the CIA failed to substantiate Iraq’s alleged links to Al Qaeda.

The infighting in Washington revolves around concerns that the Bush administration’s reckless disregard of international law and world public opinion is undermining the world position of American imperialism. Biden, Rockefeller, Harman & Co. are all for the conquest of Iraq, but they would have preferred more international support for this crime, and fear that flagrant lying will make the next war more difficult to sell to the American people.

War and democratic rights

There is almost no discussion in official circles of the deeper implications, both internationally and domestically, of the turn by the US government to a foreign policy based on gangsterism. One exception was the speech given May 21, to a nearly empty Senate, by the oldest member of that body, Democrat Robert Byrd of West Virginia. Byrd is no radical—he served as Senate majority leader in the 1970s—nor is his political record even particularly liberal—he opposed civil rights laws in the 1960s and supported the Vietnam War. His comments, ignored or disparaged in the media, were all the more remarkable.

Condemning the claims by the Bush administration that the conquest of Iraq is part of its war on terrorism, Byrd said, “The American people may have been lured into accepting the unprovoked invasion of a sovereign nation, in violation of longstanding international law, under false premises. There is ample evidence that the horrific events on September 11 have been carefully manipulated to switch public focus from Osama bin Laden and Al Qaeda who masterminded the September 11 attacks, to Saddam Hussein who did not.”

The speed and ease of the conquest of Iraq by American forces refuted Bush’s claims that Saddam Hussein was a threat to the United States, he continued. No evidence of weapons of mass destruction has been uncovered. Instead, “the Bush team’s extensive hype of WMD in Iraq as justification for a preemptive invasion has become more than embarrassing. It has raised serious questions about prevarication and the reckless use of power. Were our troops needlessly put at risk? Were countless Iraq civilians killed and maimed when war was not really necessary? Was the American public deliberately misled? Was the world?”

The social conditions in postwar Iraq, with little electricity, food, water or medical care, with the looting of artistic and historical treasures while US troops guarded the oilfields, with Bush administration cronies raking in rebuilding contracts, belie the claims that Iraq is being liberated, he said: “The smiling face of the US as liberator is quickly assuming the scowl of an occupier. The image of a boot on the throat has replaced the beckoning hand of freedom.”

To all such protests, the Bush administration provides only the answer of brute force. The war was a military success, so don’t challenge its rationale. When exposed as barefaced liars, they sit back and sneer, as if to say, “We lied. So what. We’ll get away with it.” That is the secret of the smirk so characteristic, not only of Bush, but of his aides and his media apologists.

It speaks volumes for the future of the Democratic Party that an 85-year-old senator is the only one in Congress who can bring himself to speak passionately against a criminal government. Byrd’s comments are a swan song for American liberalism. Not a single prominent Democratic leader, whether in Congress or among the party’s would-be presidential candidates, would subscribe to the sentiments he voiced on the Senate floor.

The struggle against the Bush administration—both against its foreign policy of worldwide war, and its domestic policy of social reaction—must be taken up by a new social force, the working class. In the place of moribund liberalism, it is necessary to build a new political mass movement based on the struggle against imperialist war and the defense of jobs, social services and democratic rights.

http://www.wsws.org/articles/2003/may2003/wmd-m31.shtml

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Britain: Blair caught in lies over Iraqi “WMDs”

By Julie Hyland
31 May 2003

Use this version to print | Send this link by email | Email the author

Prime Minister Tony Blair’s fleeting visit to Basra Thursday May 29 was meant to vindicate his decision to defy popular opposition and join the US-led attack on Iraq.

Thursday’s visit was the first by any Western leader to Iraq since US and British forces invaded the country, supposedly in search of its “weapons of mass destruction” (WMDs). Arriving at the port of Umm Qasr in an RAF Hercules C130 plane, Blair addressed 400 British troops in Basra, expressing pride “at the magnificent job” they have done.

“I know there were a lot of disagreements in the country about the wisdom of my decision to order the action,” he continued. “But I can assure you of one thing—there is absolutely no dispute in Britain at all about your professionalism and your courage and your dedication and not just in the way you won the war, which was extraordinary, but the way you are conducting the peace, which is remarkable.”

In truth, the US and UK governments’ plans for “the peace” in Iraq are just as bitterly disputed as were their plans for war.

There could be no victorious “walk about” for the prime minister. Army officers had informed Blair that his visit would have to be tightly controlled and confined to select areas, under immediate military control, as his safety could not be guaranteed elsewhere.

The coalition forces are widely perceived as an army of occupation, not liberation. In the last week alone, at least six US soldiers have been killed and dozens of others wounded in separate guerrilla attacks.

Civil unrest over the US presence is also growing. On Wednesday, May 28, local residents in the town of Hit, 90 miles northwest of Baghdad, rioted in protest over intrusive weapons searches by Iraqi police and US soldiers. According to Reuters, the town of 155,000 people was in “uproar” as “angry residents surged into the streets, burning police cars and throwing stones and handmade grenades at the Americans.”

A local man told the news agency that the trouble began after police and US troops carried out house-to-house searches, supposedly looking for weapons. “The Iraqi police were very rough with our women,” he said. “They forced their way into houses without knocking, sometimes when women were sleeping.”

Another complained, “Saddam is gone, but we want the occupation to end. The Americans must know they can never come back to town.”

Far from ending, the occupation is being consolidated with the US administration announcing this week that it intends to increase the number of troops deployed in Iraq, as it prepares a military campaign aimed at stamping out such resistance.

If the prospect of British forces becoming embroiled in a bitter and protracted war of suppression were not enough to revive criticisms of Blair’s pro-war strategy, the prime minister has not been helped by US officials, who have called into question the entire basis of the invasion.

US Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld’s admission this week that Iraq may not have had weapons of mass destruction after all, has created a furore in Britain.

In his typically cynical manner, Rumsfeld brushed aside questions over America’s failure to recover such weapons by saying that Iraq may have destroyed them before the war. The search for hidden weapons was continuing, Rumsfeld said, but “it is also possible that they [the Iraqis] decided that they would destroy them prior to a conflict.”

The claim that Saddam Hussein possessed chemical, biological and nuclear weapons was crucial to US and UK justifications for attacking Iraq. Even on March 18, President George W. Bush was insisting to the world that “Intelligence leaves no doubt that Iraq continues to possess and conceal lethal weapons.”

The US administration may believe it can simply set its previous allegations to one side, but in doing so it risks hanging its most loyal ally out to dry.

For Blair, allegations of Iraqi WMDs were the crucial justification for defying popular opposition to the war and committing British troops alongside the US. On February 15, almost 2 million people took to the streets of London to condemn plans for war—the largest demonstration in British history. Blair himself acknowledged that he was in a small minority in supporting a US-led attack, even turning his isolation into a badge of honour.

To this end, the prime minister became the lead advocate against Iraq over its alleged weapons arsenal. Government departments churned out one document after another, supposedly outlining Iraq’s terrifying capabilities, whilst the prime minister toured Europe lecturing other heads of state on the threat posed to world security by Hussein’s regime.

Blair insisted that military action was necessary immediately against Iraq or the consequences would be catastrophic. One intelligence dossier released in September 2002 and setting out “the assessment of the British government” over WMDs, warned that Saddam Hussein’s regime “could deploy nuclear weapons within 45 minutes.”

Even as late as March 18, 2003, Blair was stridently denouncing the claim that Iraq no longer possessed WMDs. “We are asked to accept Saddam decided to destroy those weapons. I say that such a claim is palpably absurd,” he said.

As Blair was making his appearance in Basra, he was being denounced as a liar in Britain.

Robin Cook, former foreign secretary who resigned from the government over the war, described Rumsfeld’s admission that Iraq may have destroyed its weapons as “breathtaking.” It meant that the prime minister had taken Britain to war on a false basis, Cook said. “That has to be investigated—a [House of Commons] select committee is one way of pursuing it.”

Peter Kilfoyle MP said, “This is absolutely dangerous for Tony Blair. The potential charge is that the House of Commons has been misled.”

Senior intelligence officers have also entered the row, albeit anonymously, with one informing the BBC that the original version of the dossier released in September was doctored by the government to suit its political ends.

The dossier had been “transformed” a week before it was published on the orders of Downing Street, the official said.

“The classic example was the statement that weapons of mass destruction were ready for use within 45 minutes. That information was not in the original draft. It was included in the dossier against our wishes because it wasn’t reliable,” he told the BBC.

Government efforts to calm the row have so far backfired. Responding to the BBC’s claims, Defence Minister Adam Ingram denied that the UK had gone to war on a false pretext, claiming that the United Nations had also provided “damning” evidence of Iraq’s WMDs.

Almost immediately, Ewen Buchanan, spokesman for leading UN weapons inspector Dr Hans Blix, rejected Ingram’s claim. Blix had “never asserted” that Iraq definitely had illegal weaponry, Buchanan said.

http://www.wsws.org/articles/2003/may2003/blai-m31.shtml
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Aló Presidente
Chávez: La globalización es una forma de imperialismo... América Latina no va a cruzarse de brazos y ver como sus hijos se mueren de hambre
Por: MS - Aporrea.org
Publicado el Domingo, 01/06/03 03:26pm








Escuche al Presidente Chávez Formato MP3

Durante su programa Aló Presidente de hoy, el Presidente Chávez contrastó las luchas de los ejércitos latinoamericanos contra los colonizadores europeos, con la manera en que operan ejércitos de otros países en la era moderna.

"Bolívar no es un mito inalcanzable, un semi dios, no. Bolívar era un hombre del común. Allá se consiguió con San Martín en Guayaquil, y se unieron todos esos ejércitos en uno sólo, no para intervenir en un país determinado, en conflictos internos, sino para sacar a un imperio que nos clavó las garras durante trescientos años", dijo Chávez.

Igualmente, el Presidente hizo una comparación entre el saqueo de América Latina llevado a cabo por fuerzas europeas durante la época de la conquista, y el robo llevado a cabo hoy en día por el nuevo imperialismo, a través de organismos internacionales como el Fondo Monetario Internacional (FMI). En tal sentido destacó:

"Doscientos años después, aquí se está levantando otra oleada. Los imperios son otros. La globalización es una forma de imperialismo. ¿Qué es el FMI? ...A mí me seguirán anotando en esa lista negra allá, pues. El día que vino acá [al palacio presidencial] Carmona El Breve y sé auto-juramentó, El FMI dijo allá en Washington "lo apoyamos, lo que quiera Venezuela". Eso es imperialismo. Todos esos organismo internacionales son formas de imperialismo, de invadirnos a nosotros, de saquearnos a nosotros. Ya no son los galeones españoles, ingleses u holandeses que saquearon al caribe, no, hay otras maneras más sutiles, pero yo creo que hasta peor y más perversas y mucho más dañinas que esos imperios de hace doscientos años. Bueno, así es que se está levantando una oleada. ¿Y qué querían pues? ¿Que la América Latina se va a enterrar? ¿Que vamos a aceptar que nos entierren en la pobreza, en la miseria a este continente que es el símbolo del nuevo mundo? Este continente bolivariano, estos pueblos que han batallado van a cruzarse de brazos y ver como los hijos se le mueren de hambre."

Habló sobre algunas de las luchas que se llevan a cabo en Latinoamérica, en concreto, los triunfos electorales en Brasil y Argentina.

"La dignidad de los pueblos se levanta. Hace doscientos años esa oleada comenzó a recorrer este continente. Pero se fue por los andes... Ahora la oleada va por el agua o por selva: Caracas, Brasilia, Manaos, Buenos Aires.

Viene remontando el grito del carioca y viene a unirse con su hermano el obrero venezolano. El Brasil, Argentina... Uruguay, donde hay un pueblo levantado y consciente."

http://www.aporrea.net/dameverbo.php?docid=7171  

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Antiglobalizadores quemaron comercios y destrozaron vidrieras en Ginebra por reunión del G8
Por: AP
Publicado el Domingo, 01/06/03 02:24am








Nota de aporrea: Nos preguntamos si la gente de Ginebra tiene que algo que ver con los Kurdos (:

Amplia información y fotos en http://www.indymedia.org/g8/es/

GINEBRA (AP) _ Varios centenares de manifestantes, que protestaban por la reunión del Grupo de los 8, quemaron el sábado varios comercios y destrozaron vidrieras la víspera del encuentro que tendrá lugar en el balneario francés de Evian, dijo la policía.

El vocero de la policía ginebrina Jacques Volery dijo que por lo menos 10 comercios fueron atacados la noche del sábado en el centro de la ciudad por unos 300 manifestantes.

Tras una tregua, los manifestantes continuaron sus destrozos poco después de la medianoche.

La algarada "cesa y luego es reanudada", dijo Volery a la agencia AP. "Operan en pequeños grupos, lo que hace más difícil controlarlos".

Volery no pudo confirmar si fueron practicadas detenciones.

El movimiento contra la globalización designó el domingo día de protestas contra la reunión cimera del G-8 en Evian, un balneario en los Alpes franceses cercano a la frontera suiza. Ya que las autoridades francesas sellaron el acceso a Evian, habrá dos rutas autorizadas para las protestas _ una de Ginebra y la otra de Annemasse, la ciudad fronteriza francesa al otro lado de la divisoria.

Por temor a los desórdenes, Ginebra es irreconocible por las precauciones que adoptaron sus comerciantes, especialmente bancos y tiendas de lujo, cuyas vidrieras fueron cubiertas con madera chapeada pintada de amarillo.

Durante una manifestación mayormente pacífica efectuada el viernes en Ginebra, unos 100 militantes causaron entre 100.000 y 150.000 francos suizos en daños (77.000-115.000 dólares) al destrozar los vidrios de varios edificios, dijo el sábado la policía. Fueron detenidas tres personas y una de ellas sigue encarcelada.

En la ciudad de Lausana se realizó una manifestación pacífica.
http://www.aporrea.net/dameverbo.php?docid=7163
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Chávez: Existe voluntad en Argentina y Brasil para que Venezuela se integre al Mercosur
Por: Venpres
Publicado el Domingo, 01/06/03 01:12pm








Buenos Aires, 01 Jun. Venpres.- Presidente venezolano, Hugo Chávez Frías, confirmó aquí su voluntad de integrar su país al Mercado Común del Sur (Mercosur) y abogó por una alianza estratégica entre Argentina y Venezuela.

En una entrevista que publica este domingo el diario Página-12, Chávez dijo que existe voluntad de parte de los mandatarios argentino, Néstor Kirchner, y brasileño, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, para que Venezuela "se integre más temprano que tarde al Mercosur", reseña Prensa Latina.

Insistió, en lo que denominó ampliación cuantitativa y cualitativa de ese bloque comercial y recordó que su aspiración de formar parte del mecanismo regional la dio a conocer en 1998, cuando aún era presidente electo.

En su conversación con el periodista argentino Miguel Bonasso, Chávez explicó que luego de aquel momento "entramos cada uno en su crisis (...) La Comunidad Andina entró en su crisis interna de falta de cohesión y de visión".

El Presidente de Venezuela estimó que esos son mecanismos hechos con el viejo enfoque neoliberal y criticó la tecnocracia que impide avanzar más rápido hacia los objetivos propuestos.

Aquí se impone, en todos los órdenes, el retorno de la política. "Si San Martín hubiera tenido a unos técnicos calculando las dificultades del cruce de Los Andes, si Bolívar hubiera llamado a otros, jamás hubieran llevado a cabo la gesta emancipadora que requería audacia política", aseguró.

El gobernante venezolano anunció que visitará Buenos Aires dentro de unos meses y reveló que acordó con el presidente argentino realizar un trabajo rápido y crear una comisión binacional de alto nivel.

"Es que tenemos que hacer un plan, un mapa estratégico por donde encauzar una alianza estratégica argentino-venezolana. Debe ser una alianza estratégica, no sólo un acuerdo comercial", explicó.

Sobre su reciente estancia en Buenos Aires para la asunción de Kirchner al poder, Chávez consideró que en este país suramericano "está naciendo un proyecto nuevo. Hay una gran expectativa, un gran entusiasmo, voluntades desatadas (...) En las calles hemos visto mucha juventud y es posible que una buena parte de esa gente movilizada sea la misma que protestó en diciembre del 2001(...) De aquí hacia delante creo que hay que apostar por el triunfo del presidente Kirchner y del proyecto histórico que él está encarnando en este momento".

A confesión del presidente Chávez "debo decirles que mi gobierno y yo, en particular, apostamos y apostaremos duro a favor de su proyecto (...) Creo que Kirchner no es ningún actor de reparto de un teatro, sino un ser humano auténtico y sensible, comprometido con lo que dice. Y lo que dice es un discurso doctrinario, patriótico, nacionalista, delineador, con algunos toques de (John Maynard) Keynes", apuntó.

La fuente original de este documento es:
Venpres (http://www.venpres.gov.ve

http://www.aporrea.net/dameverbo.php?docid=7166
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