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Chavez
turns to Iran on military, uranium
By
Rowan Scarborough
The
Washington Times
Infosearch:
José Cadenas
Bureau Chief
USA
Research Dept.
La Nueva Cuba
April 21, 2006
Venezuelan President
Hugo Chavez is seeking to deepen ties with Iran, with discussions
on holding joint military exercises and obtaining uranium, according
to Bush administration officials.
Hamas also is talking to Caracas about sending representatives to
Venezuela to raise money for the militant group's newly elected
Palestinian government.
But relations with another ally, Russia, have soured over a deal
in which Moscow is selling 100,000 AK-47s to Venezuela. The South
American country was counting on receiving new rifles, but Russia
has shipped a number of refurbished models, prompting Caracas to
halt the deal, the U.S. sources said.
Mr. Chavez's continuing efforts to cozy up to Iran are of increasing
concern inside the Pentagon and State Department.
Mr. Chavez yesterday threatened to expel the U.S. ambassador, after
accusing the diplomat of provoking tensions, according to reporters
in Caracas. The threat came two days after pro-Chavez demonstrators
tossed eggs, fruit and vegetables at Ambassador William Brownfield's
car and the State Department warned Venezuela that it faced consequences
if it did not protect the U.S. envoy.
The Washington Times reported in October that the Chavez government
had made overtures to Iran about obtaining nuclear technology. The
U.S. and European allies are now trying to force Tehran to give
up its stated ambition to enrich uranium, a possible first step
to building nuclear weapons.
U.S. officials told The Times that talks now include discussions
on Venezuela's obtaining uranium for what is feared to be a fledgling
nuclear program in Caracas.
"Hugo Chavez has been clearly talking to Iran about uranium,"
said a senior administration official, who asked not to be named.
The official said he could not confirm reports that Venezuela wants
to buy uranium from Iran.
Having made several trips to Iran, Mr. Chavez has declared solidarity
with the country's hard-line mullahs and has entertained Iranian
officials in Caracas as he seeks to build an anti-U.S. axis that
also includes Fidel Castro's Cuba.
Mr. Chavez has endorsed Tehran's nuclear ambitions, and voiced support
for the terror insurgency in Iraq.
"I am on the offensive," Mr. Chavez said on the Arab-language
Al Jazeera television network, according to a British Broadcasting
Corp. translation, "because attack is the best form of defense.
We are waging an offensive battle."
Venezuela, the
No. 3 U.S. oil supplier, would have to build a nuclear program from
the ground up, and there have been press reports in Latin America
that Mr. Chavez wants to buy a reactor from Argentina.
A spokeswoman at the Venezuelan Embassy in Washington referred questions
to Ambassador Bernardo Alvarez Herrera, who was not available for
comment. Mr. Alvarez denied to The Times last year that Venezuela
was supporting insurgencies in South America and that Venezuela
bought the 100,000 AK-47s from Russia "because of defensive
purposes for the country."
The Times reported last year that the State Department had formally
protested the rifle deal to Moscow. The fear is Mr. Chavez's left-wing
regime is arming neighborhood militias trained by Cuba to enforce
a Stalinist-like security apparatus, while putting used rifles on
the black market for South American insurgents.
The Web site Strategypage.com reported last week on the refurbished
AK-47s.
The senior administration official said he believes the report is
true and probably stems from corruption on both ends of the deal.
"Throughout the Venezuelan government, there is a complete
lack of accountability because Chavez has destroyed the institutions
of accountability," the official said. "He's trying to
centralize everything to himself."
A State Department official said the administration is also concerned
about the overtures Venezuela is making toward Hamas, the militant
organization that executes terror attacks on Israel and recently
won Palestinian parliamentary elections.
"We certainly are concerned about the ongoing relationship
with Venezuela and a number of countries of concern, not just Iran,
but Hamas and others," the official said.
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