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Washington
and Caracas again on talking terms
By
Tibisay Soto
AFP
CARACAS
Petroleumworld.com 12 15 06
Washington and Caracas are again on talking terms, the US ambassador
here said after meeting the Venezuelan foreign minister, a major step
aimed at ending years of frosty relations.
"I just had a conversation, and in my opinion a very positive one,
with the foreign minister," US ambassador William Brownfield told
reporters after his meeting with Nicolas Maduro, Venezuela's top diplomat.
"I believe that today we start a bilateral dialogue, this is the
first step."
Maduro, who said that Washington had called for the meeting, described
the talk as "frank, very clear," as well as "cordial
within the tension that can be created by a conversation where we speak
with frankness."
US-Venezuelan relations have been strained since President Hugo Chavez
took power eight years ago with populist, pro-Cuba policies and virulently
anti-US rhetoric.
But the United States is also Venezuela's largest trading partner, and
Venezuela the source of about 11 percent of all US oil imports.
The meeting comes just one day after the top US State Department official
for hemispheric affairs, Tom Shannon, had positive words for the December
3 election that swept Chavez into a second six-year term as president.
"You all know that the Venezuelans have enough reason to mistrust
statements that could come from the United States government,"
said Maduro.
But Venezuelans also have the "maturity ... to sit down to dialogue
in a respectful manner" with the US government.
Brownfield said that the two discussed issues of common interest, and
both governments "coincided in a system or a process to touch these
themes in the future.
"I believe we began with ... a recognition by both governments
of the electoral results in November in the United States and in December
here in Venezuela," Brownfield said, referring to the opposition
Democrats taking control of the US Congress and Chavez' re-election.
"Hopefully this dialogue, this first step today, will produce more
productive and positive dialogue in the coming year," he said.
In April 2002 Chavez accused the US government of supporting a military
coup against him, and in September he famously described the US president
as "the devil" at the United Nations General Assembly.
Venezuelan Vice President Jose Vicente Rangel said on Tuesday that his
government would remain "very cautious" with regards to Shannon's
comments that Washington wanted to improve its relations with Caracas.
Shannon in October replaced conservative Roger Noriega in his State
Department post.
"If the United States wants dialogue, Venezuela will always keep
the door open. But I doubt they are sincere in this," Chavez said
on Tuesday, his first news conference since his re-election.
"It is possible to talk to the devil, but you need human strength,"
said Chavez.
Brownfield acknowledged that substantive talks will take time.
"We have to walk before we run, we are going to start with small
steps," he said.
"Hopefully the next time that I speak with you I have more concrete
results to mention."
AFP
15 1042 GMT 12 06
Copyright© 2001 AFP. All
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