Chavez
threatens Latin American democracies: Negroponte
REUTERS/Jim Young
John Negroponte testifies during his confirmation hearings for Deputy
Secretary of State on Capitol Hill in Washington, January 30, 2007.
AFP
WASHINGTON
Petroleumworld.com 01 31 06
Leftist Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez is threatening democracies
in Latin America with his behavior, incoming US Deputy Secretary of
State John Negroponte said Tuesday.
"He has been trying to export his kind of radical populism and
I think that his behavior is threatening to democracies in the region,"
Negroponte told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.
"I do not think he has been a constructive force in the hemisphere,"
said Negroponte, currently the US spy chief, at a hearing to confirm
his appointment as deputy to Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice.
Long a thorn in the US side, Chavez last week threatened to kick out
US Ambassador William Brownfield for criticizing his proposals to nationalize
key telecommunications and energy industries.
Reelected to a new six-year term in office and with his allies controlling
Venezuela's unicameral legislature, Chavez earlier this month was granted
the power to rule by decree for 18 months by a unanimous vote from lawmakers.
A former ambassador to Mexico and Honduras, Negroponte has often voiced
his dislike of Chavez, whom he accused a year ago of seeking closer
relations with North Korea and Iran.
Since Chavez first came to power nine years ago, several other leftist
or left-leaning governments have been elected in Latin America, including
Nicaragua, Ecuador, Bolivia and Chile.
Negroponte attributed the rise of Chavez and other populist regimes
in Latin America to a general disappointment with democracy in the region.
"I think that one of the trends that we need to be concerned about
is a kind of a frustration among some of the populations of Latin America
... that democracy is not necessarily delivering the kinds of results
that people had hoped for," he said.
But he told senators that despite Chavez's influence "by and large,
I think that democracy is doing quite well in the hemisphere."
Turning to Colombia, Negroponte told the Senate committee that the US
should continue to back President Alvaro Uribe's efforts to stem leftist
guerrilla activity.
"The situation in Colombia is a critical one to our interests and
I think it's very important that we continue to support the government
of Colombia in its efforts to bring that country under control and to
finally put an end to the guerilla activity that's taking place in that
country," Negroponte said.
In October, Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs Nicolas Burns
said Washington would ask Congress to extend for another two years the
600 million dollars US support for Uribe's Plan Colombia against drug
trafficking and guerrilla warfare.
AFP
30 1921 GMT 01 07
Copyright© 1999 AFP. All
Rights Reserved.