Venezuelanalysis.com
CARACUS, Venezuela
— The
Venezuelan government issued a statement yesterday rejecting comments made by a
senior U.S. official, John Negroponte, who called Venezuelan President Hugo
Chavez “a threat to democracy” in Latin America.
Earlier this month U.S.
President George W. Bush nominated Negroponte, currently director of National
Intelligence under the Bush administration, for the position of deputy Secretary
of State, an appointment subject to confirmation by the U.S. Senate. At his
Senate Foreign Relations Committee confirmation hearing last week Negroponte
said, "I do not think [Chavez] has been a constructive force in the hemisphere,"
adding that he thought “[Chavez’s] behavior is threatening to democracies in the
region," according to the Associated
Press..
The Venezuelan government’s
response, issued through a Ministry of Foreign Relations (MRE) press release,
stated that “Mr. Negroponte represents a real threat to peace and democracy,” in
In reference to the period
(1981-1985) that Negroponte served as U.S. Ambassador to
Negroponte is widely known to
have been complicit with human rights abuses perpetrated by the Honduran
military that he worked closely with during his tenure in
Earlier this month the
Washington D.C.-based Council on
Hemispheric Affairs (COHA) released a statement saying that Negroponte’s
involvement in Central American “dirty wars” of the 1980s should “fundamentally
disqualify him for any job in public service.” It added that
U.S. President Bush echoed
Negroponte’s comments today telling TV channel Fox News he was “concerned about
Venezuelans, about decreasing democratic institutions, as well as about the
efforts at nationalization that could take place or not," according to Agence
France Presse.
These latest exchanges
between the U.S. and Venezuelan governments come in the wake of last Thursday’s
warning by President Chavez to U.S. Ambassador to Venezuela, William Brownfield,
that he risked being expelled from the country if he continued ''meddling in
Venezuela's affairs.” Chavez’s remarks came in response to comments made by
Brownfield the day before regarding the proposed re-nationalization of key
industries such as the telecommunications company CANTV and the electricity
companies, announced earlier this month. CANTV’s largest minority shareholder is
New York-based Verizon Communications, while Electricidad de Caracas is owned by
Arlington, Virginia-based AES Corp.
Relations between
Meanwhile, Chavez has been
emphatic about the need to oppose
______