Venezuelan President willing to talk to Bush Wednesday, December 06, 2006 04:39 [IST]
Caracas:
Newly re-elected Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez said he is willing to talk to
US President George W. Bush whom he routinely calls a 'devil' from a position of
equality and respect.
Chavez said yesterday his Government would demand respect
for Latin American countries and their decisions on development, a withdrawal
of US troops from Iraq
and the extradition of Cuban anti-Castro activist Luis Posada Carriles, convicted
by Venezuelan courts of terrorist attacks.
Chavez, who regularly attacks US imperialism, easily won
re-election Sunday. The US
had commended Venezuela
for conducting peaceful elections and said it wanted to work with the Chavez
government.
Chavez said he was willing to engage in dialogue with Washington, though he admitted that he doubts the
sincerity of Washington's
offer.
In a press conference here, Chavez reacted to recent
comments by Thomas Shannon, US assistant secretary of state for the Western
Hemisphere, who said he hoped the US
will have a good relationship with Caracas
and praised the Venezuelan election.
Chavez said such comments are a good sign, but stressed that
any dialogue must include a series of regional and global issues.
"For example, over 100 people died yesterday in Iraq, and the US president sleeps happily,"
Chavez said.
"If the US
government wants dialogue, Venezuela's
doors will always be open, but we are a free country. We have been freed. We
were once a North American colony, and we will not be one ever again," he said.
In typical Chavez rhetoric, he said even Jesus talked to the
devil, so he too, is willing to talk to Bush. Chavez said he would set
conditions because "the devil has many forms of temptation".
The US
has long raised concerns that Chavez has eroded democratic institutions in Venezuela, while Chavez regularly accuses Washington of plotting
to oust him from office. |