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Caribbean-Latin America
Chávez pushes for withdrawal of international reserves from U.S. banks
2008-01-28
The president of Venezuela, Hugo Chávez, urged his Latin American allies to begin withdrawing billions of dollars in international reserves from U.S. banks, warning of a looming U.S. economic crisis.
"Si se puede!"
Chávez made the suggestion Saturday as he hosted a summit aimed at increasing Latin American integration and countering U.S. influence. "We should start to bring our reserves here," Chávez said. "Why does that money have to be in the north? You can't put all your eggs in one basket."
"I'll hold it for you. Really. It'll be safe"
To help pool resources within the region, Chávez and other leaders launched a new development bank at the summit of the Bolivarian Alternative for the Americas, or ALBA.
Since ABBA was already taken...
The left-leaning regional trade alliance supported by Chávez is intended to offer an alternative, socialist path to integration while snubbing U.S.-backed free-trade deals. "The empire doesn't accept alternatives," Chávez told the gathering, attended by the presidents of Bolivia and Nicaragua, the vice president of Cuba, Carlos Lage, and other leaders. Chávez warned that U.S. "imperialism is entering into a crisis that can affect all of us" and said Latin America "will save itself alone."

Rice left Colombia on Friday after a trip aimed at reviving a free-trade deal that has stalled in the U.S. Congress. She sidestepped an opportunity to confront Chávez, who accused Colombia and the United States of plotting "military aggression" against Venezuela.

Chávez took up the issue again Saturday, saying, "I warn the world of the following: The U.S. empire is creating the conditions to generate an armed conflict between Colombia and Venezuela."
"So we should defend ourselves by shooting first!"
Formerly cordial relations between the two nations have been tense since November, when Colombia's U.S.-allied president, Álvaro Uribe, said Chávez was no longer welcome to continue mediating a hostages-for-prisoners swap with Colombia's leftist rebels.
Hoogo needs a bogeyman, first the US and then Columbia, next Guyana
Daniel Ortega, the president of Nicaragua, joined Chávez in his criticism of U.S.-style capitalism, saying "the dictatorship" of global capitalism "has lost control." Three days earlier, Ortega had shouted "Long live the U.S. government" as he inaugurated an American-financed section of highway in his country.

The leaders signed a series of accords at the end of the meeting pledging cooperation in areas from energy to agriculture, plus a document denouncing "the warlike attitude of the U.S. government and its attacks against our governments."

A spokeswoman for the U.S. Embassy in Caracas rejected that characterization. "A door is always open to dialogue and cooperation on issues of mutual concern," Robin Holzhauer said.
"but doors close too, and sometimes one loses a finger or dictator in it"
Posted by:Frank G

#9  Frozen Al is right, Hugo's probably living on "Future Earnings" anticipated from oil.

"I'll gladly pay you Thursday for a Hamburger Today", immediately pops to mind, take whatever money you have and vanish into the obscurity of History Books.
Posted by: Redneck Jim   2008-01-28 21:47  

#8  This assumes Hugo has any financial reserves left after mismanaging his oil industry.

Al
Posted by: Frozen Al   2008-01-28 20:58  

#7  What Hugo doesn't understand is the money is in US banks because they don't get nationalized or suddenly lose the money. Even if you hate us the investment is safe, although if we hate you it might get frozen but then again you can't hide from that anywhere really.
Posted by: rjschwarz   2008-01-28 15:38  

#6  Hugo instituted currency controls a while back, trying to prevent the middle class from moving their money off shore. I wonder if that's pinching right now.
Posted by: lotp   2008-01-28 15:26  

#5  I say "Take your money and go" they don't realize that it works both ways, you remove your cash, you also remove your influence, it's a one-time threat, once removed, you also remove the threat.

Go, be damned, don't come back when you've spent it all and are starving.
Posted by: Redneck Jim   2008-01-28 15:08  

#4  My tax dollars went to finance a highway in Nicaragua? While Interstate 5 is gridlocked and crumbling in San Diego? Huh?
Posted by: Ebbang Uluque6305   2008-01-28 12:37  

#3  Daniel Ortega, the president of Nicaragua, joined Chávez in his criticism of U.S.-style capitalism, saying "the dictatorship" of global capitalism "has lost control." Three days earlier, Ortega had shouted "Long live the U.S. government" as he inaugurated an American-financed section of highway in his country.

Its funny watching Danny boy try to straddle the fence.
Posted by: Dopey Flotle8127   2008-01-28 12:01  

#2  Or lung cancer. Of course, you might want to chew coca paste to ease the pain and forget the hunger.
Posted by: anonymous5089   2008-01-28 07:34  

#1  South American free trade deal?
You can only trade bananas and cigars so many different ways until you die of malnutrition.
Posted by: Jeremiah Jaiting2214   2008-01-28 07:32  

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