Posted on 11/19/2007 4:21:46 PM PST by TigerLikesRooster
Chavez, Ahmadinejad to work against US
By NASSER KARIMI, Associated Press Writer
53 minutes ago
The presidents of Venezuela and Iran boasted Monday that they will defeat U.S. imperialism together, saying the fall of the dollar is a prelude to the end of Washington's global dominance.
Hugo Chavez's visit to Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in Tehran followed a failed weekend attempt by the firebrand duo to push the Organization of Petroleum Exporting States away from trading in the slumping greenback.
Their proposal at an OPEC summit was overruled by other cartel members led by Saudi Arabia, a strong U.S. ally. But the cartel agreed to have OPEC finance ministers discuss the idea, and the two allies' move showed their potential for stirring up problems for the U.S.
The alliance between Chavez and Ahmadinejad has blossomed with several exchanged visits Monday's was Chavez's fourth time in Tehran in two years a string of technical agreements and a torrent of rhetoric presenting their two countries as an example of how smaller nations can stand up to the superpower.
"Here are two brother countries, united like a single fist," Chavez said upon his arrival in Tehran, according to Venezuela's state-run Bolivarian News Agency.
"God willing, with the fall of the dollar, the deviant U.S. imperialism will fall as soon as possible, too," Chavez said after a two-hour closed meeting with Ahmadinejad, the Iranian state news agency IRNA reported.
As the dollar weakens, oil prices have soared toward $100 a barrel. Chavez said over the weekend at the OPEC meeting in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, that prices would more than double to $200 if the U.S. attacked Iran or Venezuela.
"The U.S. empire is coming down," Chavez told Venezuelan TV, calling the European Union's euro a better option and saying Latin American nations were also considering a common currency.
The leftist Venezuelan is a fierce critic of President Bush, and Iran's Islamic government is in a bitter standoff with Washington over Tehran's nuclear program. The U.S. accuses Iran of seeking to develop nuclear weapons, a claim Tehran denies, and Iran has been hit with two rounds of U.N. sanctions for refusing to suspend uranium enrichment.
Ahmadinejad backed his "dear brother" Chavez in their joint fight with the Bush administration.
"We have common viewpoints and we will stand by each other until we capture the high peaks. God is with us and victory is awaiting us," Ahmadinejad was quoted as saying by IRNA. He said he and Chavez would stick together to defend their "nations and ideals to the end."
During the OPEC meeting, Iran and Venezuela proposed that the cartel begins pricing its oil in a basket of currencies, rather than just the dollar, and wanted the summit to specifically express concern over the dollar's slide in its final statement.
Saudi Arabia blocked those moves. Saudi Arabia's foreign minister cautioned that even talking publicly about the currency's decline could further hurt its value.
Chavez repeated his warnings that attacking Iran would further increase oil prices. "It's very important that they leave us in peace, the major oil-producing countries," he said.
"If it occurs to Bush to invade Iran, I'm sure the Iranians will resist, and they aren't going to allow them to take away their oil, just as we Venezuelans wouldn't allow it," he said.
In Tehran, the two presidents signed four memorandums of understanding Monday to create a joint bank, a fund, an oil industry technical training program and an industrial agreement, Iranian state television said. It said Chavez then left after an official farewell ceremony.
On Chavez's previous visit in July, the two leaders broke ground for construction of a jointly owned petrochemical complex in Iran, with 51 percent of it in Iranian ownership and 49 percent to be owned by Venezuela. The two nations also began construction of a second petrochemical complex in Venezuela, at a total combined cost of $1.4 billion.
Chavez and Ahmadinejad believe their petrochemical partnership will help Iran win markets in Latin America and Venezuela to gain access to Asia's energy market, especially India.
Since 2001, the two countries have signed more than 180 trade agreements, worth more than $20 billion in potential investment, according to official reports.
Iran has partnered with Venezuela on several industrial projects in the South American nation, including the production of cars, tractors and plastic goods.
Gotta be because of some French liberal, or some Hollyweirdo, or some commie bastard somewhere that have people in DC worried about doing what is necessary to survive.
Instead of becoming little pieces of DNA, I would rather be around arguing with the liberals (they will cut and run anyhow).
Chavez and Ahmadinejad - Stalin and Hitler..
The humanitarian in me cries, “Spare the women!”
Your enemy wont spare your women.
I know, but their women are hot.
Like I said, we can argue about it later.
How much does a 50 cal bullet cost?
One shot, one kill....
I say, if Amadjihad wants to wipe Israel off the map, we play with him. And we let him GO first.
Image saved, and I agree.
“Speak softly, but carry a big stick.”
That's sick, I like it!
Thanks!! I think it would work too!!
good one! those two are so far gone does anyone really think that they would be missed? I say bombs away
HEAR HEAR
let the games begin!!!
That sure sounds like a joint declaration of war against us. I think we ought to oblige them.
you can be President, I ‘ll take VP because my golf game needs a lot of work. There is a set of clubs sitting at the bottom of a pond. Been there since the late 80s. I could’t fix my slice, so I gave it up. It probably felt better throwing a set of clubs into a pond then it would have fixin’ my slice. I made a lot of people laugh that day. And years latter I can still tell that story and people laugh. Must be a classic.
Put me in coach, I am ready to play.
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