Bush Offers Brazil Energy Deal to Counter Chavez and Ahmadinejad Advances

American George W. Bush and Brazilian Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva American President George W. Bush will tour Latin America in March, in an attempt to curb the influence of his Socialist Venezuelan counterpart, Hugo Chavez, and to neutralize recent Iranian efforts to improve ties in the region.

Bush's visit crowns months of a US diplomatic offensive aiming to isolate the ongoing Socialist Revolution in Caracas by developing ties with South America's giant, Brazil.
 
Bush is arriving in Brazil March 8 and his tour ends March 14. The US president is expected to also visit Mexico, Guatemala, Uruguay and Colombia to show agreement following years of divergences in Washington's southern flank.

According to analysts, the ultimate goal is to stop Chavez' plans to turn the Common Market of the South into a Latin American body where political anti-US stances prevail over plain economic integration.

As such, Bush's visit to Uruguay becomes one of the hot spots of his tour. In Montevideo, Washington diplomats are expected to deepen trade ties between both nations, something that could disrupt the Mercosur block that Uruguayans founded with Argentina, Brazil and Paraguay.

Washington wants to strengthen the Brazilian leadership in the region to corner Chavez efforts to export his Bolivarian Revolution. US diplomats see President Lula as a moderate reformist who could take an alternative leadership to the radical moves of the Venezuelan.

In order to counter the Venezuelan oil diplomacy, Washington will be offering an energy deal with Brazil for production and trade of biofuels. Together, the US and Brazil amount to around 70% of the world ethanol production.

Nicholas Burns, the US Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs, told newspaper O Estado de S. Paulo that Brazil "is the most powerful country in South America." Burns added that his country did not want to depend on oil from "countries such as Iran and Venezuela."

"Energy has become a big diplomatic issue. Energy has tended to distort and expand the power of some countries beyond the power they should probably have," Burns said.

Bush's visit to Latin America, came only one month after the Iranian leader Mahmoud Ahmadinejad visited Venezuela, Ecuador and Nicaragua. Sponsored by Chavez, Tehran aims to develop closer ties in a region that ranks for its anti-American spirit.

Iran closed energy deals and a strategic partnership in Venezuela but did not succeed in cooperating with other nations.

Argentina, for instance, has a long-running diplomatic conflict with Tehran, as top Iranian officials have been requested by local courts on charges of terrorism after the bombing of Jewish center in Buenos Aires in 1994.

Pravda – http://english.pravda.ru/

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazilian Indians Abused and Threatened with Guaranteed Impunity

A car driven by Brazilian Indian Tuxaua Anselmo DionÀ­sio Filho was chased by a ...

LETTERS

Some have dismissed his initiative as just "the paranoia of the Brazilian left-wingers", but ...

Brazil’s GDP Grows 1.4% in First Quarter

Brazil’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) – the sum of all goods and services produced ...

Embryos to Be Used in Brazil’s Stem Cell Research

At a ceremony in the Chamber of Deputies, Wednesday April 20, the Brazilian government ...

World’s Largest Cattle Fair, Expozebu, Starts Its 73rd Edition in Brazil

The city of Uberaba, in the interior of the southeastern Brazilian state of Minas ...

Who’s to Blame for British Police’s Fatal Bungling? Brazilians Want to Know.

London Metropolitan Police Chief Sir Ian Blair denied Wednesday Scotland Yard was involved in ...

Brazilian businessman Vítor Sandri's house in Ibiúna, São Paulo

After Robbery Ordeal, Wife of Brazil’s Finance Minister Refuses to Go to Police

Brazil's Finance Minister, Guido Mantega, who was held hostage for over four hours, last ...

If You Are Magically Swept Away in Brazil You Got Maracatu Fever

It is difficult to explain the effect of maracatu on the psyche, when one ...

Progress Should Spare Brazil’s Severinos

In front of the luxury hotels on Porto de Galinhas beach in southern Pernambuco ...

Agribusiness is Bad for Brazil and Brazilians

If Brazil wanted to solve the problems of unemployment and poverty in the rural ...