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Chavez squares up for Americas summit

Says Obama has same stench as Bush

Posted by Agencies at 08:05 AM GMT on Mar 18, 2009

CARACAS (Reuters): Venezuela's president Hugo Chavez is expecting a row at a summit next month that could produce the first encounter between the anti-Washington leader and US president Barack Obama.

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez speaks during his broadcast "Alo Presidente" in Cumana, Sucre state in this March 15, 2009 file photo. REUTERS/Miraflores Palace/HandoutSocialist Chavez suggested he will use April's Summit of the Americas to pressure the United States to drop a trade embargo it imposed on Cuba more than four decades ago.

"What Obama will bring, I don't know, we'll see," Chavez said during a televised Cabinet meeting yesterday.

"We are preparing for this summit, getting our artillery ready. I reckon the cannons will be heard from here," he said without elaborating.

The meeting between presidents from throughout the Americas will be held on 17-19 April in Trinidad and Tobago, an island nation that lies just a few miles off the Venezuelan coast.

Chavez has broad influence among leftist governments in the region and has frequently used summits attended by supportive counterparts to harangue arch-foe the United States.

Chavez made headlines for his colourful repeated criticism of Obama's predecessor, George W Bush. He has called for warmer relations with the new administration, but also responded to criticism from Washington by saying Obama has the same stench as Bush.

Obama and Chavez are both due to attend the Organization of American States' summit but it is no known whether the two men will meet.

More than a dozen Caribbean nations have already called on Obama to end the trade embargo on Cuba, and a Cuban-American lobby group this week said that the president had not gone far enough to loosen travel restrictions to the communist island.

"It is not only a blockade against Cuba, it's an aggression against all the people of Latin America and the Caribbean," said Chavez, a close friend of former Cuban president, Fidel Castro.

Venezuela helped the island recover after the Soviet Union collapsed with sales of cheap oil.

Cuba's current president Raul Castro will not attend the Trinidad summit because the OAS expelled Cuba in 1962 on the grounds that its adherence to Marxist-Leninism was "incompatible with the inter-American system."
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