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In an Allusion to Chavez Brazil Warns US: We're Nobody's Middleman PDF Print E-mail
Written by Newsroom   
Friday, 02 March 2007

US President Bush and Venezuelan President Chavez Brazil would like to see the current relation with United States become something positive for South America and expects that Washington's renewed interest in the hemisphere is based on cooperation and not in the old "intervention" style, said Friday Brazilian Foreign Affairs minister Celso Amorim.

Just a week from the arrival in Brazil of US President George W Bush, in the first leg of a long tour of several Latinamerican countries, Amorim said that "what we can obtain from the US, will be for the whole of South America. We're not after advantages that are not extensive to the rest of South America."

Bush is scheduled to meet with Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva next Friday in São Paulo and again at the end of the month but in Camp David, evidence of the "good chemistry between both leaders and countries."

Amorim denied Brazil is turning its back on its neighbors and insisted that they will all benefit from "this positive climate between the world's leading power and the principal power in the region."

He also revealed that Lula talked about the issue with Uruguay's president Tabare Vazquez when they met in Colonia, last Monday, and "it's our intention to send the same message to the rest of our South American colleagues."

However he said Brazil has not intention of acting as "nobody's middle man" in an apparent reference to the verbal exchanges between United States and President Hugo Chavez.

"What we want is for the US to have a comprehensive vision of South America's problems, understanding its diversity, the existent plurality and our economic claims," said Amorim.

But "essentially we want to transmit a positive vision of this continent, of an integration process with innumerable business opportunities. We want US corporations to invest in South America. We have no prejudice against any US company."

"A good relation between Brazil and United States reinforces the chances for a good overall relation of South America with the US", emphasized Amorim who denied it was Brazil's intention to "calm" Bush about the situation in the continent.

"I don't know if President Bush is coming to the region looking for tranquilizers, I very much doubt it. He's coming to Brazil in search for cooperation in fuels", he said with irony in relation to the US interest in developing ethanol and bio-fuels.

"I believe Brazil has much to offer by its own stance: we're a democracy, which respects the free press with an important social agenda and a very much respected foreign policy."

Mercopress

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What does Chavez have to offer
written by Forrest Allen Brown, March 03, 2007
Chavez will drop any one that does not think the way he wants them to .
whan Lula comes back from camp david , see waht Chaves does or calls him .

his next move will to be claim brasilians are ploting to kill him because the U.S. wants him dead
and Lula wants U.S. money .

afetr he has sent all news paper reporters out of the country .
but lula has doen that before also
has control of all the TV stations .
brasil has some fredom still

if brasil and the US got with each other they could control over 70% of all bio desiel and other fuels
can chaves do that
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South American Integration
written by Alex Pereira, March 28, 2008
Finally, it seems that Brazil is taking the leadership to move South America towards integration. It was well said from Minister Amorim that we Brazilians "are not after advantages that are not extensive to the rest of South America." This is a great diplomacy, and Brazil has been working a great deal to propel the democracy that is inherent of the South American people, and that had been hidden by decades of bad administrators. Go Brazil! The country of the future.
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