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Iranian president to tour US foes in Latin America
by Staff Writers
Caracas (AFP) Jan 8, 2012

US urges Latin America not to deepen ties with Iran
Washington (AFP) Jan 6, 2012 - The United States on Friday urged Latin American countries not to deepen ties with Iran as Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad prepared to visit Venezuela, Nicaragua, Cuba and Ecuador.

"As the regime feels increasing pressure, it is desperate for friends and flailing around in interesting places to find new friends," State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said when asked about Ahmadinejad's trip.

"We are making absolutely clear to countries around the world that now is not the time to be deepening ties, not security ties, not economic ties, with Iran," she told reporters.

"Rather, it's in the entire international community's interest to make clear to Iran that it's got a choice," she said.

Nuland could not say whether these points were made directly to Venezuelan and Cuban officials, but she said Washington was in "close touch" with Nicaragua and Ecuador about Amhadinejad's trip.

Iran "can... remain in an international isolation, or it can comply with its obligations and start cooperating and rejoin the community of nations," she added.

The United States and the European Union have been stepping up sanctions against Iran over its uranium enrichment program, on top of four rounds of UN Security Council sanctions and a host of unilateral punitive measures.

The United States and western powers suspect Iran's program masks a drive to build nuclear weapons. Iran denies the charge saying its program is purely peaceful.

Ahmadinejad will arrive in Caracus late Sunday for talks with anti-US firebrand Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez. On Tuesday he will attend the inauguration of the recently re-elected Nicaraguan leader Daniel Ortega, before travelling to Cuba and Ecuador.


Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, under growing pressure from debilitating Western economic sanctions, starts a Latin America tour Sunday aimed at shoring up ties with his few remaining allies.

Ahmadinejad will meet fellow US foe and firebrand Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez during a four-nation trip that coincides with rising international concern over Tehran's nuclear ambitions.

The Iranian leader will arrive in Caracas late Sunday, kicking off a five-day trip that will on Tuesday see him attend the inauguration of the recently re-elected Nicaraguan leader Daniel Ortega.

Stops in Cuba and Ecuador will round off the tour.

All four countries have frosty ties with the United States and their leaders have in the past four years made numerous Tehran visits to build up diplomatic and business links while relations with Washington have worsened.

Just before leaving Iran, Ahmadinejad said that all the countries on his itinerary "resist the oppression" of the United States and share "an anti-colonialist view," according to the Fars news agency.

"Latin America is a region that the oppressive regime (the United States) sees as its backyard where it can do as it likes. But today the people have awoken and are acting independently," he said.

Ahmadinejad called Chavez "a hero in the struggle against the oppression", said Ortega was leading a "revolution (that) is the same as the Iranian revolution", and praised Ecuador's ruling "revolutionaries who battle the (US) regime of domination".

He said he planned to sign deals in all the countries, including Cuba.

Ahmadinejad's international affairs director, Mohammad Reza Forqani, earlier said the visit to "what used to be called the backyard of America shows the dynamism of the Islamic Republic of Iran's diplomacy in the world arena."

The trip also "invalidates the claims of the enemies," Forqani was quoted as saying by Iranian state media on Tuesday, in a clear jab at Washington.

Officials in Ecuador meanwhile confirmed that Ahmadinejad would visit the South American nation on Thursday, in the Iranian leader's second visit since attending President Rafael Correa's inauguration in 2007.

Ahmadinejad will talk with Latin American leaders about "bilateral ties and regional and international issues," according to Iran's official IRNA news agency.

The United States has urged Latin American countries not to deepen ties with Iran.

"As the regime feels increasing pressure, it is desperate for friends and flailing around in interesting places to find new friends," State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said when asked about Ahmadinejad's trip.

Carlos Romero, a retired international relations professor at the Central University of Venezuela, said Ahmadinejad was "trying to find oxygen in Latin America," while links with other states continue to spiral downwards.

"His country is in a very complicated state internationally and is challenged internally by ever more protests on social networks" over the regime's repression of human rights at home and failure to denounce abuses in Syria, Romero said.

While the international community and many neighbouring states have condemned Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's months-long crackdown on protesters, ally Ahmadinejad has remained steadfastly loyal to the Damascus leadership.

The Iranian president will be accompanied on the Latin America trip by his foreign, trade, commerce and mines and energy ministers.

Ahmadinejad, who last came to Venezuela in November 2009, was scheduled to visit Caracas in September 2011 but the trip was postponed because Chavez was diagnosed with cancer. The Venezuelan leader, who has since declared himself free of the disease, last visited Iran in October 2010.

But the region's economic powerhouse, Brazil, is notably absent from Ahmadinejad's itinerary.

Lytton Guimaraes, an expert on Latin America at the University of Brasilia, said the omission indicated that President Dilma Rousseff was adopting a much cooler approach to Iran than that of her predecessor Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva.

"Brazil is not going to defend Iran, but nor will it attack it. It's going to sit still," Guimaraes told AFP.

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Iran president leaves on anti-US LatAm tour
Tehran (AFP) Jan 8, 2012 - Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad left on Sunday for a five-day Latin American tour taking in countries that share his deep antipathy to the United States, which is leading sanctions against Tehran.

His trip was to take him to Venezuela, Nicaragua, Cuba and Ecuador -- all countries that "resist the oppression" of the United States and share "an anti-colonialist view," he said just before flying out, according to the Fars news agency.

"Latin America is a region that the oppressive regime (the United States) sees as its backyard where it can do as it likes. But today the people have awoken and are acting independently," he said.

Ahmadinejad was first to see Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, whom he called "a hero in the struggle against the oppression."

He was then to attend the swearing-in of recently re-elected Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega, who he said was leading the Nicaraguan people in "their revolution (that) is the same as the Iranian revolution."

In his last stop, fellow OPEC member Ecuador, he was to speak with the ruling "revolutionaries who battle the (US) regime of domination."

In all the countries, including Cuba, he planned to sign deals, he said.

Regional and international issues would be discussed, along with "the aims of the (US) regime of domination to interfere in the affairs of other countries and its military presence" around the world, Ahmadinejad was quoted as saying.

The United States on Friday urged Latin American countries not to deepen ties with Iran.

"As the regime feels increasing pressure, it is desperate for friends and flailing around in interesting places to find new friends," State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said.

The United States is leading a campaign to isolate Iran economically through sanctions to punish it for its nuclear programme.

Washington believes the nuclear activities are being used to develop an atomic bomb, despite Tehran's repeated denials.



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