-News for Tue. 16 April & Wed. 17
April 2002 Bush
Criticized by Democrats for Slow Response to Venezuelan
Crisis
Deborah Tate Capitol Hill 16
Apr 2002 23:20 UTC

Senate Democrats are
criticizing the Bush administration for its handling of the short-lived ouster
of Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez.
Senator
Christopher Dodd of Connecticut says the administration should have moved more
quickly to denounce the Venezuelan military when it forcibly removed Mr. Chavez
from power last Friday.
Mr. Dodd is
chairman of the Subcommittee on Western Hemisphere, Peace Corps and Narcotics
Affairs. Senator Dodd said, "I am extremely disappointed that rather than
leading the effort to reaffirm the region's commitment to the democratic
principles outlined in the OAS [Organization of American States] Charter, only
belatedly did the United States join with other OAS members to respond to the
Venezuelan crisis. I would be the last one to defend all of the decisions and
policies of the Chavez administration, but to stand silent while the illegal
ouster of a government is occurring is deeply troubling."
The administration
had blamed Mr. Chavez for creating conditions that led to his
overthrow.
Senate Majority
Leader Tom Daschle of South Dakota acknowledged that Mr. Chavez has been a
frequent critic of U.S. policy, but he said that was no reason for the U.S.
administration to "throw out democratic principles".
The comments of
Senate Democrats, along with news reports that the administration gave tacit
approval to a coup attempt, put White House spokesman Ari Fleischer on the
defensive.
Mr. Fleischer
denied the United States encouraged those responsible for the ouster of the
Venezuelan President even though U.S. officials had met opponents of Mr. Chavez
in recent months. He said, "United States officials explicitly made clear,
repeatedly, to opposition leaders that the United States would not support a
coup."
Mr. Fleischer
noted that after supporters returned Mr. Chavez to power, the administration
backed an Organization of American States' resolution condemning what it called
'the alteration of constitutional order.'
Senate
Republicans refrained from criticizing the administration's handling of the
Venezuelan crisis.
Senator Jesse
Helms of North Carolina, an influential member of the Foreign Relations
Committee, suggested that the threats to Venezuelan democracy and its
constitution began long before last Friday's incident. Senator Helms said, "I
personally would urge Mr. Chavez to make good use of his second chance and
embrace a little more strongly the principles of democracy than he has in the
past."
Mr. Helms, a
long-time foe of the communist-led government in Cuba, also called on Mr.
Chavez to end his close relationship with Cuban leader Fidel
Castro.
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