sábado, 14 de março de 2009

Notícias do ditadorzinho venezuelano. Blog do Noblat

Se a Rússia aceitar, é preciso que os EUA bombardeiem as pistas, antes da chegada à Venezuela de aviões russos carregados de artefatos nucleares. O canalha tenta agora, novamente e em novo constexto, a jogada que deu errado (URSS, foguetes, EUA) na presidência Kennedy. Se o Brasil apoiar esta loucura, será cúmplice. Note-se bem o esquema: Venezuela, Irã, Rússia. E no meio, o Brasil de Lulla que já bate asas para o Irã e Venezuela. A Rússia é fácil. Está na hora de se criticar com o máximo barulho a "política"externa do Itamaraty.
RR

Oferta de Chávez à Rússia ofusca viagem de Lula

O espaço nobre dos sites dos principais jornais norte-americanos ignorou até agora o encontro de Lula com Barack Obama (Washington Post, The New York Times, Wall Street Journal e Los Angeles Times).

A notícia importante da América Latina para tais jornais explodiu esta tarde: Hugo Cháves ofereceu as pistas das bases militares da Venezuela para uso pelo bombardeiros estratégicos russos que transportam armas nucleares.

O chefe de aviação de longo alcance da Rússsia, major-general Anatoly Zhikharav, revelou que Cuba também ofereceu suas bases.

O governo russo admite que o uso de bases na Venezuela não passa, por enquanto, de uma hipótese.

Atualização das 17h18 - Vinte e quatro minutos depois deste post ter ido ao ar, entrou no site do The New York Times a notícia sobre o encontro de Lula com Obama.

No The New York Times:

Russia Said to Weigh 2 Latin Base

Published: March 14, 2009

MOSCOW — A top Russian Air Force official said that the government was weighing whether to base strategic bombers out of Cuban territory or on a Venezuelan island that has been offered by President Hugo Chávez, according to the Interfax news service.

In comments made at an awards ceremony on Friday night, Maj. Gen. Anatoly Zhikharev, chief of staff for Russia’s long-distance aviation division, told reporters that either option would be practical.

“There are four or five airfields in Cuba with 4,000-meter-long runways, which absolutely suit us,” he said. “If the two chiefs of state display such a political will, we are ready to fly there.”

He confirmed that Mr. Chávez had offered the use of a military airfield on La Orchila island. “If a relevant political decision is made, this is possible,” he said.

Russia has bolstered its ties with Cuba and Venezuela in the past year. High-ranking Russian officials, including President Dmitri A. Medvedev, have made visits to Cuba, and Moscow hosted Raúl Castro, the Cuban president, in January. The two governments signed a series of bilateral agreements, though there was little mention of military plans.

Russia’s bomber fleet has been a favored piece in geopolitical gamesmanship with the United States. In August 2007, Vladimir V. Putin, then the president, punctuated the military’s growing assertiveness by reinstituting long-range patrols by nuclear-capable bombers over the world’s oceans. And Venezuela, with an eye toward rankling the United States, hosted two Russian strategic bombers last year and also conducted joint naval exercises with Russia.

At the time, top United States military officials played down the joint efforts, with Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, saying that Russia and Venezuela had the right to work together “if they see fit.”