Showing posts with label Chavez. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chavez. Show all posts

Monday, July 6, 2009

Foreign Policy Folly Take 3 - Honduras


Obama's continues to weigh in on the side of Chavez ally President Zelaya in the Honduran Constitutional crisis that Zelaya created and that threatened Honduras's democracy. This from the Washington Post:

The Obama administration has signaled its support for democracy in Latin America by condemning the coup in Honduras, reducing military cooperation and joining with other countries in the hemisphere yesterday in a rare suspension of a nation from the Organization of American States.

The problem is that democracy was what Zelaya was attacking. There is always the danger that democracies will elect a person who does not respect democratic rule and will try use his power to end democracy. Hitler did this in Germany. Chavez has followed a similar model in Venezuela. And when the Honduran Supreme Court ruled that Zelaya had no power to fire the chief of the Armed Forces for refusing to distribute ballots and that Zelaya could not hold a referendum on constitutional term limits, it was Chavez who flew referendum ballots and voting equipment into Honduras so that the referendum could go forward.

Further, Obama's continued choice to refer to the removal of Zelaya from power as "illegal," a "terrible precedent" and a "coup" utterly mischaracterizes what happened in Honduras. This from a Bloomberg interview with the head of Honduras's Supreme Court, Justice Rsoalinda Cruz:

Honduras’s military acted under judicial orders in deposing President Manuel Zelaya, Supreme Court Justice Rosalinda Cruz said, rejecting the view of President Barack Obama and other leaders that he was toppled in a coup.

“The only thing the armed forces did was carry out an arrest order,” Cruz, 55, said in a telephone interview from the capital, Tegucigalpa. “There’s no doubt he was preparing his own coup by conspiring to shut down the congress and courts.”

Cruz said the court issued a sealed arrest order for Zelaya on June 26, charging him with treason and abuse of power, among other offenses. Zelaya had repeatedly breached the constitution by pushing ahead with a vote about rewriting the nation’s charter that the court ruled illegal, and which opponents contend would have paved the way for a prohibited second term.

She compared Zelaya’s tactics, including his dismissal of the armed forces chief for obeying a court order to impound ballots to be used in the vote, with those of Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez.

“Some say it was not Zelaya but Chavez governing,” she said.

The arrest order she cited, approved unanimously by the court’s 15 justices, was released this afternoon along with documents pertaining to a secret investigation that went on for weeks under the high court’s supervision. . . .

As to the legalities of what Honduras did, as Fausta points out in her post on Honduras today, there is precedent in the U.S. for using the military to enforce court orders and. Further, Fausta quotes from The Corner: "Article 272 of the Honduran Constitution gives the military the power to remove a president even without a court order, if he seeks to violate the term limits prescribed in the Honduran Constitution."

Obama is ignoring all of these facts and attacking Honduras even as it seeks to act legally to protect its democratic system against a united power grab from Zelaya and Chavez. I cannot for the life of me fathom his motivation. Once again Obama is choosing the wrong side on a major foreign policy issue. As Krauthammer pointed out several days ago, if Obama finds himself on the side of Castro and Chavez on a foreign policy issue, then it's time to reevaluate. Unfortunately, whatever Obama's motivation, what we are seeing is that Obama feels comfortable in the company Castro, Chavez and their ilk.








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Tuesday, June 30, 2009

A Picture Is Worth A Thousand Words



Ramierez couldn't have summed it up any better. As I said in the post below, Obama's foreign policy is wholly dysfunctional. He is dangerous.

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Obama - 180 Degrees of Wrong



Is Obama insane?

The democraticaly elected President of Honduras, Zelaya, makes an extra-Constitutional power grab even after the highest Court in Honduras rules it illegal. On the eve of that act, he is replaced during the final six months of his administration. That wasn't a coup. That was defense of democracy and the rule of law. It was ordered by a properly convened Court. It was supported by a democraticaly elected legislature. And now Obama is joining hands with Chavez, Castro and other enemies of the U.S. and of democracy to condemn the actions in Honduras and reinstate the President?

If you ever needed evidence that Obama should never have been let near the oval office, this completes the mosaic we saw begin over a year ago with Georgia, when their democratic regime came under assault from Russia. Obama did not come out in support of democracy then, not until he took a lesson from McCain. The lesson didn't stick. Two weeks ago, as Iranians were being brutalized and murdered in the streets by a regime that had just engaged in massive vote fraud, Obama sat silent and then, despicably, played down the importance of the revolt. Now, when a country acts to preserve its laws and Constitution against an extra-Constitutional assault from a rabid socialist following the Chavez model, Obama supports the one who was seeking to violate the constitution. Obama really does see the U.S. as the problem. He has no understanding of the intrinsic importance of democracy and the rule of law. He has embraced moral equivalence and is unable to discriminate friend from foe.

History is important, and true, the U.S. has been involved in more than one coup in Central and South America. History should inform all of our acts - but it should never hold us hostage. As Hot Air notes, it may be that, in some incredibly naive burst of deeply opaque motivation, Obama is trying to repair America's image by coming out on the side of Chavez, Castro et al. If so, it is inexplicably foolish.

This is bad - and holds the potential to get much, much worse. The last president that even approached this level of dysfunction was James Earl Carter, and he gave the world the Iranian theocracy. I do not know what Obama's legacy will be, but I fully expect it to be far worse.

For Obama's future reference on such matters, Charles Krauthammer provides a rule of thumb:








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Sunday, June 28, 2009

Impeachment - Honduran Style; Obama Acts As To Be Expected


Left wing Honduran President and Chavez ally Manuel Zelaya has been arrested by the military pursuant to a Court Order in a Constitutional crisis of his own making. The radical lefties - Chavez, Castro & the Obama administration - weigh in to support Zelaya.

President Zelya was, until today, in his second term as Honduran President. The Honduran Constitution provides a two term limit on the Presidency. Further, their Constitution provides a single method for amending the constitution - a 2/3rds vote of the legislative body in two consecutive regular annual sessions. Zelya had attempted to get around this by calling a country wide referendum. Honduras's highest Court ruled such a move illegal. Zelya continued ahead with the planned referendum, firing officials along the way who refused to take part in this extra-constitutional act. Accordingly, the Court ordered Zelya's arrest today and the military complied. At his own request, Zelya has been flown to Costa Rica. Fausta has the whole story.

This from the WSJ:

Honduras's Congress formally removed Mr. Zelaya from the presidency and named congressional leader Roberto Micheletti as his successor until the end of Mr. Zelaya's term in January. Mr. Micheletti and others said they were the defenders, not opponents, of democratic rule.

"What was done here was a democratic act," Mr. Micheletti, who was sworn in as president Sunday afternoon, said to an ovation. "Our constitution continues to be relevant, our democracy continues to live."

It should be noted that Micheletti was also a member of Zelya's party. Although the Constitutional issue provided the impetus for this act by the Courts and military, underlying it was concern with the role of Venezuela's clown dictator, Hugo Chavez, in Honduran politics. The WSJ quotes retired Honduran Gen. Daniel López Carballo, who "justified the move against the president, telling CNN that if the military hadn't acted, Mr. Chávez would eventually be running Honduras by proxy." The WSJ further notes that this was "a common view Sunday."

All of the rabidly left wing governments are attacking this arrest and the installation of a new President. Chavez, for one, is threatening war. The Obama administration has, according to the WSJ, "called the removal of President Zelaya a coup and said it wouldn't recognize any other leader." And Sec. of State Clinton goes one further. This from the WP:

Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton says the action taken against Honduras' president should be condemned by everyone.

She says Honduras must embrace the principles of democracy and respect constitutional order. . . .

It certainly sounds like the Hondurans played by the Constitutional rule book. Yet the U.S. seems to want to favor the Chavista's unconstitutional acts. You know, honest to God, watching Obama foreign policy is like watching the Keystone Cops.








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Thursday, April 24, 2008

Toon of the Day

Pelosi 1



by Michael Ramirez

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Criticism From The Left On Obstruction Of The Colombia Free Trade Agreement


The obstruction of the Colombia Free Trade Agreement by Democratic leaders and the Dem presidential nominees is every bit as pathologically partisan as their stand on Iraq and Homeland Security issues, such as whether to grant immunity to the telecom industry. In none of these cases are the best interests of the U.S. and its allies considered. The carefully staked out far left positions are designed to pander to special interests and are aimed at gathering power. You can begin to realize how transparent these detestable people really are when those on the left with some degree of intellectual integrity become highly critical of their actions, as does Nicholas Kristof today on the issue of obstructing the Colombia Free Trade Agreement.

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This from Mr. Kristof writing in the op-ed pages of the NYT:

For seven years, Democrats have rightfully complained that President Bush has gratuitously antagonized the world, exasperating our allies and eroding America’s standing and influence.

But now the Democrats are doing the same thing on trade. In Latin America, it is Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton who are seen as the go-it-alone cowboys, by opposing the United States’ free-trade agreement with Colombia.

. . . Colombian cities like Medellín were the most dangerous cities in the world in the 1980s and ’90s, but now they are thriving and homicide rates are well below those of some American cities.

One reason is those bouquets you buy, entering duty-free from Colombia. These days Colombia is the world’s second-largest exporter of flowers after the Netherlands, and almost 200,000 people work in the flower industry. Up to 28 cargo planes a day carry flowers from Colombia to the U.S.

Better carnations than cocaine, no?

Critics of the free-trade pact worry that it would hurt American workers. But Colombian goods already enter the U.S. duty-free; what would change is that American exporters would get access to the Colombian market.

(Colombia is pushing hard for the pact not because of any immediate trade benefit but because its duty-free access to the U.S. must be regularly renewed. Businesses are reluctant to invest in flower farms or garment factories unless they know that they will be able to export to the U.S. for many years to come.)

Some Democrats point out that Colombia’s government has been tied to paramilitary units that kill union members. It was important for Democrats to raise these concerns — forcing the Colombian government to crack down on paramilitaries and prosecute those who murder unionists.

But Colombia’s progress has been immense. Assassinations of union members, while still a problem, have fallen 80 percent since 2002. Last year, the murder rate for union members was 4 per 100,000, reaching levels far below the homicide rate for the general public.

. . . The last few years have seen enormous gains in security and the quality of life in Colombia — and that’s why President Álvaro Uribe has an 85 percent approval rating.

I asked President Uribe on Monday if there was concern among Latin leaders that Democrats in Congress are tugging the U.S. away from its historic commitment to free trade. He said bluntly: "I don’t want to imagine this scenario. It would be devastating for the good relationship between the United States and our region."
To their credit, a large group of prominent Democrats from previous administrations have strongly endorsed the trade accord, declaring that it is "in both our vital national security and economic interests." But the presidential candidates aren’t listening.

Democrats instinctively criticize Mr. Bush when he harms America’s standing in the world. That’s easy. But a test of intellectual honesty is your willingness to hold your own side to the same standard and to point out pandering in those politicians you normally admire. . . .



Read the entire article.


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Friday, March 7, 2008

Interesting News & Posts - 7 March 2008


The interesting news and posts of the day, below the fold.

Art: The Feast of Herod, Reubens, 1633
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At Vast Rightwing Conspiracy, a great post on McCain and some comparisons, including a fascinating one to Churchill.

At JammieWearingFool, the story of McCain’s limited tolerance for fools, particularly tendentious ones.

Heh. The Conservative Cat has a true test for Obama to prove his ability to sway America’s enemies with his rhetorical and negotiating skills.

Blonde Sagacity takes a serious look at Obama’s foreign policy positions and reaches much the same conclusions I reached here. And Confederate Yankee notes that Obama has reasserted his intention to withdraw from Iraq at any cost. TNOY delivers their own verdict, fit for mugs and t-shirts.

As Soob notes, the "Democratic party would seem to be headed, full steam, pedal to the metal, ass over tea kettle, toward a vigorous stage of infighting that might make even Ann Coulter seem a moderate, Undecided Sap."

At BlueCrab Boulevard, more on Hugo Chavez’s ties to narco-terrorist FARC. As Gaius says, and I agree, "[i]t is past time for the US Congress to send a message of support to Colombia. Pass the free trade agreement with that country - it may avert a war." And This Ain’t Hell has a good updated round-up.

From the Barking Moonbat, a story about how RAF personnel in Britain face abuse wearing their uniforms in public. And more thoughts at Samizdata. Then do read this post at Classical Values, as the Code Pinko’s in San Fran call the Marines for help when challenged by a civilian during their protest in front of the Marine Recruiting Station.

The RAF story is understandable in Britain of today, where the socialists are teaching the country to be ashamed of its history and traditional values. See the concluding paragraph of my post here.

While at Dinah Lord, the local Islamists try their hand at milking Britain’s welfare system.

From the Elder of Ziyon, Wafa Sultan rocks. She really does. If you haven’t read the transcript of her debate with an Islamist on al Jazeera, do so. She is an eloquent and acerbic critic of the Salafi Islamist movement.

From Seraphic Secret, the best and most comprehensive coverage of an Islamist’s barbaric massacre of unarmed teenagers in Jerusalem. See here, here, here, here and here. As to those animals that celebrated this slaughter, you are not deserving of taking another breath on this earth. There is no nuance, nor is there any moral relevance. Nor is there any difference between those animals and the one’s described by Ironic Surrealism in her post on "the barbarian’s strike again."

At Crusader Rabbit, the latest in "reach out and touch someone" technology. And at MK’s Views, the story of gallantry under fire.

At the Jawa Report, it is clear why moonbats should not be made judges.

At Q&O, a zealous member of the global warming clique breaks ranks based on new climate prediction models that correct for decades old error in the thickness of earth’s atmosphere.

At Political Insecurity, Kuwait is putting political demonstrations to good use. They are taking not of the foreigners involved in the protests and then deporting them.

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Tuesday, February 19, 2008

Fidel Finito

Cuba's bearded Bolshevik is down for the count. Fidel Castro, 81 years old, has announced his retirement from politics after half a century of ruling over the glorious worker's paradise that he created in Cuba - a country that has barely managed to remain afloat with the benefice of Fidel's friend, Hugo Chavez. Raul Castro is expected to take the reins of dictatorial power. Read the Washington Post story here.

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Monday, January 21, 2008

Interesting News - 21 January 2008

In Venezuela, a judge who speaks against the regime is named on broadcast television as an enemy of the state. Hours later, she was shot and the person with her murdered. Venezuelan police have termed a car-jacking – prior to the completion of an investigation. Read the story in PJM. Meanwhile, Hugo show us what happens when you get government interference in the economy.

Thomas Sowell remembers 1968 and finds the reality of the year’s legacy differs greatly from the myth.

No-Knock warrants are dangerous for all parties. Classical Values has some troubling thoughts – and the report of a case with the worst possible outcome.

If you have a reasonable concern about energy prices, the first place to take your complaint is the closes Democrat. Ask them why we can’t drill for oil in Anwhar or off of our coasts, why we can’t build any nuclear reactors, and why we cannot build new refineries.

Biofuels will not cut greenhouse emissions and the costs do not outweigh the benefits – so says Joint Research Centre of the EU. On top of what this investment in biofuels is doing to food prices, mandating ever greater use of biofuels seems increasingly insane. But don’t tell that to the EU Commission, who are apparently going to simply ignore the report.

"Step right up folks and get your tickets to the greatest scam on Earth as we pay homage to those much-maligned scientists, geologists, climate researchers and marginalized Global Warming Skeptics the world over who refuse to be silenced by the skeptiphobics who would still the voices of reason." It’s a global warming carnival at the CFP. (H/T LostInto2)

While I’ve been unconcerned up to the moment with the latest fad, "sharia finance," I’ve obviously been too complacent. Dinah Lord posts on Sharia finance and the ties of many involved to extremists.

Omar Bakri has some thoughts on Muslims in the UK’s police and military. As does Lionheart.

Sheik Yer Mami is on fire. Read his posts about: compulsion of religion in Egypt; litigation jihad in the Netherlands aimed at silencing any criticism of the religion of peace; and some must see vidoes:
Islam in the UK is "not about bringing two world’s together."





And also Pat Condell who remarks eloquently on the Mark Steyn cases and its larger implications:





And lastly, a Public Service Message on the crisis of Journalistic Violence from Iowa Hawk whose incredible spoof of the odious NYT is quick becoming legend.

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Monday, December 3, 2007

More Hugo

Rick Moran at Right Wing Nut House brings up an interesting point. The facts on the ground suggest vote fraud in Venezuela did occur, but the spread was so great that Hugo's machine was simply unable to change enough votes / stuff enough ballots to make it come out their way. If in fact that is the case, one could expect that Hugo will do his best to improve the efficiency of his machine and make sure the numbers come out "right" the next time. Everything about Hugo indicates that he will not accept this "no" vote beyond paying it lip service for just as long as he must.

And as Rick documents, the lefty blogosphere has more then a few people praising Hugo and making unfavorabe favorable comparisons to Bush who, we are told, is a dictator and who refused to accept the will of the people. All of which leaves one to ponder whether such idiocy is learned or genetic.

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Interesting News From Around the Web

The big news of the day, Chavez loses his bid for dictatorial powers in Venezuela by democratic vote. Fausta’s Blog has the story. And here is a WaPo article on the loss. Given Hugo’s past, its amazing the official results of this vote came out as they did. So whither now, Hugo? Daniel Duquenal at PJM ponders the possibilities.


Not all putatitve dictators for life received bad news yesterday. Putin’s party won handily in Russia amid charges of large scale fraud.

Sudan has pardoned the British teacher, Gillian Gibbons, who caused untold damage to the delicate sensibilities of Salafists by allowing her class to name Muhammad’s teddy bear Muhammad.

“Last month, the Senate had to choose how to spend $400 million: health insurance for 173,000 children, or 1,056 pork projects. Pork won, 68-26.” It seems the Democrats’ promises to clean up Washington have not quite panned out. Unfortunately, this is a bipartisan malignancy. Suicidal Republicans desperately need to clean up their act on this one, also.

Men are simple creatures. Women often ask: ‘What underwear do you like to see me in?’ and the usual answer is: ‘Any underwear.’ Unless your relationship has been going so long that you have sex only on special occasions, such as the installation of a new Pope, then most men are just pathetically grateful to see women partially unclothed.” More hardhitting journalism from my favorite tabloid, the Daily Mail

France is “stunned by rioter’s savagery.” The left blames the rioting on social injustice. Sarkozy is of a different view.

Instapundit links to a fascinating post on one of the more corrupt practices in our legal system, judge shopping in politicly charged cases.

After much wailing and gnashing of teeth by the usual suspects, it is now known that a noose and threatening letter left at a Baltimore Fire Department station two weeks ago was left by an African American employee who was having problems in his job.

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Sunday, November 25, 2007

Interesting News From Around the Web

The far left are still pushing hard for an impeachment of President Bush and Vice President Cheney. Good luck with that.

So is al-P photographer Bilal Hussein the completely innocent victim of a plot hatched by our evil U.S. military . . . or perhaps not? It all seems to have shaken Instapundit’s belief in the veracity of our press.


According to the Asia Times, the very existence of Israel “embodies the last, best chance for the Islamic world to come to terms with the modern world. . . . The premise of Western policy is to tread lightly upon Muslim sensibilities. That is an error of first magnitude, for Muslim sensibilities are what prevents the Islamic world from creating modern states. Islam cannot produce the preconditions for democracy in the Western sense out of its own resources.” Read it all here. I concur and for the reasons stated therein. (h/t Jules Crittenden)

Lenin's corpse has a rare reason to smile. A new workers' paradise is sprouting in Venezuela, under the direction of the sometimes clownish but always cunning President Hugo Chavez.

The Weekly Standard is running a story on the newly invigorated Tories under the leadership of the boy wonder, David Cameron. I have my doubts about the Tories. Their refusal to promise a referendum on the Lisbon Treaty is very bad indeed. The Tories seem more concerned with the UKIP than with the transfer of Britain’s sovereignty to the EU.

In multicultural Britain, to proclaim one’s faith in God is to be called a “nutter” according to Tony Blair.

Classical Values has a fascinating post on fuel costs and energy R&D, comparing the EU and America.

Even as fatalities have dropped and the security situation measurably improved, Democrats continue to push for a full withdrawal of all police from NYC.

Biased BBC is reporting that the publicly funded BBC is squealing like a pig over their rivals, SKY news, whose reporting is generally recognized to be faster, more accurate, and sufficiently less biased “that during the Iraq War, the crew of HMS Ark Royal chose Sky News over BBC News because "The BBC always takes the Iraqis' side. It reports what they say as gospel but when it comes to us it questions and doubts everything the British and Americans are reporting".

From the Rightwing Nuthouse - its official. America has lost its collective grip on 9-11 reality. Dennis Kucinich must be putting something in the water. But Cheatseeking Missles thinks that it may just be that the pollsters were looking for specific results.

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Monday, November 12, 2007

Shopping in a Socialist Paradise

One would think that the world's would-be dictators, socialists and communists who hunger for power would at least have figured out by now that, while instituting the trappings of a police state is one thing, introducing the trappings of a socialist, command directed economy is another thing entirely. One needs to look no further than China and the Soviet Union to figure that one out. The difference between Deng Xiao Ping and Krushev would seem to be that someone gave the former a copy of The Wealth of Nations. Apparently, they are out of Adam Smith down in Venezuela also. Thus, while the darling of the Hollywood left, Hugo Chavez, is off attempting to turn all of Latin America into a Socialist heaven, average Venezualens seem to have more prosaic concerns:

Venezuelan construction worker Gustavo Arteaga has no trouble finding jobs in this OPEC nation’s booming economy, but on a recent Monday morning he skipped work as part of a more complicated search — for milk.

The 37-year-old father-of-two has for months scrambled to find basic products like cooking oil, beef and milk, despite leftist President Hugo Chavez’s social program that promises to provide low-cost groceries to the majority poor.

“It takes a miracle to find milk,” said Arteaga, who spent two hours in line outside a store in the poor Caracas neighborhood of Eucaliptus. “Don’t you see I’m here slaving away to see if I can get even one or two of those (containers)?”

Venezuelan consumers are increasingly facing periodic shortages of basic food products as the economy shows signs of overheating amid record revenues from an oil boom. . . .

A black market has sprung up where informal vendors illegally peddle bags of sugar, beans and precious powdered milk — for as much as double the regulated price. . .

Read the article at Hillbilly Politics where, as she puts it, money can't buy me love, [but in] Venezuela, it can't buy me food, either.

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