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Lawmakers: Beware the Looming Threat From the South
Dave Eberhart, NewsMax.com
Monday, Oct. 7, 2002
A group of congressional members concerned by the opinion poll lead of Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, presidential candidate of the Worker’s Party in Brazil and vocal critic of Brazil’s adherence to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons, have sent a letter to President Bush outlining their "grave concern.”

The letter, which was copied to vice president Richard Cheney, secretary of state Colin Powell, secretary of defense Donald Rumsfeld, and national security advisor Condoleezza Rice, requests that the state department review Lula da Silva’s comments and "assess the threat that his policy poses to U.S. and hemispheric security.”

The framers of the letter, who include Rep. Dan Burton, R-Ind., and Rep. Chris Smith, R-N.J., hone in on a September 13, 2002 statement by da Silva that compliance with the NPT "would make sense only if all countries that already have [nuclear] weapons also gave them up.”

The presidential candidate continued, "If someone asks me to disarm and keep a slingshot and he comes at me with a cannon, what good does that do?” He concluded his remarks by stating, "All of us developing countries are left holding a slingshot while they have atomic bombs.”

Also voicing distress with da Silva’s associations with radical political movements around the world, the writers note that in 1990 da Silva, cooperating with the communist regime of Castro in Cuba, established a leftist, anti-globalization group called the Forum of Sao Paulo.

"This ensemble, which has liaised with communist and radical political movements from around the world, held its most recent meeting in December, 2001, in Havana, Cuba,” the letter states.

In summing up, the congressional members warn, "The leadership of Mr. da Silva in this annual gathering of communist and radical organizations and alliances; his long-standing close relations with, and admiration for, the communist dictator and sponsor of terrorism, Fidel Castro; and recent statements regarding nuclear non-proliferation, raise grave questions concerning the international policies a government of Brazil might pursue under his Presidency.”

Expert Agrees With Threat

The election in October of radical Luis Ignacio da Silva as president of Brazil could trigger the spread of anti-U.S. dictatorships in Latin America that would hold sway over as many as 300 million people and boost the potential of terror attacks on the U.S. from the south, warns Hudson Institute scholar Constantine C. Menges.

Menges fears that under da Silva, giant Brazil, a republic friendly to the U.S., will become "the focal point for political and military assistance to the Communist narco-guerillas in Colombia and to anti-democratic groups seeking to overturn potentially fragile democracies in Bolivia, Ecuador, and Peru – not to mention neighboring Argentina, already in the grip of economic crisis.

"By the end of 2003, the United States might be faced with anti-American regimes in most of South America,” Menges concluded in the July 22 issue of the Weekly Standard.

Behind da Silva, says Menges, stands a powerful Castro-Chavez alliance that wants desperately to evolve into an even more powerful and dangerous "Castro-da Silva-Chavez Axis,” a moniker first coined by Treasury Secretary Paul O’Neill, who has admitted that the potential election of da Silva has him wary of "immense economic problems in all of Latin America.”

The Chavez arm of the axis is, of course, Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, who, according to Menges, has been and remains a key supporter of terrorism. Forging alliances with Iran, Iraq and Libya, Chavez has backed communist guerrillas in Colombia and radical groups in Bolivia, Ecuador and other countries.

At the direction of Cuban dictator Fidel Castro, Cuban operatives helped bring Chavez back to power, and as a quid pro quo, says Menges, Chavez has provided Castro with free oil, probably in the value of $2 billion.

Da Silva has direct and intimate ties to Castro, says Menges. Da Silva and Castro co-founded Forum of Sao Paulo back in 1990. Each year the forum convenes a veritable Who’s Who of communists, terrorists and leaders of radical political movements from Latin America, Europe and the Middle East.

"These annual meetings have been used by the participants to coordinate their plans for taking power in their respective countries and for executing actions against the United States,” explains Menges.

Arab Connection

Such intrigues include the PLO, says Menges, which along with terror agents of Hezbollah reportedly hide among the large Middle Eastern communities in Brazil and Venezuela.

He maintains that it is a "strategic priority” for Castro and Chavez to see da Silva rise to power in Brazil, which has the world's eighth-largest economy. "Already Chavez is probably contributing millions, if not tens of millions to da Silva out of the estimated $70 billion in oil revenues…."

Meanwhile, Menges adds, "It is a virtually certain that Castro is committing hundreds, perhaps thousands, of his skilled political and intelligence operatives to help da Silva win …”

According to Menges, da Silva will fit right in the Castro-Chavez orbit. Da Silva is on record saying that Brazil should have nuclear weapons, embrace communist China and perceive its enormous foreign debt load as nothing less than "economic terrorism.”

Da Silva aside, there is already momentum in Brazil pushing it in directions contrary to U.S. interests. For instance, after Brazil’s president exposed a secret plan by the military to build an atomic bomb, it came to light that elements of the military had secretly exported eight tons of uranium to Iraq.

Menges also reports the defection to Iraq of 20 missile scientists, who were disgruntled after the cancellation of the country’s ballistic missile program in 1991.

Recent moves by Workers' Party nominee da Silva, such as naming prominent industrialist Sen. Jose Alencar as his vice presidential candidate and promising to honor debt payments, contain inflation and maintain budget surpluses, have given the appearance of a move to the center.

However, Menges says da Silva’s real stripes are best revealed in remarks such as his labeling of President Bush’s Free Trade Areas of the Americas as "a USA annexation project.”

Read more on this subject in related Hot Topics:

War on Terrorism

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