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Iran's President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad (L) is welcomed by Venezuela's President Hugo Chavez at Miraflores Palace in Caracas - Source: Reuters -
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Venezuela's President Hugo Chavez used a visit by Iranian
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to brand Israel as a murderous agent
of Washington.
Chavez and Ahmadinejad, on the last leg of a tour of three
left-leaning South American nations, hugged, held hands, and
praised each other as fellow revolutionaries.
The Venezuelan singled out a comment by Israeli President Shimon
Peres during a visit this month to South America that his and
Ahmadinejad's days in power may be numbered.
"We know what the state of Israel stands for - a murderous arm of
the Yankee empire," Chavez told joint news conference.
"What the president of Israel said, we take as a threat."
Chavez broke relations with Israel this year.
He won praise in the Muslim world after branding an Israeli
military offensive in the Gaza Strip as genocide.
His fierce speeches against Israel are taken by some supporters as
a green light for anti-Semitism and walls in Caracas are often
daubed with anti-Jewish slogans.
Ahmadinejad denies the Holocaust and has called for Israel to be
wiped off the map.
OPEC members Venezuela and Iran have grown much closer in recent
years. Chavez supports Ahmadinejad's controversial nuclear program,
while Iran is helping Venezuela map uranium deposits.
The two leaders signed a raft of business and industrial agreements
relating to 129 joint projects that Chavez said ranged from
assembling bikes and producing car-parts, to processing milk and
building houses.
Ahmadinejad clinched a second term after a disputed June election
brought the worst unrest in Iran since the 1979 Islamic revolution
and a heavy-handed clampdown on opponents.
His trips to left-leaning Brazil, Bolivia and Venezuela this week
have helped cement ties with countries that back Iran's right to
develop atomic power for peaceful purposes.
Iran is under pressure to accept a UN plan aimed at checking
nuclear ambitions which it says are peaceful but the West fears
could be intended to create atomic weapons.
"What do the imperialists say? That Ahmadinejad is here because we
are making the atomic bomb here too," Chavez said.
"They're the ones with the atomic bombs, and remember the Yankee
imperialists dropped bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki," he added,
referring to the bombings of Japanese cities that ended World War
II.
A leading Chavez critic and newspaper director, Teodoro Petkoff,
mocked Ahmadinejad's visit, saying past cooperation deals had led
to little of substance, not even the planned production of
bicycles.
Karen Hooper, Latin America analyst for Stratfor consultancy,
agreed that the worst fears in Washington about Venezuela and
Iran's ties may be overblown.
"There is little danger of Venezuela being able to help Iran
proliferate," she said.
"Although Iran is short on uranium and Venezuela might have some,
even if Venezuela were to deliver sufficient quantities, the real
problem for Iran is the enrichment process, which requires
technology that Venezuela could not possibly wield."