Published: 1:58PM Tuesday December 15, 2009
Source: Reuters
Source: Reuters
Former Cuban leader Fidel Castro warned that US President Barack
Obama's "kindly smile" could not be trusted, saying Washington was
plotting against leftist Latin American governments including
Venezuela's.
Castro, 83, who ran Cuba for nearly 50 years before poor health led
him to hand the presidency to his younger brother Raul last year,
initially welcomed Obama's election but has been increasingly
critical.
In a letter read by Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez at a gathering
of leftist leaders in Havana, Castro said the United States was
backing rightist movements in a bid to weaken Chavez and other
regional socialist leaders.
"The empire's real intentions are obvious, this time beneath the
kindly smile and African-American face of Barack Obama," Castro's
letter said.
"The empire is mobilizing behind rightist forces in Latin America
to strike Venezuela and, in doing so, strike (other leftist)
states," the letter said.
Castro, who came to power at the head of the 1959 Cuban revolution,
criticized Washington's stance on a June 28 coup in Honduras and a
deal to allow US troops more access to Colombian military
bases.
The elder Castro has been seen only in occasional photos and videos
since having surgery for an undisclosed intestinal ailment in July
2006.
He still has a behind-the-scenes role in government and keeps a
high profile through his writings.
Last week, he chided Obama for accepting the 2009 Nobel Peace Prize
as he steps up the US war effort in Afghanistan by deploying more
troops.
Chavez, Washington's most outspoken critic in Latin America, called
Obama the Nobel War Prize winner.
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