Skip to content
Vagobond
Menu
  • Home
  • About
  • Vagobond Podcast Adventures
  • Vagobond Travel Videos
  • Contact
Menu

Go Hugo! You can be the replacement! We are tired!

Posted on October 2, 2006 by CD

I dream of a day when the United States is just another country among countries. I would love for my country to be 3 or 4 seperate countries among countries. Maybe if Chavez can get enough influence, the United States can finally call an end to this insanity of 50 states and a bunch of territories and all these foreign wars.
cd

MANAGUA, Nicaragua – The recent military build-up in Venezuela by U.S. nemesis President Hugo Chavez has other countries in the region worried that the weapons could end up in the hands of terrorists, Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld said Monday.
“I can understand neighbors being concerned,” said Rumsfeld, who is attending a meeting of Western hemisphere military leaders here this week.
Asked whether he believes Venezuelan officials’ contention that the weapon buys are strictly for defense and not a threat to the region, Rumsfeld said, “I don’t know of anyone threatening Venezuela — anyone in this hemisphere.”
Venezuela’s defense minister Gen. Raul Isaias Baduel, who is also attending the meeting, said Monday that his country’s recent military spending spree wasn’t “an arms race,” despite Washington’s protests.
Chavez, however, has repeatedly charged that United States is planning to invade his country, a claim American officials dismiss as preposterous. And he said Sunday that he’s heard the Bush administration is plotting to assassinate him or topple his regime.
U.S. Army Gen. Bantz J. Craddock, chief of U.S. Southern Command, called the accusation “mindless” and “way over the top.” But he also agreed that Venezuela’s recent deal to buy roughly $3 billion worth of arms from Russia — including rifles, jet fighters and helicopters — is triggering “more concern from more countries.”
Rumsfeld did not meet privately with Baduel, but did briefly exchanged pleasantries with him.
“I have spoken to Mr. Rumsfeld to convince him that he should try smoking Venezuela’s good tobacco,” Baduel told the Associated Press. “He said he doesn’t smoke, that his wife wouldn’t let him.”
Meanwhile, Craddock and other officials said Monday that they don’t see a credible threat in Venezuela’s call for the creation of an anti-U.S. military coalition with other leftist countries in the region. Craddock said Brazil’s defense minister told the gathering he doesn’t see a need for a regional military organization.
Gen. Moises Omar Hallesleven, the commander of the Nicaraguan military, told U.S. reporters he is not concerned about the Chavez effort.
Venezuela, he said through an interpreter, has very weak influence in the region. Hallesleven also vowed that as long as he is its leader, the Nicaraguan military will remain apolitical and professional — even if Sandinista leader Daniel Ortega wins the upcoming presidential election.
Chavez grabbed headlines recently when he called Bush “the devil” and slammed U.S. leaders for trying to block his country from taking a seat on the
U.N. Security Council.
U.S. officials have long considered Chavez a destabilizing force. And they have suggested that Venezuela would make the Security Council unworkable if the nation were to win its bid against U.S.-backed Guatemala for a rotating council seat.
Rumsfeld, in his formal remarks to the gathering, also made a reference to the other main U.S. antagonist in the region: Cuba.
He said he hoped that one day soon “the final holdout in our hemisphere against the democratic sweep of history will give its citizens the right to choose their own destiny and will participate in our conference.”
Rumsfeld also called for more regional cooperation in the fight against terrorism.
“These new challenges can be solved only if we work together to protect our free democratic institutions and to provide economic opportunities for our people,” Rumsfeld said.
The military conference, along with a
NATO defense ministers meeting and other military visits in the Balkans last week, have largely kept Rumsfeld out of Washington for the past week, where there is renewed debate on his stewardship of the
Iraq war.
He said he will not resign, and openly questioned why reporters were so focused on a new book, “State of Denial” by Washington Post assistant managing editor Bob Woodward, that is critical of the defense chief.
Clearly frustrated with repeated questions about his job security, Rumsfeld told reporters he has not read Woodward’s book and is not likely to.

Share this:

  • Click to share on Bluesky (Opens in new window) Bluesky
  • Click to share on Mastodon (Opens in new window) Mastodon
  • Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to share on Telegram (Opens in new window) Telegram
  • Click to share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
  • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X

Like this:

Like Loading...

Related

Leave a ReplyCancel reply

Join Us!

Join the Discord

Baoism.org : BE HAPPY!

Recent Posts

  • The Last Vagobond Post
  • Thoughts on Returning Home to Japan – Spring Begins in Hokkaido
  • The Digital Divide – A Week in Shanghai and Hong Kong – China Rising
  • Introducing the Pader’s – Baoist AI Personalities
  • Future World 2323 – It’s Darker and Stranger Than You Think

Vagobond Links

  • VM Discord
  • Vagobond Substack
  • Vagobond Medium
  • CD’s Cent Page
  • CD’s Amazon Author Page
  • VoiceMarkr App

Satoshi Manor Videos

Vagobond Magazine

MicroVictory Army

Baldism.org

VoiceMarkr

Hawaii Travel

  • Big Island
  • Kauai
  • Lanai
  • Maui
  • Molokai
  • Oahu

Beyond Hawaii Travel

  • Australia
  • Belgium
  • Bulgaria
  • Canada
  • China
  • Dubai
  • Egypt
  • France
  • Germany
  • Greece
  • Iceland
  • Indonesia
  • Ireland
  • Italy
  • Japan
  • Luxembourg
  • Macedonia
  • Malaysia
  • Morocco
  • Singapore
  • South Korea
  • Spain
  • Sri Lanka
  • Turkey
  • USA Mainland
  • Vietnam

Oahu Travel

  • Oahu
  • Oahu Tourist Attractions
  • Oahu Neighborhoods
  • Oahu Beaches
  • Oahu Food and Drink
  • Oahu’s Natural Beauty
  • Hawaiian History and Culture
© 2025 Vagobond | Powered by Minimalist Blog WordPress Theme
Vagobond is now an archive. My new work lives at Indignified.com.

All content here is pre-May 2025. For my latest anti-capitalist fiction, world-building, and exile rants, visit:
→ Indignified.com or subscribe to my Substack.

— CD Familias (Wondering why my name is different? Read about it at INDIGNIFIED

%d