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Venezuela's
President Hugo Chavez speaks during an election rally
in Barcelona in the state
of Anzoategui July 12, 2012. (Credit: Reuters
/Carlos Garcia Rawlins)
|
(Reuters) -
President Hugo Chavez denied on Friday that Venezuela was a threat to anyone,
after U.S. presidential hopeful Mitt Romney criticized Barack Obama for playing
down the risk posed by the socialist leader.
Obama told
a Spanish-language television station in an interview screened this week that
Chavez's actions over recent years had not had a serious national security
impact on the United States.
Romney said
Obama's comments were "stunning and shocking" and showed a pattern of
weakness in the Democratic president's foreign policy.
In an
interview with a local Venezuelan television station on Friday, Chavez
dismissed the allegations he posed any danger.
"The
Venezuela of today is no threat to anyone," he said.
Whenever
there were efforts to improve relations between Washington and Caracas, Chavez
added, they were criticized by powerful "snipers" who issued threats
in the U.S. media.
Chavez also
cited his friendship with Juan Manuel Santos, the conservative leader of
neighboring Colombia.
"The
president of Colombia has said it, twice: Chavez is a factor of stability for
the region."
Obama's
campaign team has accused Romney, the likely Republican nominee in the November
6 election, of playing into Chavez's hands by giving him the international attention
that he wanted.
Chavez
frequently lauds Fidel Castro's communist-led revolution in Cuba, and Romney's
comments could cheer Cuban-American voters in Florida, where many oppose Castro
and Chavez.
There was a
window to improve ties between Caracas and Washington after Obama took office
in 2009 and promised more engagement with foes. Chavez toned down his tirades
against the "Yankee empire" and shook hands with Obama at a summit.
But within
months, Chavez said the U.S. leader was disillusioning the world by following
his predecessor George W. Bush's foreign policies, and he cranked up his
rhetoric again.
(Additional
reporting by Diego Ore; editing by Mohammad Zargham)

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