2001:
Hugo Chavez Condemned US Cluster Bombing of Afghanistan
Following the 9/11/2001 attacks on the World Trade Center in
New York City, President Bush announced a “War on Terror,” saying: “Either you
are with us, or you’re with the terrorists.” On October 7, 2001, the US began
bombing suspected terrorist camps in Afghanistan. In the first week, U.S
bombers dropped 50 cluster bombs.[3] A single cluster bomb opens as it falls
and releases hundreds of smaller bomblets. The bomblets from a single cluster
bomb explode over a large area of up to four football fields. The 50 cluster
bombs contained 10,100 bomblets.[3]
On a TV broadcast in
Venezuela on October 29,2001, Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez held up a photo
of children killed by the US bombing. He condemned the US bombing in
Afghanistan as a “slaughter of innocents,” saying: “This is fighting terrorism
with more terrorism.” [1] He said their deaths had “no justification, just as
the attacks in New York did not either.” [1] The U.S. State Department
reproached Chavez for making the comparison as “totally inappropriate.” [1]
Following Chavez’s TV appearance, Donna Hrinak, US
Ambassador to Venezuela, was recalled to Washington for “consultations.” [1].
After returning to Venezuela, Hrinak requested a meeting with Chavez and read a
letter from President Bush demanding that Chavez publicly retract his criticism
of the US bombing.[2] Chavez refused and told Hrinak to leave his office.[2]
Hugo Chavez visited the World Trade Center 9/11 site on
November 10, 2001 and condemned the 9/11 attacks on the United States as acts
of terror.
1.
New York Times, U.S., Irritated by Criticism,
Calls Envoy Home from Venezuela, November 3, 2001.
2.
Venezuelanalysis, US Ambassadors to
Venezuela: A Chronology of Failure, February 18, 2012.
3.
Human Rights Watch, Fatally Flawed: Cluster Bombs and their use by the United
States in Afghanistan,
December 18, 2002
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