Venezuela’s Chavez denounces military action in Libya

CARACAS, (Reuters) – Venezuelan President Hugo  Chavez said today that military action in Libya by the  West’s “men of war” is aimed at seizing the North African  country’s oil reserves.
Chavez spoke as a five-country coalition including the  United States, France, Britain, Canada and Italy launched  strikes on Libya designed to cripple Muammar Gaddafi’s air  defenses.
“They want to seize Libya’s oil and they care nothing about  the lives of the Libyan people,” Chavez said on state TV,  wearing a red hard-hat after touring a road building project in  a poor neighborhood of Caracas.
“These are the men of war … what irresponsibility. Behind  this is the hand of the United States and its European allies,  instead of taking the path that we have modestly proposed.”
Venezuela’s socialist leader is the most vocal critic of  the United States in Latin America and an ally of Gaddafi.
Chavez announced a vague peace plan for Libya this month  and said Gaddafi supported foreign mediation.
But it fizzled after Gaddafi’s son, Saif al Islam, said  they did not need help from friends in the South American  country who lived very far away and had “no idea” about Libya.
Chavez and Gaddafi are military men who cast themselves as  anti-imperialist revolutionaries. They built an alliance based  on left-wing economic ideas and membership of their nations in  the OPEC oil producer group.
Chavez has presented Gaddafi with a replica of the sword of  South American independence hero Simon Bolivar, and Libya had  named a soccer stadium near Benghazi after Chavez — which has  since been renamed by Libya’s rebel.
Chavez denounced the operations as a “pulverization” of  international law and as a dangerous and unwarranted  intervention in the internal affairs of a sovereign state.
“Another imposition of the warmongering policies of the  Imperial Yankee and its allies is unfortunate, and it is  unfortunate that the United Nations endorses the war, in  contravention of its fundamental principles,” he said.
“We know what is going to happen: bombs, bombs, war, more  suffering for the people … this is the hand of capitalism.”