While the Bush administration has been fighting wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, relations between the United States and the countries of Latin America have become a festering sore - the worst for years.
Virtually anyone paying attention to events in Venezuela and Nicaragua in the north to Peru and Bolivia further south, plus in different ways Mexico, Argentina and Brazil, comes to the same conclusion: there is a wave of profound anti-American feeling stretching from the Texas border to the Antarctic.
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While Washington's attention turned to al-Qaeda, the Taleban, Iraq and now Iran, in country after county in Latin America voters chose governments of the left, sometimes the implacably "anti-gringo" left, loudly out of sympathy with George Bush's vision of the world, and reflecting a continent with the world's greatest gulf between rich and poor.
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{Nicaraguan President Violeta Chamorro} said even a slice of the money used to back the anti-communist Contra guerrillas could build a new Nicaragua - but she predicted that if she won the election Washington would declare victory - and then cut off the money supply. She was right.
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more:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/4861320.stmThis is apparently the first in a planned series of articles, with a more-or-less 'diary' structure. Toward the end it becomes more arts/entertainment-centered, but there are lots of interesting glimpses in there.
Funny, I didn't read anything about all this in the papers.:(
ON EDIT: link to the program page directly:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/programmes/newsnight/default.stmToday's program:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/programmes/newsnight/4873676.stm"Newsnight's
Greg Palast will be reporting from Venezuela on the man who is the biggest thorn in George Bush's side - President Hugo Chavez."