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Politics : The Donkey's Inn -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Dorine Essey who wrote (5302)11/10/2002 9:55:35 AM
From: TigerPaw  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 15516
 
I had nothing to do with winning these Senate and House seats
That is his way of reminding the new congress that they owe him. You will see more checks than balances (pork checks).
TP



To: Dorine Essey who wrote (5302)1/10/2003 2:57:06 PM
From: Mephisto  Respond to of 15516
 
Bush sidelines his Cuban hardman

[ Reich]…" used to be a lobbyist for Lockheed
Martin and Bacardi rum."


Duncan Campbell in Los Angeles
Friday January 10, 2003
The Guardian

The Bush administration yesterday announced a new job - in
effect a demotion - for Otto Reich, the controversial
Cuban-American who has been responsible for policy in Latin
America for the past year.

The decision is a climbdown which acknowledges that the
Senate, even with its new Republican majority, will not confirm
Mr Reich as assistant secretary of state for the western
hemisphere.

Mr Reich, a hardline anti-communist, has been accused of
supporting terrorists in Central America and appearing to
welcome a military coup in Venezuela.


The White House spokesman Ari Fleischer announced that Mr
Reich would be joining the National Security Office in a minor
role. It was described by Latin American analysts as a
consolation prize.

Mr Fleischer said Mr Reich would be reporting to the national
security adviser, Condoleezza Rice, in his new post.

"Ambassador Reich has a distinguished record of service to the
United States both outside and in government," he said.

The new chairman of the Senate foreign relations committee, the
moderate Republican Richard Lugar, had already made it clear
that he would not vote to confirm Mr Reich.

The administration had considered submitting his name again
but has decided to avoid an embarrassing rebuff by the
committee.

Mr Reich was able to occupy the post last year because
President Bush used a formula called a recess appointment,
which let him take office without Senate confirmation.

In November he was temporarily named as the state
department's special envoy to Latin America, reporting to the
secretary of state, Colin Powell, but Mr Powell was said to be
uncomfortable about the presence of such a controversial figure.

Now he has been moved again to a lesser post.

"This is a consolation prize, a face-saver," said Larry Birns, the
director of the Council on Hemispheric Affairs which monitors
Latin American politics.

He said that Mr Reich had originally been appointed to placate
"the Miami Cubans", who are a significant body of support for
the governor of Florida, Jeb Bush, the president's brother.


He added that Mr Powell had become increasingly aware of the
negative effect Mr Reich's position had on Latin American
relations, particularly since the election of the leftwingers Ignacio
Lula da Silva in Brazil and Lucio Gutierrez in Ecuador.

Last April Mr Reich came under scrutiny for apparently
welcoming the military coup which led to the brief removal from
office of President Hugo Chavez in Venezuela.

More recently he angered the Venezuelan government by
saying: "An election is not sufficient to call a country a
democracy."

The Venezuelan vice-president, Jose Vicente Rangels, called
him "a clown".

Mr Reich, 57,
rose to promi nence in the 80s when he was a
public diplomacy adviser at the state department.

He used his office to promote the cause of the contras,
who
were then trying to overthrow the leftwing Sandinista government
in Nicaragua. An investigation by the comptroller general found
that Mr Reich's office had engaged in "prohibited, covert
propaganda" on the contras' behalf.


He has been accused by his critics of supporting terrorism by
his assistance to the contras. He was also accused of assisting
the convicted Cuban terrorist Orlando Bosch to gain the right to
live in the US, an accusation he has denied.


The assistant secretary of state appointment will probably be
taken by the Panamanian-American Roger Francisco Noriega,
who has been the US representative to the Organisation of
American States, and is considered less confrontational.

Mr Birns predicted that Mr Reich would shortly return to the
business world, where he used to be a lobbyist for Lockheed
Martin and Bacardi rum.


guardian.co.uk