Cuban President Fidel Castro warned the United States on Saturday
against plotting to kill his most important ally, Venezuela's leftist
President Hugo Chavez. "I say to world public opinion: if they
assassinate Chavez, the responsibility will fall squarely on the
president of the United States, George W. Bush," Castro said. The Cuban
leader, who was the target of CIA assassination plots after his 1959
revolution steered Cuba toward Soviet Communism, gave no evidence that
Chavez's life was in danger. But he said the United States would be
responsible for killing Chavez even if the Venezuelan military was to
carry out the assassination. He added: "If they can eliminate him, they
will." Populist Chavez has led oil-rich Venezuela into a close alliance
with Cuba, raising fears in Washington of Cuban-style communism taking
hold in the South American country, a major supplier of oil to the
United States. Castro, 78, boasted that he had survived at least 100
attempts on his life. CIA plots against him included such capers as
poisoned cigars, an exploding conch shell and toxin to make his beard
fall out. "This comes from a survivor. I have survived," he said in a
nearly six-hour speech that lasted into the early hours of Saturday.
Pictured above: On this day 1959: Castro sworn in as Cuban PM [more]
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