Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad will seek support from Latin America's leftist leaders on a tour starting on Sunday after tough new Western sanctions targeted Iran's oil industry.
With
one eye on his standing at home ahead of March's parliamentary
election, Ahmadinejad will meet other anti-American presidents on a trip
Washington said showed Iran was "desperate for friends."
His
first stop is OPEC-ally Venezuela, where Ahmadinejad has been assured a
warm welcome by President Hugo Chavez. He will also visit Cuba and
Ecuador and attend the inauguration of re-elected Nicaraguan President
Daniel Ortega.
"We
are making absolutely clear to countries around the world that now is
not the time to be deepening ties, not security ties, not economic ties,
with Iran," U.S. State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said on
Friday.
"As
the regime feels increasing pressure, it is desperate for friends and
flailing around in interesting places to find new friends," Nuland said.
President
Barack Obama signed new measures into law on New Year's Eve that will
make it harder for most countries to buy Iranian oil. The European Union
is expected to announce some form of ban on Iranian oil by the end of
the month.
The
sanctions are aimed at forcing Iran to halt its nuclear work, which the
United States and its allies say is aimed at producing bombs. Iran says
it is for power generation only.
The
sanctions are already hurting Iranians. Faced with rising prices and a
falling rial currency, they have been queuing at banks to convert
savings into dollars.
"The
representative of the dignified people of Iran will be welcome," Chavez
said last week as Iranian naval exercises helped push up global oil
prices.
But
it remains to be seen how far Chavez would go in backing Iran's threat
to close the Strait of Hormuz, the world's most important oil shipping
lane, or how much he could undermine the sanctions by providing fuel or
cash to the Islamic Republic.
Other
regional leaders due to receive Ahmadinejad, such as Ortega and
Ecuador's Rafael Correa, have a similar ideological stance to Chavez but
fewer resources available to help Iran.
Ahmadinejad,
who is subordinate to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei on foreign
policy, has said little about the spike in tensions with the West,
leaving it to military commanders to make the most bellicose statements.
Under
increasing fire from rival hardliners aiming to stop his supporters
making gains in the March election, Ahmadinejad will hope the foreign
tour will show voters he still has international clout and is not, as
his critics say, a lame duck.
With
less than 18 months left of his presidency, he will be keen to preserve
his legacy as a leader who stood up to Washington in a changing Middle
East.
PRIVATE TALKS
The
friendly relations between Ahmadinejad and Chavez are a growing source
of concern for Obama. In a newspaper interview last month, he said:
"Sooner or later, Venezuela's people will have to decide what possible
advantage there is in having relations with a country that violates
fundamental human rights and is isolated from most of the world."
Chavez
replied that Obama should mind his own business. In the past, Chavez
has threatened to stop oil exports to the United States, but has never
followed through.
He
and Ahmadinejad can be expected to announce new deals during the trip.
Iran has built homes, dairies and vehicle factories in the South
American country. But analysts say their private talks are likely to be
more significant.
The
Washington D.C.-based Center for Strategic and International Studies
(CSIS) think-tank said this week Iran had funded joint ventures across
the region that could help it sidestep trade restrictions with the West,
and Venezuela led the rest of Latin America in such arrangements.
"In
almost all cases, joint ventures and investments seem directed at
either political objectives or possible clandestine technology transfer,
not profits," the CSIS said in a report.
It
said Iran wanted to challenge the United States in its own backyard and
the easiest way was to "exploit" the loose alliance of leftist leaders
headed by Chavez.
But Chavez's close ties with Iran are likely to be jumped on by opponents who hope to unseat him at an election in October.
"I
think it's absolutely harmful, a visit that gives no help at all to
international politics, that keeps away investors and will contribute to
bringing chaos to the country," opposition lawmaker Edgar Zambrano told
Reuters TV.
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