Chávez Talks to The Nation
The Editors
Hugo Chávez on Barack Obama, the Honduran crisis, and domestic successes and challenges.
The Editors
Hugo Chávez on Barack Obama, the Honduran crisis, and domestic successes and challenges.
Greg Grandin
Hugo Chávez talks about his relationship with Barack Obama, the Honduran crisis, plans to extend the Pentagon's presence in Colombia, and domestic successes and challenges.
Chesa Boudin : Venezuela
There are at least three reasons why the world should congratulate Venezuela's Hugo Chávez on his recent success abolishing term limits.
GRIT TV : Venezuela
Venezuela's Hugo Chávez is willing to engage in direct talks with President Obama. How will this effect US policy in the region?
Brett Story & VideoNation : Foreign Leaders & Political Figures
Actor-director Sean Penn debunks the many myths surrounding Cuba's Raúl Castro and Venezuela's Hugo Chávez.
The Cuban President talks about Obama, Guantánamo and the Pentagon; the Venezuelan President considers human rights and the next US administration.
Is Venezuela's president undoing his country's experiment in democracy?
Elisabeth Young-Bruehl : Student Movements
A student movement influenced by Hannah Arendt is emerging in Venezuela. What do they think of the Bolivarian Revolution?
Joaquín Villalobos : Venezuela
Oil money allows Hugo Chávez to do many things, but it will never be enough to buy a revolution.
Although the United States itches to do away with Hugo Chávez, his socialist policies are alleviating poverty and earning the people's trust. To Bush's chagrin, the Venezuelan leader is here to stay.
The United States may well have its way and exclude Venezuela from the UN Security Council, in retribution for Hugo Chávez's diabolical roast of George W. Bush. But doesn't the world have larger issues to worry about?
Michael Blanding : International Organizations
The World Social Forum in Caracas provided living proof of alternative political and social visions, but raised new questions about government co-optation.
Jordana Timerman : George W. Bush
Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez and Argentine soccer hero Diego Maradona led thousands in a massive rebuke of George W. Bush, his trade policies and his neoconservative agenda at the Summit of the Americas in Mar del Plata Argentina. Despite some sporadic violence, the protest focused on developing indigenous alternatives to US-led trade initiatives policies.
What Venezuela's revolution is made of.
