CARACAS, Venezuela - President Hugo Chavez snubbed a US overture for dialogue 
on Tuesday, saying he is always willing to talk but doubts Washington sincerely 
wants to improve relations. 
 
 
 |  Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez 
 greets his supporters upon his arrival to National Electoral Council to 
 attend the ceremony wherehe is officially announced as the re-elected 
 president in Caracas, Venezuela, Tuesday, Dec. 5, 2006. [AP]
 
 
 | 
Chavez, who overwhelmingly won another six-year term in elections Sunday, 
said if the US really wants to take meaningful steps, it would halt the war in 
Iraq and extradite a jailed Cuban militant who is wanted in Venezuela for a 1976 
airliner bombing. 
"They want dialogue but on the condition that you accept their positions," 
Chavez said at his first news conference since Sunday's vote. 
"If the government of the United States wants dialogue, Venezuela will always 
have its door open," he said. "But I doubt the US government is sincere." 
The comments from Chavez came shortly after US Ambassador William Brownfield 
congratulated Venezuelans on a peaceful vote and expressed Washington's 
willingness to seek a less conflictive relationship with Chavez. 
"The president was re-elected by the decision of the Venezuelan people," 
Brownfield told the Venezuelan broadcaster Union Radio. "We recognize that and 
we're ready, willing and eager to explore and see if we can make progress on 
bilateral issues." 
Brownfield said the United States and Venezuela share an interest in 
cooperating on issues including combatting drug trafficking, international crime 
and terrorism, as well as trade and energy issues. "Venezuela is a partner of 
the United States, for geographical reasons, for historical reasons," he said. 
The United States remains the No. 1 buyer of Venezuelan oil, but tensions 
have often precluded dialogue. Chavez accuses Washington of backing a 2002 coup 
against him, while US officials worry about the health of Venezuela's democracy 
in a government dominated by Chavez and his allies. 
Chavez also said his landslide re-election victory in a vote marked by the 
highest turnout in years showed Venezuela supports a radical turn toward 
socialism. 
Chavez spoke after the elections council formally declared him the winner, 
defeating Manuel Rosales with nearly 63 percent of the vote. Electoral officials 
said turnout was about 75 percent. Chavez won some 7.2 million votes out of more 
than 11 million cast, the results showed. 
"Those who voted for me didn't vote for me. They voted for the socialist 
plan, to build a profoundly different Venezuela," Chavez said, praising the 
Rosales camp for accepting his victory. "I want to salute the responsible 
opposition ... It was time they assumed the attitude of true democrats." 
Rosales, meanwhile, said that although the opposition suffered a setback in 
the vote, it has won a victory of sorts by uniting forces to challenge Chavez in 
the future. 
"This is a political triumph in the middle of an electoral setback," Rosales 
said. "We are going to continue fighting." 
Recent polls suggest Venezuelans hold a variety of opinions about socialism. 
An Associated Press-Ipsos poll last month found that 37 percent favored a 
socialist economic system, 22 percent favored capitalism and 33 percent 
preferred a mix of the two. 
Eighty-four percent opposed adopting a political system similar to that of 
Cuba, which has become Venezuela's close ally under Chavez. 
During the news conference, Chavez read a note from ailing Cuban leader Fidel 
Castro congratulating him on his victory. Chavez said he could tell from the 
signature that Castro was gaining his strength back. 
On Tuesday, Cuba's Communist newspaper published a brief message on its front 
page that was signed with Castro's name. 
"The victory was resounding, crushing and without parallel in the history of 
our America," read the message in the Communist Party daily Granma. 
Chavez has said he plans to seek constitutional reforms to end presidential 
term limits and enable him to run again in 2012. Rosales pledged to fight that 
bid with a proposal instead to reduce terms to four years. 
Chavez also has said he plans to deepen oil-funded social programs aimed at 
reducing poverty. He says he will fully respect private property, though he also 
pledged to deepen agrarian reform and has hinted he might nationalize 
Venezuela's largest telecommunications company. 
Electoral observers from the European Union said in a preliminary report 
Tuesday that they backed the results of Sunday's election and that overall the 
vote was carried out smoothly and securely. 
However, the EU mission noted a few areas of concerns, including a high 
participation of public employees in Chavez's campaign events, unbalanced 
coverage in both state and private media, and a heavy use of government 
advertising by Chavez, and to a lesser degree, Rosales. 
Monica Frassoni, the Italian head of the EU mission, said complaints had been 
received of alleged pressure on public employees to vote for Chavez. She said 
such pressure would violate electoral laws, but the mission was not able to 
evaluate those complaints.