CARACAS, Venezuela - Hugo Chavez has called President Bush a devil, a donkey
and a drunkard. But on Wednesday the Venezuelan leader said his comments were
"nothing personal."
 Venezuelan's President Hugo Chavez, second from right, and
Haiti's President Rene Preval walk during Chavez's visit in
Port-au-Prince, Monday, March 12, 2007. [AP]
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Chavez, who had stepped up his
verbal assault during Bush's Latin American tour this week, suggested that the
two adversaries might eventually overcome their differences and even play a game
of dominos or baseball together.
"One day, if maybe George Bush and I survive all of this, we will reach old
age, and it would be good to play a game of dominos, street baseball," Chavez
said on his weekday radio program.
But he said his comments about the American leader were "nothing personal"
and that his opposition to Bush was due to "deep ethical, political, historic
and geopolitical" reasons.
Chavez has fiercely opposed US-backed free trade policies and criticized the
Bush administration's handling of Iraq and other foreign policy decisions.
Chavez said Bush was part of a long line of elitist US administrations that
have become accustomed to abusing the rest of the world, acting unilaterally and
violating human rights.
He also taunted the US leader for skirting questions about Chavez during his
Latin American tour in the past week, comparing him to a matador avoiding the
bull with his cape.
"The president of the United States takes out his cape as always, Ole!,
because he doesn't want to respond" to pointed issues raised by the Venezuelan
leader, Chavez said.
Bush on Wednesday completed a tour of Mexico, Brazil, Uruguay, Colombia and
Guatemala.
Chavez went on something of a shadow tour of Bush's trip over the same
period, visiting several regional nations including Argentina, where he led
thousands in an anti-bush rally.