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Bush rebuked by the hand of God

by Open-Publishing - Monday 7 November 2005
2 comments

Governments USA South/Latin America

By Phil Davison

George Bush presumably knew before this weekend that the "hand of God" could be merciless. He certainly does now. Maradona, rather than Iraq, was uppermost on the US President’s mind this weekend as he attended a summit of leaders from the Western hemisphere in the Argentinian beach resort of Mar del Plata.

As domestic polls informed him that he was increasingly mistrusted by his fellow Americans, Mr Bush was clearly mortified to be called "human trash" by Latin America’s equivalent of Michael Jordan - the Argentinian football legend Diego Maradona.

Despite being a compatriot of Ché Guevara, Maradona is an unlikely revolutionary. He cheated at football but was forgiven on account of his genius on the field. He also screwed up with drugs and was forgiven for that, too, because he fought it and, so far, is overcoming it. But could he be a nail in George Bush’s political coffin? Don’t rule it out.

Anyone who has spent time in Latin America recently knows Mr Bush is the least popular US president among Latin Americans in history. Five Latin American countries have voted in left-of-centre governments since he took office. From the indigenous people through to the middle classes and even among the elite, Latin Americans increasingly seek not the American dream, but the Latin American dream. They are disillusioned with what Maradona yesterday called "the American Empire".

The so-called Fourth Summit of the Americas on Friday and yesterday was supposed to be about eradicating poverty and spreading democracy. With all respect to the diplomatic envoys and the hundreds of millions of pounds spent on making the summit happen, little significant was ever going to come out of it. As it turned out, the theme of "Bush, get out!" was eerily reminiscent of the "Yanqui, go home" of the Eighties in Nicaragua, El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras, where the US attempted to prop up military-backed regimes.

While Mr Bush jetted in with an entourage of advisers, diplomats, soldiers and secret service men of unheard-of proportions, Maradona and Mr Bush’s new nemesis, Hugo "the new Castro" Chavez, President of oil-soaked Venezuela, rumbled in on a "peace train" from Buenos Aires. Mr Chavez, who calls Bush Señor Peligro (Mr Danger) and has accused him of planning to invade Venezuela for its oil, made his point by first attending a parallel, anti-Bush "People’s Summit".

"If [Mister Bush] is desperate enough to invade us, he will find himself in a 100-year war," Mr Chavez, a retired army colonel, said. Behind Mr Chavez in the city’s multi-sports stadium was an enormous portrait of Guevara. In front of him were 25,000 people and banners telling Bush that "YOU are the terrorist" and comparing him with Hitler for his policies in Iraq.

Even the mayor of Mar del Plata, Daniel Katz, was upset that Mr Bush was there. "Bush probably doesn’t even know that people here are so solidly against him," he said. Mr Katz earlier this year described the American President as "the most disagreeable man on the planet".

Before Mr Bush left last night for Brazil, around 1,000 protesters, ostensibly separate from the "People’s Summit" of Maradona and Mr Chavez, burned US flags and smashed shop windows in Mar del Plata.

George Bush presumably knew before this weekend that the "hand of God" could be merciless. He certainly does now. Maradona, rather than Iraq, was uppermost on the US President’s mind this weekend as he attended a summit of leaders from the Western hemisphere in the Argentinian beach resort of Mar del Plata.

As domestic polls informed him that he was increasingly mistrusted by his fellow Americans, Mr Bush was clearly mortified to be called "human trash" by Latin America’s equivalent of Michael Jordan - the Argentinian football legend Diego Maradona.

Despite being a compatriot of Ché Guevara, Maradona is an unlikely revolutionary. He cheated at football but was forgiven on account of his genius on the field. He also screwed up with drugs and was forgiven for that, too, because he fought it and, so far, is overcoming it. But could he be a nail in George Bush’s political coffin? Don’t rule it out.

Anyone who has spent time in Latin America recently knows Mr Bush is the least popular US president among Latin Americans in history. Five Latin American countries have voted in left-of-centre governments since he took office. From the indigenous people through to the middle classes and even among the elite, Latin Americans increasingly seek not the American dream, but the Latin American dream. They are disillusioned with what Maradona yesterday called "the American Empire".

The so-called Fourth Summit of the Americas on Friday and yesterday was supposed to be about eradicating poverty and spreading democracy. With all respect to the diplomatic envoys and the hundreds of millions of pounds spent on making the summit happen, little significant was ever going to come out of it. As it turned out, the theme of "Bush, get out!" was eerily reminiscent of the "Yanqui, go home" of the Eighties in Nicaragua, El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras, where the US attempted to prop up military-backed regimes.

While Mr Bush jetted in with an entourage of advisers, diplomats, soldiers and secret service men of unheard-of proportions, Maradona and Mr Bush’s new nemesis, Hugo "the new Castro" Chavez, President of oil-soaked Venezuela, rumbled in on a "peace train" from Buenos Aires. Mr Chavez, who calls Bush Señor Peligro (Mr Danger) and has accused him of planning to invade Venezuela for its oil, made his point by first attending a parallel, anti-Bush "People’s Summit".

"If [Mister Bush] is desperate enough to invade us, he will find himself in a 100-year war," Mr Chavez, a retired army colonel, said. Behind Mr Chavez in the city’s multi-sports stadium was an enormous portrait of Guevara. In front of him were 25,000 people and banners telling Bush that "YOU are the terrorist" and comparing him with Hitler for his policies in Iraq.

Even the mayor of Mar del Plata, Daniel Katz, was upset that Mr Bush was there. "Bush probably doesn’t even know that people here are so solidly against him," he said. Mr Katz earlier this year described the American President as "the most disagreeable man on the planet".

Before Mr Bush left last night for Brazil, around 1,000 protesters, ostensibly separate from the "People’s Summit" of Maradona and Mr Chavez, burned US flags and smashed shop windows in Mar del Plata.

http://news.independent.co.uk/world/americas/article325146.ece

Forum posts

  • For non soccer fans I would like to set the record straight regarding some comments or impressions left by this British author about Diego Maradona.
    1) His name and that of Pele are known by hundreds of millions through out the world not just in the Americas. With the greatest of respect for Michael Jordan he pales in name recognition compared to number ten. Mohamed Ali’s name would be more universally recognized and a better comparison.
    2) "Compatriot" of course has two meanings, a person from ones own country, or a colleague. Guevara left Argentina in the middle fifties and was killed when Diego was only seven years old in 1967 in Bolivia.
    So for any right wing wingnuts out there, they didn’t travel in the same company and never met.
    3) His awareness of Guevara was probably acquired during the time he spent mainly in Cuba from 2001-2005 in drug rehabilitation, after having previously attended the best Swiss clinics.
    He was not "forgiven for drugs", good treatment and hard work overcoming his cocaine addiction for this he was applauded by his fans.
    4) I don’t think George Bush had a clue who Diego Maradona was until he arrived in Argentina and if he didn’t watch TV during the Summit he won’t even be able to recognize him. It was Hugo Chavez that he wanted to avoid.
    5) " he cheated" lets put this in some context: the following is a more complete explanation of that famous incident that is alluded to in Phil Davidson’s article.
    It was the two goals he scored in the Quarter-Final game against England which cemented his legend. Action replay footage showed that the first goal was scored with the aid of his hand. He later claimed it was the " Hand of God" and described it as " A little of the hand of God, and a little of the head of Maradona" implying that God was ultimately responsible for the goal,because the referee had missed the handball offense. However, on 22 August 2005 Maradona acknowledged on his new television talk show that he hit the ball with his hand purposely and that he immediately knew the goal was illegitimate. He recalled thinking right after the goal that " I was waiting for my teammates to embrace me, and no one came...I told them, " Come hug me, or the referee isn’t going to allow it" In contrast, however, Maradona’s second goal was an uncontroversial and impressive display of footballing skill. He ran half the length of the pitch, passing five English players and beating the goalkeeper. This goal was voted Goal of the Century in a 2002 online poll conducted by FIFA
    In another FIFA poll he was named player of the century. For reason unexplained FIFA then appointed a "Football Family" which elected to place Pele alongside Maradona.
    I can understand why a British reporter might want to comment on cheating, or perhaps he just doesn’t know much about football. He might also bone up a little bit more about Chavez and Bush.
    Otherwise its a fairly accurate article.

    cheers, jt

  • South America needs to built it’s own economy. The anglo/american pattern has been proven wrong already. Those who proclaim open markets don’t mean it, because the subsidize, or just have mechanism in place to protect their local markets. South America once used in the same way the still use Africa, as a supplier of raw material finally got the message.
    Japanese companies have done tremendous damage to the environment in Brazil. Don’t allow this again to happen.