On Thursday, the Wall Street Journal editorial page
reported that former vice president Al Gore had
declined to meet with Colombian President Alvaro
Uribe, citing concerns about human rights.
Never mind why Uribe was seeking a meeting with a has-been pol
— the story of the shabby treatment of an American ally continues
to get worse.
According to sources within the House Democratic leadership,
Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi has denied the
request for a meeting with Uribe when he comes to Washington next
week. Uribe’s staff has attempted to set up a meeting with Pelosi,
offering to come to her offices with Uribe if necessary. Pelosi has
refused the meeting.
“She has third parties who have encouraged her not to take the
meeting,” says a leadership aide, who said a coalition of labor
organizations and MoveOn.org had been pressuring her to not meet
with Uribe. “We’ve never seen anything like it. It’s not like we’re
talking about some family from San Francisco who stopped by her
office unannounced. This is the president of a country.”
In Colombia, Uribe has been struggling against communist
terrorist groups financed by Venezuelan dictator Hugo
Chavez, as well as leftist political pressure internally.
All while attempting to work with the U.S. against
narco-trafficking. “He’s a friend and an ally,” says a State
Department source, who was unaware of Pelosi’s snub. “I’d be
surprised that one of our national leaders would not meet with a
strategic partner of the United States of America.”
Earlier this week Pelosi declined to meet with the man
overseeing U.S. military forces in Iraq, Gen. David
Petreaus.
Pelosi, though, is willing to meet with America’s enemies.
Against the advice of the State Department, Pelosi pressed for and
did meet with the dictator of Syria earlier this month. According
to leadership staff, she has members of her personal staff working
on initial plans for a trip to Venezuela, perhaps in the fall, to
meet with Chavez.