Venezuela sells gas to Iran to reinforce front against US

Source Guardian (UK)

Venezuela is to sell gas to Iran to alleviate its ally's crippling fuel shortage and to bolster their common front against the US, it was announced on July 3. President Hugo Chávez made the promise during a visit to Tehran where he pledged an "axis of unity" with President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, according to Venezuela's oil minister, Rafael Ramirez, who was part of the visiting delegation. "Yes, Iranians have asked to buy gasoline from us and we have accepted this demand," he told the Iranian daily newspaper Shargh, without elaborating. The announcement came a week after Iran imposed fuel rationing which brought riots in several cities and increased anger at the government's failure to ease economic hardship. Iran is a major oil producer but a shortage of refineries forces it to import more than half of its domestic needs. Rationing was an attempt to reduce consumption and the government subsidies which keep gas prices artificially low. The announcement signalled an extension of Chávez's use of Venezuela's considerable oil reserves to forge alliances against the US. "The two countries will, united, defeat the imperialism of North America," he told reporters. With a smile he added: "When I come to Iran, Washington gets upset." It was not immediately clear how much gas would be shipped from the Caribbean to the Persian Gulf, nor whether Tehran would receive a discount on the grounds it was a revolutionary "brother" in standing up to the west. The two presidents signed a number of other economic agreements, including for a dairy factory in Venezuela, a methanol factory in Iran and efforts to boost each other's exports to Latin America and the Indian subcontinent.