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Chavez
accused of ties to terrorists
By Nicholas
Kralev
Washington
Times
USA
José F. Sánchez
Bureau Chief
Cuba
Research Dept.
La Nueva Cuba
May 19, 2006
Venezuela
ha permitido que sus servicios de inteligencia se transformen en
un clon del cubano mientras brinda abrigo y protección a
grupos con conexiones a terroristas en el Cercano Oriente y permite
que armamentos procedentes de sus propios arsenales lleguen a manos
de las guerrillas colombianas, afirmo un funcionario estadounidense
de alto rango.
Estas son las
razones de mayor importancia que llevaron a la admistracion del
Presidente Bush administration blacklisted Venezuela on Monday,
saying it has failed to fully cooperate on counterterrorism, Thomas
A. Shannon, assistant secretary of state for Western Hemisphere
affairs, told editors and reporters at The Washington Times.
"It's our
hope now that we've gotten their attention," he said of the
Venezuelans, who are banned from purchasing U.S. weapons because
of the listing. "We hope that we are going to be in a position
where we can talk with them and look for how we can improve [our]
cooperation."
An immediate
impact of the decision is that Venezuela will be unable to buy spare
parts from the United States to maintain its aging fleet of U.S.-made
F-16 fighter jets. A senior military adviser to President Hugo Chavez
said yesterday that Venezuela might now sell the planes to another
country, possibly Iran.
It was not clear
what Iran might do with the planes, because it is also subject to
U.S. sanctions.
The United States
stopped selling Venezuela sensitive upgrades for the F-16s even
before the latest action, which Mr. Shannon described as "regrettable."
"This is
actually an issue we've been wrestling with for quite some time,"
Mr. Shannon said. "We did this with a lot of reluctance, because
we really want to find a way to work with them and improve our cooperation,
but they are just unprepared and unwilling."
The U.S. official
said that in dealing with Mr. Chavez, "the purpose is not just
to ignore him," he said. "The purpose is not to allow
him to define the terms of the confrontation and to make sure that
as we engage with him, we are not doing so in a way that harms our
larger interests. "It would be a mistake for U.S. foreign policy
in the region to overly concentrate on the guy," Mr. Shannon
said. "If we allow ourselves to get trapped in the kind of
confrontation that he wants to have with us, it lessens our influence
with others in the region."
He said the
administration could no longer certify that Venezuela was cooperating
on counterterrorism because of its close ties with Cuba and Iran,
both of which Washington considers state sponsors of terrorism.
"Cuban
intelligence has effectively cloned itself inside Venezuelan intelligence
to the point that [our] ability to cooperate and have a relationship
with Venezuela on the intelligence side is very difficult,"
Mr. Shannon said.
"We are
worried about the kind of relationship [Mr. Chavez] wants to have
with Iran on the intelligence side," he added. Mr. Shannon,
a career diplomat serving in a post usually held by a political
appointee, also expressed concern about "groups and individuals"
in Venezuela with "links to terrorist organizations in the
Middle East."
He declined
to be more specific, but U.S. military officials have in the past
noted the presence in Latin America of groups linked to Hezbollah,
the Lebanon-based terrorist organization.
In addition,
he said, "the western part of Venezuela has always been a wild
place," and members of Colombian guerrilla groups like the
Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia [FARC] and the National Liberation
Army [ELN] have "moved with a certain amount of ease."
"But over time, we've seen what appears to be a more structured
relationship," he said. "There appears to be more movement
of weapons across the frontier into Colombia, and some of it comes
from official Venezuelan stockpiles, and it almost certainly involves
the participation of Venezuelan officials, either corrupted or not."
Venezuelan Foreign
Minister Ali Rodriguez accused the Bush administration yesterday
of climbing to "new heights of cynicism and shamelessness"
with its Monday decision on arms sales
"Behind
its despicable accusations is a useless campaign of shame designed
to isolate Venezuela, destabilize its democratic government and
prepare the political conditions for an attack," Mr. Rodriguez
said.
Mr. Shannon,
speaking broadly about Mr. Chavez's influence in the region, said
he seems popular at the moment because he is "awash" in
oil money.
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2006 News World Communications, Inc. All rights reserved
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