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Thread: Chavez Says U.S. Ambassador Must leave

  1. #1
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    Default Chavez Says U.S. Ambassador Must leave

    Well this is interesting.

    Russia lands acft in Venzuela, and now the U.S. Ambassador is ordered out.

    http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5i...OwznQD934SGQO0

    Venezuela's Chavez says US ambassador must leave
    By CHRISTOPHER TOOTHAKER – 41 minutes ago

    CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) — President Hugo Chavez ordered the U.S. ambassador to leave Venezuela in 72 hours and said he was immediately withdrawing his ambassador from Washington.

    Chavez said Thursday night that U.S. Ambassador Patrick Duddy is no longer welcome, just as his close ally Bolivia expelled the American envoy from La Paz a day earlier.

    "They're trying to do here what they were doing in Bolivia," Chavez said, accusing Washington of trying to oust him.

    "That's enough ... from you, Yankees," he said during a televised rally, using an expletive.

    The socialist leader said Venezuela's ambassador to Washington, Bernardo Alvarez, would return to the U.S. "when there's a new government in the United States."

    The move by Chavez brings relations with Washington to a new low and raises questions about whether the diplomatic clash could hurt trade.

    Venezuela is the fourth-largest oil supplier to the United States, and
    Chavez threatened on Thursday to cut off crude shipments "if there's any aggression against Venezuela."

    He has made similar threats in the past, but the United States is his No. 1 oil client and taking such an action would debilitate his government financially.

    Chavez, long at odds with Washington, appeared to leave open the door for restoring full relations once President George W. Bush's successor is in the White House.

    "Hopefully, sooner than later, (the U.S.) will have a government that respects the peoples and the governments of Latin America," Chavez said.

    Chavez warned last month that Duddy could soon be "packing his bags" after the diplomat lamented that U.S. and Venezuelan officials have not been cooperating in the war on drugs.

    Duddy has said that deteriorating diplomatic relations between Caracas and Washington were giving drug smugglers the upper hand.

    Chavez announced the decision to oust Duddy hours after saying his government had detained a group of alleged conspirators in a plot to overthrow him. He accused the group of current and former military officers of trying to assassinate him with backing from the United States.

    U.S. officials have repeatedly denied Chavez's accusations of backing plots against him.

    Asked about Chavez's remarks, U.S. Embassy spokeswoman Jennifer Rahimi said: "We saw the speech and we're investigating, but we haven't seen anything official."

    Tensions between Venezuela and the U.S. grew this week after two Russian strategic bombers were deployed to the country at Chavez's invitation.

    "The presence of those Russian planes in Venezuela is a warning," Chavez said. "There's nothing better to keep yourself from being attacked than to dissuade."

    The president said that behind the conspiracy to overthrow him were "the same coup-plotters" who masterminded a failed 2002 coup — which he also blamed on the Bush administration.

    Chavez ordered an investigation of the alleged plot, which he said involved an active vice admiral and other former military officers. He said his intelligence services had been "following this for some time."

    Military prosecutors were questioning several officers about their alleged involvement, Defense Minister Gen. Gustavo Rangel Briceno said.

    Chavez ally Mario Silva, who hosts a program on state television, first played recordings of the purported coup plotters' phone conversations late Wednesday. It was unclear when they were recorded.

    In one, a voice identified as an ex-officer said "we're going to take" the presidential palace. In another, a voice identified as retired air force Gen. Eduardo Baez Torrealba said "there is a pilot who has 1,000 hours in an F-16" — allegedly to be used in the plot.

    Chavez said the authorities have known for some time that the conspirators were "looking for ground-to-air missiles ... to try to blow up the presidential plane ... or bomb the (presidential) palace with a plane."

    Associated Press writers Ian James and Fabiola Sanchez contributed to this report.


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    Default Re: Chavez Says U.S. Ambassador Must leave

    Adios. Chavez will obey the russkies. He wants Mexico. Bought argentina it appears.
    Guido Antonini
    Henry Rangel Silva, Director of DISIP, Venezuela's Intelligence Service, had advised one of the other defendants in the case, that Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez Frias was personally involved in the cover-up of the facts that the money seized in Buenos Aires came from the Chavez government, and was destined for the presidential campaign of Christina Kirschner.
    http://www.world-check.com/articles/...involved-anto/

    canto XXV Dante

    from purgatory, the lustful... "open your breast to the truth which follows and know that as soon as the articulations in the brain are perfected in the embryo, the first Mover turns to it, happy...."
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    Default Re: Chavez Says U.S. Ambassador Must leave

    US Expels Venezuelan Ambassador
    By Meredith Buel
    Washington
    12 September 2008

    The United States has told Venezuela that its ambassador to Washington will be expelled in the latest chapter of a growing diplomatic dispute. The U.S. also slapped sanctions on Venezuelan officials for allegedly supplying arms and helping drug traffickers in South America. VOA correspondent Meredith Buel reports from Washington.
    State Department spokesman Sean McCormack
    The U.S. State Department announced the expulsion of the Venezuelan ambassador one day after ordering Bolivia's ambassador to leave the country.

    The actions came after Bolivian President Evo Morales ordered U.S. ambassador Philip Goldberg to leave, accusing him of contributing to divisions within the country.

    On Thursday Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez ordered the U.S. ambassador in Caracas to leave, a move he said was designed to show solidarity with Bolivia.

    State Department spokesman Sean McCormack called the decisions by the two Latin American governments regrettable. "This reflects the weakness and desperation of these leaders as they face internal challenges and an inability to communicate effectively internationally in order to build international support. The charges leveled against our fine ambassadors by the leaders of Bolivia and Venezuela are false and the leaders of those countries know it," he said.

    McCormack says the actions taken by Venezuela and Bolivia are hurting their people and isolating them from the rest of the world. "No country has ever improved the well-being of its citizens by antagonizing neighbors and refraining from fruitful integration with the world's democracies. Those who shout the loudest are not making the real news in the Americas," he said.

    The latest diplomatic dispute came on the same day the U.S. accused two senior Venezuelan government officials and a former official of aiding Colombian rebels.

    The Treasury Department accused the officials of supplying weapons and protecting drug shipments for members of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, known as the FARC.

    The U.S. froze assets of the three and prohibited Americans from conducting business transactions involving those assets.
    The United States has designated the FARC as a terrorist group.

    http://voanews.com/english/2008-09-12-voa43.cfm

    Jag



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