THE
PENTAGON'S PLANS TO INVADE VENEZUELA
Dateline: Colombia Support Network
- November 19, 2005
By Noelio Tiuna
AIN Special Service
Photo by Bernie
A.N.S.W.E.R.
Coalition
Terrorist Luis Posada Carriles, another fugitive
of Venezuelan law, is a "guest" of the US immigration
service, which has refused to extradite Posada Carriles to Caracas. |
The United States has
military contingency plans aimed against Venezuela, contrary to
the UN Charter and the document guiding relations between members
of the Organizations of American States (OAS).
A recent article in the Washington Post -which has
not been refuted by the Pentagon-, affirms that the Defense Department
has prepared a plan to create a potential conflict with the South
American nation, considered a threat to US strategic security by
the White House.
William M. Arkin, in a column published November
2, said that Venezuela was identified as a "threat" in
this year's Pentagon analysis and is foreseen to remain so for the
period 2008-2013. The fifth greatest oil exporter in the world and
among the principal exporters of crude to the US, Venezuela is included
on the list of states which pose the most danger to the US, sharing
that position with the North Korea and Iran, both considered by
the Bush administration as nuclear threats.
According to the daily, the White House sees President
Hugo Chavez as promoting revolutions in Latin America and accuses
him of financing rebels in Colombia - where there are US military
advisors are participating in a long-term domestic conflict.
Venezuela has suffered from the instability of the
situation in Columbia, particularly that country's use of paramilitary
forces paid for by the interests behind the failed coup attempt
against the Venezuelan leader.
But when we look into what the Pentagon has planed
in the land of Bolivar, we cannot forget the history that explains
the hostile escalation of actions by the current Republican administration
against the Bolivarian Revolution.
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The participation of
both the CIA and the former US military mission in Caracas in the
short-lived coup attempt headed by Pedro Carmona is not conjectural
journalism.
The government of George W. Bush never condemned
the coup attempt, despite the US being a signatory of the Democratic
Letter of the OAS. On the contrary, they welcomed, encouraged and
participated in the coup.
Nor is it a coincidence that military interests
behind the coup which are responsible for planting bombs at the
Colombian and Spanish diplomatic missions in Caracas are protected
in the US, despite their being terrorists.
In Boca Raton, Florida lives Venezuelan business
executive Nelson Mezarhane - a banker and stockholder of the opposition
daily El Globo. He is wanted by the Venezuelan justice system for
having participated in the assassination of Judge Danilo Anderson,
who was bringing to trial those individuals who were implicated
in the April 2002 coup attempt.
We must also mention the fact that terrorist Luis
Posada Carriles, another fugitive of Venezuelan law, is a "guest"
of the US immigration service, which has refused to extradite Posada
Carriles to Caracas.
With such information, it should not come as a surprise
that the Pentagon has included Venezuela in its plans for future
"preventive wars," despite President Chavez' prediction
that if this were to ever occur, Latin America would explode in
a ball of fire.
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