Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez expelled a US Embassy military
attache on Thursday after authorities accused him of espionage for
trying to persuade Venezuelan officers to hand over state
secrets.
The expulsion worsens already rocky relations between the United
States and the world's number 5 oil exporter, as Chavez
aggressively promotes his socialist revolution to counter US
influence in South America.
"We have decided to declare persona non grata, or as we say here,
to throw out of the country, a military officer in the US mission
because of espionage," Chavez said during a ceremony to celebrate
seven years in power.
"We have declared persona non grata US naval Captain John Correa,
who must leave the country immediately," he said.
Chavez, a former army officer allied to Cuban President Fidel
Castro and Iran, warned he could expel the full US military mission
if any officers were caught spying.
US officials in Washington rejected the espionage charges.
"We will respond through diplomatic channels," US State Department
spokesman Kurtis Cooper said, referring to a January 30 letter the
United States received about Correa. "None of the US attaches was
or is engaged in inappropriate activities."
US officials brand the leftist leader an authoritarian bully at
home and a threat to regional stability for using Venezuela's oil
wealth to meddle in the politics of his South American
neighbours.
'Mr Danger'
Chavez often calls US President George Bush "Mr Danger" and has
repeatedly accused Washington of trying to overthrow his government
since he survived a 2002 coup.
Flush with oil cash, Chavez has promoted himself as the frontman
for a burgeoning left-wing resurgence in South America, where Evo
Morales become Bolivia's first indigenous president on the back of
popular resistance to US-backed policies.
In Washington, US Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld had harsh words
for Chavez but did not specifically address the expulsion.
"He's a person who was elected legally, just as Adolf Hitler was
elected legally and then consolidated power, and now is of course
working closely with Fidel Castro and Mr Morales and others. It
concerns me," he said at the National Press Club.
Venezuelan authorities said last week they had "confidential
evidence" that US Embassy staff were involved with a group of
Venezuelan military officers accused of passing state secrets to
the US Defense Department.
Chavez had already downgraded military cooperation with the United
States and suspended accords with the US Drug Enforcement
Administration after accusing its agents of spying on his
government.
Since his first election in 1998, Chavez has sought out trade and
energy alliances with Iran, Russia, China and South American
nations to break Venezuela's traditional reliance on the United
States. Caracas still supplies about 15 percent of US petroleum
imports.
Caracas and Washington recently sparred over US attempts to block
Spanish and Brazilian military equipment to Venezuela after
accusing Chavez of becoming a destabilizing influence in the
region. Chavez has said he could turn instead to China or Russia
for arms deals.
Venezuela expels US naval captain
Published: 11:27AM Friday February 03, 2006 Source: Reuters
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