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Veenzuela: gornalista USA accusa il venezuela di aiutare i terroristi, commenti dal paese caraibico
- Subject: Veenzuela: gornalista USA accusa il venezuela di aiutare i terroristi, commenti dal paese caraibico
- From: "nello margiotta" <nellomargiotta55 at virgilio.it>
- Date: Wed, 8 Oct 2003 13:36:59 +0200
http://www.usnews.com/usnews/issue/031006/usnews/6venezuela.htm Nation & World 10/6/03 Terror Close to Home In oil-rich Venezuela, a volatile leader befriends bad actors from the Mideast, Colombia, and Cuba By Linda Robinson Editor's note: a map graphic accompanied the print version of this story. The FARC's principal camp in Venezuela is in the Perija mountains near an Indian village called Resumidero, according to maps and testimony from FARC deserters (location: Latitude: N 10` 29'56''; Longitude W72' 44'56'') The oil-rich but politically unstable nation of Venezuela is emerging as a potential hub of terrorism in the Western Hemisphere, providing assistance to Islamic radicals from the Middle East and other terrorists, say senior U.S. military and intelligence officials. Bush administration aides see this as an unpredictably dangerous mix and are gathering more information about the intentions of a country that sits 1,000 miles south of Florida. One thing that's clear is that Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez is fast becoming America's newest nemesis, U.S. officials say. He has forged close ties with Cuba's Fidel Castro and has befriended some of America's other notorious enemies, traveling to Saddam's Iraq and Qadhafi's Libya. Now, after surviving an attempted coup and a nationwide petition demanding his recall, Chavez is flirting with terrorism, and Washington is watching with increasing alarm. "We are not disinterested spectators," says Roger Noriega, the new assistant secretary of state for Latin America. "Any actions that undermine democratic order or threaten the security and well-being of the region are of legitimate concern to all of Venezuela's neighbors." U.S. officials are monitoring three sets of developments: Middle Eastern terrorist groups are operating support cells in Venezuela and other locations in the Andean region. A two-month review by U.S. News, including interviews with dozens of U.S. and Latin American sources, confirms the terrorist activity. In particular, the magazine has learned that thousands of Venezuelan identity documents are being distributed to foreigners from Middle Eastern nations, including Syria, Pakistan, Egypt, and Lebanon. Venezuela is supporting armed opposition groups from neighboring Colombia; these groups are on the official U.S. list of terrorist organizations and are also tied to drug trafficking. Maps obtained by U.S. News, as well as eyewitness accounts, pinpoint the location of training camps used by Colombian rebels, a top rebel leader, and Venezuelan armed groups. Cubans are working inside Venezuela's paramilitary and intelligence apparatus. The coordination between Cuba and Venezuela is the latest sign that Venezuelan President Chavez is modeling his government on Castro's Cuba. The Venezuelan government denies supporting Middle Eastern terrorist groups and says that no Cubans are operating inside its intelligence agencies. Venezuela has long denied providing aid to the Colombian guerrilla groups. Venezuela is providing support--including identity documents--that could prove useful to radical Islamic groups, say U.S. officials. U.S. News has learned that Chavez's government has issued thousands of cedulas, the equivalent of Social Security cards, to people from places such as Cuba, Colombia, and Middle Eastern nations that play host to foreign terrorist organizations. An American official with firsthand knowledge of the ID scheme has seen computer spreadsheets with names of people organized by nationality. "The list easily totaled several thousand," the official says. "Colombians were the largest group; there were more than a thousand of them. It also included many from Middle Eastern `countries of interest' like Syria, Egypt, Pakistan, Lebanon." The official adds: "It was shocking to see how extensive the list was." U.S. officials believe that the Venezuelan government is issuing the documents to people who should not be getting them and that some of these cedulas were subsequently used to obtain Venezuelan passports and even American visas, which could allow the holder to elude immigration checks and enter the United States. U.S. officials say that the cedulas are also being used by Colombian subversives and by some Venezuelan officials to travel surreptitiously. The suspicious links between Venezuela and Islamic radicalism are multiplying. American law enforcement and intelligence officials are exploring whether there is an al Qaeda connection--specifically, they want to know if a Venezuelan of Arab descent named Hakim Mamad al Diab Fatah had ties to any of the September 11 hijackers. The United States deported Diab Fatah to Venezuela for immigration violations in March 2002. A U.S. intelligence official says that Diab Fatah is still a "person of interest" and that his family in Venezuela is "a well-known clan associated with extremist and illicit activity" in northern Venezuela. But when U.S. officials sought Diab Fatah for further questioning, they were told by Venezuelan officials that he was not in the country. Diab Fatah may also be tied to the Caracas mosque of Sheik Ibrahim bin Abdul Aziz, which has caught investigators' attention. One of the mosque's officials, also a Venezuelan of Arab descent, was recently arrested in London for carrying a grenade on a Caracas-London flight. Sympathy. Latin America's Arab communities are also becoming centers for terrorist sympathizers. A Venezuelan analyst who recently visited Margarita Island, a free zone on the north coast of Venezuela run largely by Arab merchants from Lebanon and Iran, described the Venezuelan-Arab Friendship Association as a "fortress" with armed guards outside. A U.S. official says the association has been long known as a location of illicit activities. In addition, support "cells" for the groups Hamas, Hezbollah, and Islamiyya al Gammat are active on Margarita, according to Gen. James Hill, the head of the U.S. Southern Command. In a speech last month, Hill said: "These groups generate funds through money laundering, drug trafficking, or arms deals and make millions of dollars every year via their multiple illicit activities. These logistic cells reach back to the Middle East." Venezuela's support for terrorist organizations isn't limited to those based in Lebanon or Egypt. Colombia's complaints that Venezuela is actively aiding two Colombian armed groups on the U.S. State Department's terrorist list--the FARC and the ELN--have been met by heated Venezuelan denials. But U.S. News has obtained detailed information demonstrating that camps used by the Colombian rebels exist inside Venezuela; maps actually pinpoint the location of the camps, and firsthand reports describe visits by Venezuelan officials. The armed Colombian groups, though they have waged no attacks on U.S. soil, are among the most active terrorist groups in the world, and several of their leaders have been indicted in the United States for the killings and kidnappings of Americans and for drug trafficking. The FARC's principal camp in Venezuela is in the Perija mountains near an Indian village called Resumidero, according to maps and testimony from FARC deserters. The Resumidero base is home to one of the FARC's top leaders, Ivan Marquez, and can accommodate 700 people. Marquez commands 1,000 fighters and, according to one deserter's account, oversees the training of hundreds more would-be guerrillas. A clandestine FARC radio station is located about 30 miles away, on the Colombian-Venezuelan border. Resumidero, which has 100 huts and three houses for Marquez and other leaders, is two days' walk from another camp called Asamblea, near the city of Machiques, which is about 35 miles inside Venezuelan territory. That camp, which has 25 houses and even Internet access, is used to train still more more fighters. U.S. News has also obtained documents that offer firsthand accounts--from people inside the camps--that illustrate the extent of Venezuela's backing of the Colombian rebels. According to debriefings of former rebels, some 60 Venezuelan soldiers, plus two Venezuelan officers, provide training to the FARC rebels at the Resumidero camp. Visitors to the camp have included Venezuelan civilians and Europeans. A 31-year-old FARC deserter who spent seven months at FARC camps inside Venezuela, says he witnessed Venezuelan officers arrive by helicopter. He says his unit twice ambushed the Colombian Army and then fled to sanctuary in Venezuela. He also asserts that "abundant ammunition"--a cache in April included 2,500 rounds of 7.62mm and .223-caliber ammunition for automatic rifles--has been shipped across the border to Colombia. Another guerrilla who turned herself in last July says she saw FARC leaders heading for a camp called Rio Verde in Venezuela. And a former guerrilla, a 32-year-old man, says he fled from battle to a camp called Sastreria in Venezuela. Drug money helps fuel the fighting. Another FARC source told U.S. News that he witnessed a FARC logistics chief trade 8 kilograms of cocaine and cash for guns from a Venezuelan colonel, who arranged the shipments from Venezuelan Army stocks. Colombian officials have documented many such guns-for-drugs trades; they also confirm the existence of training camps--and even spots where hostages are held--along Venezuela's frontier from the flatlands of Arauca northward to the mountains of Perija. Adds a U.S. official: "It's no secret the level of cooperation that the Venezuelan government is giving to the Colombian groups, from the shipment of arms in, to the shipment of drugs out, to the movement of people in and out of Colombia." During an August visit to the region, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Richard Myers, went so far as to suggest that Venezuela's support for terrorists in Colombia was like Syria's support for terrorists in Iraq. "It is simply not helpful when countries don't fully support the antiterrorist fight." The Chavez government's support of the Colombian guerrillas is no act of charity. After he was elected in 1998, Chavez vowed to bring about a "Bolivarian revolution" in Venezuela; the movement is named for Simon Bolivar, the 19th-century hero who defeated the Spanish in South America. But Chavez's popularity has plummeted, and Venezuela's economy is troubled. In April 2002, he survived a military coup--one that the United States prematurely applauded. Chavez has since purged the military. The armed Colombian groups are helping Chavez create a force loyal to his regime. The FARC and ELN were "instrumental" in the formation and training of a 200-man Venezuelan armed group called the Frente Bolivariano de Liberacion that operates in western Venezuela, according to U.S. officials. The FARC has also provided training to the so-called Bolivarian Circles, an urban organization that Chavez set up to defend and promote his revolution. Senior U.S. officials are concerned about the growing Cuban presence inside Venezuela. All told, some 5,000 Cubans have traveled to the country; in particular, many are turning up inside Venezuela's intelligence and paramilitary apparatus. Says one U.S. official: "The Cubans are deeply embedded in Venezuela's intelligence agency." Castro and Chavez are so close, they are said to talk by phone every day. Cubans also form part of Chavez's personal bodyguard detail. There is ample evidence, officials say, that "Cuba provides military training to pro-Chavez organizations" that have been set up to safeguard Chavez from coup attempts like the one he survived last year. None of this surprises U.S. officials who have been watching Chavez. "He decided to follow the Cuban model long ago," says one, citing speeches he made in 1994 and 1998. Chavez is sending some 53,000 barrels of oil monthly to help Castro's cash-strapped Cuba. And large numbers of Venezuelan military personnel have also been sent to Cuba for training. Given all that is happening in Chavez's Venezuela, some American officials regret that terrorism is seen chiefly as a Middle East problem and that the United States is not looking to protect its southern flank. "I'm concerned that counterterrorism issues are not being aggressively pursued in this hemisphere," one U.S. intelligence official said. "We don't even have flyovers" of Venezuela. Another intelligence official complains that terror suspects being held at Guantanamo Bay, the U.S. base in Cuba, are not being interrogated about connections to Latin American. The bottom line, when it comes to terrorism so close to U.S. shores, says the official: "We don't even know what we don't know." Reporteros con fronteras o EEUU cocina una intervención a Venezuela Reinaldo Bolívar Una "periodista" estadounidense, de nombre Linda Robinson ha escrito para la revista U.S Noticias un trabajo, "Terror cerca de casa", cuyo propósito, no oculto, es del contribuir a crear una imagen internacional negativa para Venezuela al vincularla con terrorismo internacional. Intento similar al realizado en meses posteriores a septiembre 2001 y que devino en el paro del 10 de diciembre, en los pronunciamiento militares de enero y en el golpe de estado de abril de 2002, celebrado por el embajador Shapiro y funcionarios de su país, que de acuerdo a serias investigaciones tenía barcos de guerra acechando las costas venezolanas. Una campaña similar hicieron para relacionar al expresidente Manuel Noriega de Panamá (antiguo agente y aliado de EEUU) con el narcotráfico, una vez que aquel perdió el apoyo norteamericano. Después vino la sangrienta invasión de los marines en diciembre de 1989 que acabó con la vida de más de 2000 civiles. Noriega fue derrocado y llevado a EEUU para s er juzgado. Estados Unidos actuó como dueño del destino de Panamá. El absurdo escrito de Robinson se publica luego que el Presidente Chávez solicitará una explicación al gobierno de Bush de las prácticas paramilitares que realizan venezolanos antinacionalistas en Miami. Chávez citó una publicación de Florida en la cual se mostraban fotos de esos "venegringianos" uniformados con declaraciones sobre sus intenciones de eliminar al mandatario venezolano. En una alocución anterior, el Presidente venezolano reclamó a la administración Bush la presencia en territorio estadounidense de participantes del golpe de estado de abril 2002 y del paro golpista de diciembre-enero. Como se recordará en esos meses los oposicionistas venezolanos radicados en Miami, con vínculos muy cercanos a la fracasada contra anticubana (llevan 45 años enriqueciéndose y apoderándose de Florida con la bandera de que están a un paso de derrocar a la revolución cubana -bobos los gringos que se lo creen y le dan millones de dólares con los ojos cerrados), recibieron a personaje s como Carlos Ortega, que en acto público llamó a asesinar a Chávez. El artículo de U S News, basado en chimes anónimos, no hace más que repetir mentiras como las presentadas por las cuestionadas periodistas venezolanas Pacheco (botada de su periodicucho, quien perdió un juicio por difamación e injuria y está siendo demandada por causas similares) y Poleo (candidata a jefe de la Oficina de Información en el breve gobierno dictatorial de Carmona e hija adoctrinada de uno de los más férreos aliados del prófugo Carlos Andrés Pérez), como el video montaje de los comacates o el falso testimonio de un ciudadano que se hizo pasar por piloto presidencial y que a la postre ocasionó la ética renuncia del editor del Espectador de Colombia (pero que no hizo mella en los diarios El Universal y Nacional de Venezuela, que calcaron al carbón al Espectador), o como la del arrepentido y falso expía cubano pagado por los cubanos anticastristas en Venezuela, los mismos que asediaron durante tres días, junto con el Alcalde de Baruta, Capriles Radonki, la embajada cubana, cortándole la electricidad, suministros (incluso a niños y mujeres) y destruyendo los vehículos diplomáticos en una violación flagrante del derecho internacional que no fue condenada ni por la OEA ni por la ONU ni siquiera por Amnistía Internacional. Las mentiras de la periodista (¿?) norteamericana son tan débiles que afirma disparates como: que el gobierno de Chávez otorga documentos para conseguir visas de Estados Unidos, lo cual deja muy mal parada a la embajada de EEUU que siempre se ha preciado de ser estricta en sus procedimientos; que hay 50 mil cubanos armados en Venezuela, como si fuese tan sencillo y clandestino alojar a tal cantidad de personas. Tómese como referencia que Venezuela posee una Fuerza Armada de unos 90 mil hombres y para ello son necesarios como mínimo de 3 a 4 instalaciones por entidad federal, cuyas inmensas dimensiones son por todos conocidas. En Venezuela lo que hay son unos 1000 médicos cubanos ayudando a los más pobres en las barriadas de Caracas, dónde no quieren ir los cómodos galenos de la Federación Médica Venezolana; también hay entrenadores antillanos, pero deportivos, que han contribuido al aumento del medallero en juegos como los Panamericanos; que Chávez es terrorista porque visitó Siria, Irán o Libia y es amigo de Fidel, lo que quiere decir que ahora Aznar es terrorista pues hace dos semanas estuvo reunido con el Presidente Mohamed Kadafi, y que hasta el Papá y Arnold Schwarzenegger lo son por haber visitado Cuba. Además, por carambola los muchos presidentes que han recibido a Chávez (solo el G77, al que presidió, tiene 135) son terroristas y de ello no escapan los presidentes de Francia, Gran Bretaña, Rusia y la Reina Isabel los cuales han recibido en visita oficial al Presidente de Venezuela o lo han visitado como el de Colombia y Brasil. En fin, si es esa ilógica tesis fuera válida, todos los mandatarios del mundo son terroristas y están agrupados en la ONU. El tema de la presencia guerrillera, suena tan simulado que sólo es presentado como una suposición "porque la frontera con Colombia y Venezuela es porosa". Por otra parte, la guerra de posiciones en Colombia entre el ejercito oficial contra la FARC y el ELN se hace con tanta intensidad que esas organizaciones mal podrían distraerse en nuevos frentes. Sobre el argumento fascista y racista de los ciudadanos árabes en Margarita no podemos más que decir que sencillamente denota una carencia de creatividad tan solo comparable a la gigantesca carencia de seguridad en las escuelas de Estados Unidos en las que la violencia infantil sigue dejando víctimas sin que el gobierno busque las verdaderas causas e implemente correctivos distintos a los de encarcelar infantes de por vida, antes bien disminuyó el presupuesto en educación y los trasladó a gastos de guerra. En conclusión, una bazofia de escrito firmado con un apellido tan insigne para los venezolanos, como el de Robinsón, sinónimo de Simón Rodríguez que le dio nombre a la más grande cruzada contra el analfabetismo de la que se tenga conocimiento en el país. Ahora bien, detrás de ese artículo, que sale a la luz en el momento que se produce una escalada terrorista en Caracas contra sitios públicos (embajadas, Palacio Blanco, CONATEL, bases militares) evidentemente por sectores interesados en desestabilizar (solo hacen terrorismo quienes quieren asaltar el poder constituido, es decir, una oposición fuera de la ley) acompañada de precipitadas declaraciones de funcionarios yanquis anticubanos de Miami, está el enfermizo intento de aplicar a Venezuela la Doctrina Bush (http://www.geocities.com/reinaldobolivar/doctrinabush.htm) que califica unilateralmente a un país de terrorista para así intervenirlo violando los principios de soberanía y autodeterminación. Siempre nos preguntaremos ¿Por qué esos paladines contra el terrorismo no condenaron las acciones de saboteo que realizaron (y realizan) los ex pedevecos de Juan Fernández contra las instalaciones de PDVSA? Tomando prestadas las palabras del Diputado Nicolás Maduro "¿Será que hay terrorismo bueno y terrorismo malo?". Más bien, Diputado, EEUU aplica su teoría del derecho a la defensa, por la cual justifica que Israel, en una acción de terrorismo de Estado, bombardea refugios en Damasco porque allí hay palestino, o el propio EEUU arrasa con Afganistán en la creencia de que una de sus bombas de 10 mil kilos pueda matar a su viejo amigo Osama. Pero, parafraseándole Diputado, ¿Será que hay derecho a la defensa bueno y derecho a la defensa malo? Porque en este país los oposicionistas pretenden que el gobierno legítimamente electo le permita hacer todos sus actos de terrorismos y de ilegalidades sin decir pío no vaya a ser que el los batisteros de Miami se enojen y nos invadan. No podemos subestimar ese artículo por absurdo que sea. No olvidemos que la invasión a Irak se basó en un informe falso, en un trabajo de un estudiante universitario, en el razonamiento hormonal de un el presidente designado (por una corte estatal) de EEUU que quiso cobrarle a Hussein el haber ofendido a su papá (el ex director de la CIA y ex presidente Bush). Al menos, queda el consuelo de que esa mentira le costará el poder a Tony Blair, Bush y al partido de Aznar por haber mentido descaradamente a sus congresos y pueblos para invadir a un país indefenso cobrando a diario vidas iraquies y de jóvenes soldados enviados como carne de cañón. Y aunque estamos seguros, que la potencia está económicamente, moralmente debilitada e internacionalmente cada vez más aislada (hasta la ONU le sacó la silla), tiene gran poder de fuego y la desesperación de la fiera herida que en cualquier momento puede lanzar un zarpazo. Así que mucho cuidado. Hay que meterle más el ojo a sus objetivos en Venezuela: PDVSA y las FAN, "ojo e garza que gallina no ve de noche" y hay mucho camaleón suelto. Ese es el mensaje para los venezolanos y su Presidente. Para los señores del norte el siguiente: No olviden los halcones de la guerra ni sus títeres con nacionalidad venezolana que la República Bolivariana de Venezuela no es el Chile de 1973 ni la Nicaragua ni la Panamá de los 80. reibol at cantv.net www.geocities.com/reinaldobolivar
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