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BUSH
PROVOCATIONS AGAINST VENEZUELA
Military
threat and striking out blindly
BY
NIDIA DIAZ —Granma International
staff writer—
SINCE last April 4, the fundamentalist
administration of George W. Bush has been
provocatively hanging about in Caribbean waters with
6,500 soldiers, several aircraft carriers, an
impressive number of F-16 fighter planes and a
couple of nuclear submarines in tow, according to
the Pentagon’s own statement, with the objective of
"confront unconventional threats such as drug and
human trafficking."
The U.S. military maneuvers in the Caribbean are
a sham of something that could eventually evolve
into an armed aggression against the Bolivarian
Revolution and terrifying actions against those
nations of the continent that are participating in –
or expressing a desire to do so – the process of
cooperative integration advancing on the continent
or that are questioning the political-economic-social
model imposed on the region from Washington.
If this is not the case, then why are charges
against revolutionary Venezuela accompanying those
exercises of force? Why did the State Department, in
subliminal agreement with the Department of Defense,
accuse the Andean country of being the "the key
transit point" for drug trafficking originating in
Colombia?
Why in its doctrine of asymmetric warfare, did
the U.S. Army Institute of Strategic Studies
describe President Hugo Chávez and his Bolivarian
process as the most serious and dangerous threat
since the Soviet Union and communism?
Why did U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice
confide in a public fit of sincerity that Venezuela
is the Republican administration’s principal concern
in Latin America?
Similar terms can be read in documents or
statements intentionally announced by the CIA and
the Pentagon along the lines of "for its undermining
of democracy and attempting to destabilize the
region," Venezuela is to be added to the list of
nations that the empire will attack first and
foremost at the hour of unleashing a "preventive"
strike, which is part of the new National Security
Strategy document presented by George W. Bush on
March 16.
And if anyone does have any doubts as to all that,
just a few days ago, on April 28, in a mixture of
cynicism and immorality the Secretariat headed by Ms.
Rice accused Venezuela of having virtually ceased "its
cooperation in the world war on terrorism." This
would be like saying that the person refusing to
extradite the terrorist Posada Carriles is Chávez
and not Bush.
The report, invoking the old doctrine of whoever
is not with me is against me, warned that "President
Hugo Chávez has strengthened collaboration with
state sponsors of terrorism," in a new and more
serious attempt to fuel a growing matrix of opinion
that would provide the U.S. with a "justification"
to launch an assault on the Bolivarian Revolution.
It should not be overlooked that just a few days
ago, one of the warships participating in the
Caribbean military maneuvers landed military troops
on the island of Aruba, only 15 miles from the
Venezuelan coast.
Likewise, an article published on April 25 in
Colombia’s El Tiempo quoted investigative
journalist Eva Golinger confirming that the USS
Virginia nuclear submarine was patrolling in the
vicinity of the Venezuelan coast on an "espionage
mission in support of the war on terrorism."
The article also noted that John Negroponte, the
U.S. National Intelligence director admitted in an
interview with Time magazine that U.S.
intelligence agencies are increasing their presence
and work in places where they have not been recently,
and where things have been allowed to slip since the
end of the Cold War, especially in Latin America and
Africa.
The USS Virginia, added Golinger, is
equipped with four torpedo launchers, Tomahawk
missiles and a storage space for special forces’
equipment and vehicles. It also has sufficient space
to accommodate a large number of troops conducting
special operations.
Impotent given successive failures in its
attempts to destroy the Bolivarian Revolution—oil
strike, fascist coup, discrediting media campaign,
recall referendum, regional and legislative
elections—the resource always at hand – military
aggression – has resurfaced.
Faced with that possibility, Vice Admiral Armando
Laguna has announced that the Venezuelan Marines are
to begin what they have called the "Patriotic Naval
Integral Defense Operation" in which 13,500 troops
will participate, 3,500 of which as civilian members
of rescue teams, the new military Reserve and the
Territorial Guards.
In addition to fortifying the capacity of the
Armed Forces, the objective of the operation is to
consolidate civic-military unity and to enlist the
reserve in the overall defense of the nation,
explained the high official.
Equally, just a few days ago, alluding to the U.S.
maneuvers, Army General Commander Raúl Isaías Baduel
emphasized that the Andean country was sufficiently
prepared to repel any threat or aggression.
The National Armed Forces (FAN) is assessing the
potential dangers hovering over the country’s
security, Baduel stated in the capital of Guárico
state, San Juan de Los Morros, where he was an
invited guest for the visit of Papal Nuncio Giacinto
Berlocco, according to a PL report.
So that nobody would be taken by surprise, he
also noted that the FAN is constantly following any
act that could indicate a treat to national
territory and has evaluated possible scenarios
against Venezuelan security.
The U.S. government is caught in a trap. Its
vocation of interference does not allow it to
maintain respectful relations with Venezuela and its
desperation at being unable to find a social base
for its destabilizing activities in that country,
has left it blindly striking out, thus running the
risk of prompting the response of a nation that has
already started taking control of its own destiny.
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