March 05, 2006

Chavez instructs military, civilians to repel invasion

[Please don't fall into the defensive trap that the US is setting up for you Hugo. Please do what BushTard should have done after 9/11 and do MORE good for your population with the money that you are spending on weapons - this United States Government does not know how to deal with LOVE. It's the only wya you can really fuck them up]

MACARAO, Venezuela
At a rural military base on the outskirts of Caracas, Venezuelan officers have started classes in unconventional warfare to repel an invasion left-wing President Hugo Chavez warns Washington is planning.

Snipers draped in foliage and civilian reservists armed with knives, catapults and handguns crawled out of a hidden tunnel in a mock demonstration as an instructor lectured officers on resistance tactics.

Captains joined lieutenants straining behind a cordon to see another soldier camouflaged inside tree perch as he fired a bow and peppered a uniformed dummy target with arrows.

"If no one comes, then that's fine, we can continue as the free and sovereign country we are, but we cannot permit that any foreign force tries to invade," instructor Lt. Col. Antonio Benavides said as gunfire cracked from a firing range.

"All Venezuelans, the state and civil society, have a joint responsibility to defend the nation," he said over the weekend.

Locked in a fierce confrontation with the U.S. government, Chavez is building up civilian reservists and ordering the armed forces to adopt a doctrine emphasising "asymmetric war" or resistance war against a more powerful foreign force.

An initial group of 500,000 civilian reservists and territorial guard volunteers will start four-month basic training nationwide at weekends, said retired Col. Hector Herrera, a reservist advisor.

Washington dismisses Chavez's charges that it plans to oust him to control the world's No. 5 oil exporter and brushes off his invasion talk as sabre-rattling to stir up nationalism before elections in December.

But tensions are high as U.S. officials portray Chavez, a self-styled socialist revolutionary allied with Cuba, as a negative influence in Latin America. Washington has opposed Venezuela's recent arms purchases and the reservist drive.

The United States and Venezuela last month expelled diplomats after Chavez accused a U.S. naval attaché of spying and the former soldier has stepped up threats to cut off U.S. oil shipments. Since surviving a 2002 coup, he has often accused U.S. officials of trying to topple him.

RESERVISTS GETTING READY

Speaking on his regular Sunday television program, Chavez accused Washington of planning his kidnap and supporting opposition attempts to force the secession of western Zulia state where much of the country's oil reserves are located.

"If someday a group of invaders comes looking for me, they will never take me alive," Chavez said.

"The war of resistance is war we would have in case of any imperialist intervention," he said.

At the special forces military base in Macarao National Park, officers listened to a lecture on camouflage, surprise attacks and utilising reservists to strike at invading troops as part of their regular training.

Instructors made comparisons to Viet Cong guerrilla attacks on U.S troops, including the use of secret tunnels, poisons and home-made weapons.

Venezuelan officers have also been sent to Havana to learn civilian-military cooperation from the Cubans as part of the training, said National Guard Gen. Juan Alberto Hernandez.

An ex paratrooper first elected in 1998, Chavez has steadily cut U.S. military ties as he strengthens relations with Russia, Iran and Cuba. He has suspended U.S. anti-drug cooperation and ended most U.S. training programs.

In April he drilled more than 20,000 civilian reservists he said were key to defending his "Bolivarian" revolution, named after South American liberation hero Simon Bolivar, and to helping with his social programs for the poor.

Critics worry about the reservists may be used to crackdown on foes of a president they say has become more authoritarian in a drive to copy Cuban communism.

Reservists, who get a stipend of around $8 for each training session, could be armed with old FAL rifles currently used by the armed forces after regular troops get 100,000 new Russian Kalashnikov rifles, officials said.

"They will guarantee resistance against an invading force in their areas. They'll be trained in weapons and other home-made artefacts," said instructor Benavides. "They can be confused with the populace and that is part of asymmetric war."

1 Comments:

Blogger TOTAL KAOS said...

MOO YA

8-)

Sunday, March 05, 2006  

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