Oh here we go...U.S. Preparing to decimate Chavez
US drugs official accuses Chavez
Mr Walters says Mr Chavez is complicit in the drugs trade |
The official, John Walters, said Venezuela had become "a haven" for shipments of cocaine manufactured in neighbouring Colombia.
Venezuela rejects the charges, saying it is the victim of traffickers.
But Mr Walters, speaking on a visit to Colombia, said failure to deal with the problem amounted to complicity.
Mr Walters, director of the US Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP), was meeting Colombian President Alvaro Uribe.
US officials say about one third of Colombia's output of 600 tonnes of cocaine a year now passes through Venezuela, most of it going to America and Europe.
'Colluding'
Mr Walters said Mr Chavez had failed to root out corrupt officials or to deny Venezuelan ports and airfields to smugglers.
Such failure, he said, came from more than neglect.
"It goes beyond 'I can't do it' to 'I won't do it'. And 'I won't do it' means that 'I am colluding'," Mr Walters said.
"I think it is about time to face up to the fact that President Chavez is becoming a major facilitator of the transit of cocaine to Europe and other parts of this hemisphere."
Mr Walters' declaration served two purposes, says the BBC's Jeremy McDermott in Colombia.
The first is to support Colombia's President Uribe, a key regional ally.
Colombia's relations with Venezuela have all but disintegrated amid fears that Mr Chavez may start actively supporting Marxist guerrillas who are trying to overthrow the Colombian state.
The second is to berate Mr Chavez publicly for not co-operating with Washington's region-wide drug strategy.
Relations between Venezuela and the US are now so poor that US drug enforcement agents can hardly operate in the country, our correspondent says.*
Same US Official, Walters, on Chavez in 2002
Excerpts from Press Briefing with Office of National Drug Control Policy Director John Walters, August 13, 2002
Q (Name and affiliation inaudible), Venezuela. As you know, Venezuela is a transit country for psychotropic substance. Do you have any plan to cooperate with Venezuela, or Venezuela is already cooperating? In which way? I just want some more details about the cooperation with Venezuela.
MR. WALTERS: Yes, Venezuela has been cooperating, continues to -- the DEA, for example, has had a good relationship and continues to have a good relationship with officials in Venezuela. We are working to improve those, obviously, with the change of government in Colombia and the huge area of land border between the two countries. We're looking at trying to ourselves work with both countries on attacking the transit through Venezuela. President Chavez invited me to come to Caracas and talk about further cooperation, and we'll look at the possibility of doing that sometime in the future.
But, yeah, I think, in fact, while there's been a number of issues that have been public discussions of some differences of opinion, in fact, on significant parts of drug investigations, cooperation between the law enforcement agencies of Venezuela and ours have been pretty good, and it hasn't been talked about much. But I think, sure, we'd like to strengthen cooperation across the board, but I don't -- I think there's a reasonably good story here as well.
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]
<< Home