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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices

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To: bentway who wrote (372795)3/4/2008 4:12:09 PM
From: Road Walker  Read Replies (2) of 1577864
 
One thing about those Republicans, they know how to vacation! Remember the Rep Congress... they worked what, 3 days a week?

Anyway it looks like war might break out in South America... maybe we shouldf send some troops. Whoops, I forgot, they are all tied up occupy Iraq.
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Crisis deepens as Venezuela closes Colombian border by Henry Orrego
14 minutes ago


A crisis between three Latin American nations worsened Tuesday when Venezuela said it was closing its border with Colombia, even as frantic diplomatic talks to stave off war were about to begin.

Venezuelan Agriculture Minister Elia Jaua said "we have taken some measures, like closing the border," according to the Colombian television station Caracol.

The announcement aggravated a stand-off between Colombia and leftwing neighbors Venezuela and Ecuador that was triggered by a Colombian raid inside Ecuador to kill a senior FARC rebel commander.

An emergency session of the 34-member Organization of American States was to take place in Washington later Tuesday in a bid to quell the rising tensions.

There are fears an escalation of the dispute between Bogota, the United States' main ally in South America, and the two other nations -- both run by fiercely anti-US leftwing leaders and both OPEC members -- could engulf the region.

Venezuela and Ecuador have already ordered thousands of troops to their borders with Colombia, and ordered Bogota's ambassadors out of their countries amid sharpening rhetoric.

Colombia initially apologized to Ecuador for the pre-dawn Sunday raid on the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia camp that killed Raul Reyes, considered the number two leader of the decades-old Marxist insurgency.

But it said it was justified in making the attack, and claimed documents recovered from rebel laptops proved the FARC had links with Quito and Caracas and had "transnational terrorist ambitions."

Ecuador has angrily rejected the allegations, and severed diplomatic relations with Bogota over the "succession of events and unfriendly accusations."

Ecuarian President Rafael Correa was to visit Brazil, Latin America's biggest diplomatic power, later Tuesday to present his grievances and drum up support. He was also to visit Peru, Venezuela, Panama and the Dominican Republic.

Venezuela has also denied Bogota's allegations, which included a charge that President Hugo Chavez paid the FARC 300 million dollars, calling them "absolute lies."

But Colombian President Alvaro Uribe on Tuesday said his country was going to ask the International Criminal Court to try Chavez for "sponsoring and financing genocide" by allegedly providing the money.

Colombia has said its raid on the rebel camp was an "autonomous operation," but admitted US intelligence was crucial.

Washington since 2000 has supplied Bogota with five billion dollars under Plan Colombia, ostensibly to fight drug trafficking.

Much of the money has gone to combating the FARC, which profits from the narcotics trade and kidnappings, and which is considered a "terrorist organization" by the US and the EU.

Cuba's former leader Fidel Castro weighed in on the matter Tuesday with an article in the state-run media accusing the United States of complicity in the "monstrous crime" in Ecuador.

"They were Yankee bombs guided by Yankee satellites," he wrote.

US officials have called for calm and urged the Organization of American States to resolve the crisis through dialogue.
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