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Venezuela expels US military
attache over spy claims
Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez
ordered on Thursday the
expulsion of John Correa, the
U.S. embassy military attache in
Venezuela, for spying.
He said on a television program
celebrating the seventh
anniversary of his government.
"Today, Venezuela is free from
any imperialist chains," Chavez
said, adding that the whole of
the military mission would be
sent home, if attaches insisted
on spying, although none would
be jailed.
Correa is now persona non grata
and must leave the country
immediately.
Chavez described a group of
around 20 low-ranking officials
and military retirees who had
passed information to Correa as
traitors, and said they would be
court martialled.
"We will be inflexible with
these traitors," he said,
demanding that they serve
30-year sentences. The espionage
case showed that Venezuela had
not finished clearing out the
armed forces, he said.
Also on the program, vice
president Jose Vicente Rangel
said that the U.S. embassy had
lent assistance to April 2002's
failed coup against the Chavez
government, during which the
president was ousted for a
number of hours. Then-defense
minister Rangel said that he had
found U.S. soldiers on the fifth
floor of the Venezuelan defense
ministry on the day of the
failed coup.
The United States and Venezuela
have had a tense relationship
for a number of years, although
Venezuela remains a top supplier
of petroleum to the United
States. Washington has always
denied involvement in the 2002
coup.
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