|
Venezuela accuses US embassy
staff of spying for Pentagon
Venezuelan Vice President
Vicente Rangel said on Friday
that U.S. embassy staffers had
collected confidential
information for the Pentagon
from junior Venezuelan navy
officials.
"Officials from the U.S.
military mission were involved
in this affair. I am not
surprised as they were fully
involved in the April 11 coup,"
Rangel said.
Venezuela has been accusing
Washington of assisting an April
2002 coup, which temporarily
pushed President Hugo Chavez out
of office. The United States
denied involvement.
Earlier on Friday, Chavez said
John Correa, the U.S. naval
attache, had bribed Venezuelan
army officials for confidential
information.
U.S. ambassador to Venezuela
William Brownfield did not
comment directly on the charges,
but said that he had "absolute
trust in the people of the U.S.
embassy and their desire to
maintain and improve bilateral
relations."
He said that he would respond to
any concrete charges he receives
against his officers, but he
didn't get any formal reportas
the Venezuelan government made
the accusations in front of the
media.
Washington had been at odds with
Caracas over Chavez's accusation
of U.S. involvement in the 2002
coup attempt. The most recent
row between the two countries
erupted after the United States
blocked sales of Brazilian and
Spanish aircraft and boats
containing U.S. technology to
Venezuela.
However, trade between the two
countries continues to grow
despite political rows. In 2005,
the U.S.-Venezuelan trade
reached 39 billion U.S. dollars,
up 35 percent over a year
earlier.
|
|