- Do you believe
this?
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- This past weekend,
Colombia invaded Ecuador, killed a guerrilla chief in the
jungle, opened his laptop and what did the Colombians
find? A message to Hugo Chavez that he sent the FARC
guerrillas $300 million which they're using to obtain
uranium to make a dirty bomb!
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- That's what George
Bush tells us. And he got that from his buddy, the strange
right-wing President of Colombia, Alvaro Uribe.
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- So: After the fact,
Colombia justifies its attempt to provoke a border war as a
to stop the threat of WMDs! Uh, where have we heard that
before?
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- The US press
snorted up this line about Chavez' $300 million to
"terrorists" quicker than the young Bush inhaling Colombia's
powdered export.
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- What the US press
did not do is look at the evidence, the email in the magic
laptop. (Presumably, the FARC leader's last words were,
"Listen, my password is .")
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- I read them. While
you can read it all in español, here is, in translation, the
one and only mention of the alleged $300 million from Chavez
is this:
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- " With relation to
the 300, which from now on we will call "dossier," efforts
are now going forward at the instructions of the boss to the
cojo [slang term for 'cripple'], which I will explain in a
separate note. Let's call the boss Ángel, and the cripple
Ernesto."
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- Got that? Where is
Hugo? Where's 300 million? And 300 what? Indeed, in context,
the note is all about the hostage exchange with the FARC
that Chavez was working on at the time (December 23, 2007)
at the request of the Colombian government.
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- Indeed, the entire
remainder of the email is all about the mechanism of the
hostage exchange. Here's the next line: "To receive the
three freed ones, Chavez proposes three options: Plan A. Do
it to via of a 'humanitarian caravan'; one that will involve
Venezuela, France, the Vatican[?], Switzerland, European
Union, democrats [civil society], Argentina, Red Cross,
etc."
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- As to the 300, I
must note that the FARC's previous prisoner exchange
involved 300 prisoners. Is that what the '300' refers to? ¿Quien
sabe? Unlike Uribe, Bush and the US press, I won't guess or
make up a phastasmogoric story about Chavez mailing checks
to the jungle.
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- To bolster their
case, the Colombians claim, with no evidence whatsoever,
that the mysterious "Angel" is the code name for Chavez. But
in the memo, Chavez goes by the code name Chavez.
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- Well, so what? This
is what.
-
- Colombia's invasion
into Ecuador is a rank violation of international law,
condemned by every single Latin member of the Organization
of American States. And George Bush just loved it. He called
Uribe to back Colombia, against, "the continuing assault by
narco-terrorists as well as the provocative maneuvers by the
regime in Venezuela."
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- Well, our President
may have gotten the facts ass-backward, but Bush knows what
he's doing: shoring up his last, faltering ally in South
America, Uribe, a desperate man in deep political trouble.
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- Uribe claims he is
going to bring charges against Chavez before the
International Criminal Court. If Uribe goes there in person,
I suggest he take a toothbrush: it was just discovered that
right-wing death squads held murder-planning sessions at
Uribe's ranch. Uribe's associates have been called before
the nation's Supreme Court and may face prison.
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- In other words,
it's a good time for a desperate Uribe to use that old
politico's wheeze, the threat of war, to drown out
accusations of his own criminality. Furthermore, Uribe's
attack literally killed negotiations with FARC by killing
FARC's negotiator, Raul Reyes. Reyes was in talks with both
Ecuador and Chavez about another prisoner exchange. Uribe
authorized the negotiations, however, he knew, should those
talks have succeeded in obtaining the release of those
kidnapped by the FARC, credit would have been heaped on
Ecuador and Chavez, and discredit heaped on Uribe.
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- Luckily for a
hemisphere on the verge of flames, the President of Ecuador,
Raphael Correa, is one of the most level-headed, thoughtful
men I've ever encountered.
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- Correa is now
flying from Quito to Brazilia to Caracas to keep the region
from blowing sky high. While moving troops to his border
no chief of state can permit foreign tanks on their
sovereign soil Correa also refuses sanctuary to the FARC .
Indeed, Ecuador has routed out 47 FARC bases, a better track
record than Colombia's own, corrupt military.
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- For his cool,
peaceable handling of the crisis, I will forgive Correa for
apologizing for his calling Bush, "a dimwitted President who
has done great damage to his country and the world." (Watch
an excerpt of my interview with Correa here.)
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- Amateur Hour in
Blue
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- We can trust Correa
to keep the peace South of the Border. But can we trust our
Presidents-to-be?
-
- The current man in
the Oval Office, George Bush, simply can't help himself: an
outlaw invasion by a right-wing death-squad promoter is just
fine with him.
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- But guess who
couldn't wait to parrot the Bush line? Hillary Clinton,
still explaining that her vote to invade Iraq was not a vote
to invade Iraq, issued a statement nearly identical to
Bush's, blessing the invasion of Ecuador as Colombia's
"right to defend itself." And she added, "Hugo Chávez must
stop these provoking actions." Huh?
-
- I assumed that
Obama wouldn't jump on this landmine especially after he
was blasted as a foreign policy amateur for suggesting he
would invade across Pakistan's border to hunt terrorists.
-
- It's embarrassing
that Barack repeated Hillary's line nearly verbatim,
announcing, "the Colombian government has every right to
defend itself."
-
- (I'm sure Hillary's
position wasn't influenced by the loan of a campaign jet to
her by Frank Giustra. Giustra has given over a hundred
million dollars to Bill Clinton projects. Last year, Bill
introduced Giustra to Colombia's Uribe. On the spot, Giustra
cut a lucrative deal with Uribe for Colombian oil.)
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- Then there's Mr.
War Hero. John McCain weighed in with his own idiocies,
announcing that, "Hugo Chavez is establish[ing] a
dictatorship," presumably because, unlike George Bush,
Chavez counts all the votes in Venezuelan elections.
-
- But now our story
gets tricky and icky.
-
- The wise media
critic Jeff Cohen told me to watch for the press naming
McCain as a foreign policy expert and labeling the Democrats
as amateurs. Sure enough, the New York Times, on the news
pages Wednesday, called McCain, "a national security pro."
-
- McCain is the "pro"
who said the war in Iraq would cost nearly nothing in lives
or treasury dollars.
-
- But, on the
Colombian invasion of Ecuador, McCain said, "I hope that
tensions will be relaxed, President Chavez will remove those
troops from the borders - as well as the Ecuadorians - and
relations continue to improve between the two."
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- It's not quite
English, but it's definitely not Bush. And weirdly, it's
definitely not Obama and Clinton cheerleading Colombia's war
on Ecuador.
-
- Democrats, are you
listening? The only thing worse than the media attacking
Obama and Clinton as amateurs is the Democratic candidates'
frightening desire to prove them right.
Reproduced from www.Rense.com
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