Petroleumworld`s
Opinion Forum:
viewpoints on issues in energy, international
politics & civilization.
Saturday
Lagniappe
WSJ
Further Exposes Chávez's Deep Collaboration with FARC:
More From INTERPOL May15th!

FARC
guerrilla commander Luis Edgar Devia Silva, better known by
his alias Raul Reyes with his computer.
By
Pedro Miguel Burelli
R.I.P. the feeble efforts by the
Venezuelan government to discredit the almost 16,000 documents
(approx. 638 GB worth of info gold) found in a series of laptops,
hard drives and pen drives found in the camp of deceased FARC
leader Raul Reyes, the truth is about to emerge.
On
May the 15th, Interpol's Chief will announce in Bogota the
results of their excruciatingly detailed analysis of the
files, software and hardware involved. While no third government
wants to front run the announcement it is understood by all
that Interpol will confirm that these computers where not manipulated,
that various forensic test prove that they were indeed being
used by Mr. Reyes and his cohorts, and that some of the facts
contained can be corroborated through other means and sources.
The Wall Street Journal, in a fabulous piece appearing in
today's edition (see below), refreshes our memory on the facts
and brings to our attention new, as of yet undisclosed, documents
that paint a picture of blatant and shameless collaboration
of the part not of Mr. Chavez's government, but of Mr. Chavez
himself. The deeds of his amoral minister of interior and justice
(oxymoron #1) and his head of military intelligence (oxymoron
#2) are sure to grace many of the documents likely to be certified
next week by Interpol. The picture that will emerge will be
crystal clear and palpably criminal. The masks will fall and
those who, like OAS Secretary General Insulza, have ridiculously
chosen to trivialize the matter will have to move fast and
seek cover from ridicule or worse.
What next? Pressure will mount to isolate the regime in Caracas
and that will be the right reaction. Hugo Chavez has overplayed
his cards and has been caught with half his body in the cookie
jar. The people of Venezuela have little to do with the criminal
activity of individuals that have obliterated the rule of law
and sought the complicity of many the old fashion way: buying
it! But once again I stress that a crime that has been proven
with the use of high technology deserves to be punished with
highly sophisticated sanctions. Facts have to be made available
for the world to reach their own conclusion and those who continue
to cavort with this indictable regime should be ready to suffer
the consequences (i.e. Mr. and Mrs. Kirchner, Joe Kennedy,
Bill Delahunt, Danny Glover, and of course Evo, Raul, Rafael
and Daniel). Smart and global sanctions and not the usual US-unilateral
and knee-jerk espoused by the same folks that have given the
Castro's bothers their eternal excuse to oppress.
We are but a few days away from an event many have been expecting,
others have been dreading but nobody can ignore without consequences.
Enjoy this revealing WSJ expose and get ready for the real
show on May 15th and beyond.
Chávez
Aided Colombia Rebels, Captured Computer Files Show
By
Jose de Cordoba and Jay Solomon
The Wall
Street Journal
May 9, 2008; Page A1
BOGOTÁ, Colombia -- A cache of controversial computer
files closely tying Venezuela's President Hugo Chávez
to communist rebels seeking to topple Colombia's government
appear to be authentic, U.S. intelligence officials say.
The trove -- found on a dead guerrilla leader's laptops during
a military raid in March -- is likely to ratchet up pressure
for the U.S. to impose sanctions on one of its most important
oil suppliers.
The
files that have been made public so far have largely confirmed
Mr. Chávez's well-known sympathy
for the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC.
But a review by The Wall
Street Journal of more than 100 new files from the computers
suggests that Venezuela has broader and deeper ties to the
FARC than previously known.
These documents indicate Venezuela appears to be making concrete
offers to help arm the rebels, possibly with rocket-propelled
grenades and ground-to-air missiles. The files suggest that
Venezuela offered the FARC the use of one of its ports to receive
arms shipments, and that Venezuela raised the prospect of drawing
up a joint security plan with the FARC and sought basic training
in guerrilla-warfare techniques.
"There is complete agreement in the intelligence community
that these documents are what they purport to be," a senior
U.S. official said. The Office of the Director of National
Intelligence has been sharing its assessments with the White
House, this official said.
Washington's stance is likely to hurt Venezuela's already
deeply strained relationship with the U.S., its biggest trade
partner. It could also add pressure for the U.S. to declare
Venezuela a state sponsor of terrorism, alongside Cuba, Iran,
North Korea, Sudan and Syria, and impose sanctions.
Mr.
Chávez has repeatedly said the files were faked
by Colombia. "We don't recognize the validity of any of
these documents," Bernardo Álvarez, Venezuela's
ambassador to the U.S., said in a Wednesday interview. "They
are false, and an attempt to discredit the Venezuelan government."
Interpol, the international police organization, has yet to
give its view on the files' legitimacy. Colombia asked Interpol
to perform an independent forensic analysis, and next week,
Interpol Secretary General Ronald Noble is scheduled to travel
to Colombia to present the findings.
Mr.
Noble declined to comment on Interpol's conclusions. He said
Interpol hasn't yet briefed foreign
governments on its
findings. "Anyone who has told you that Interpol has informed
him about our findings has given you false information," he
said.
Cross-Border Raid
The
computer files hint at the depth of Mr. Chávez's
antipathy towards the U.S., which he often describes as an "empire" oppressing
Latin America. According to one document, Venezuela's interior
minister, Ramón Rodríguez Chacin, last November
asked the FARC to train Venezuela's military in nuts-and-bolts
guerrilla tactics -- including "operational tactics, explosives,
... jungle camps, ambushes, logistics, mobility" -- so
that soldiers would be prepared to fight a guerrilla war if
the U.S. were to invade Venezuela.
The
documents are among more than 10,000 files that Colombian
intelligence services say came from three
computers belonging
to Raúl Reyes, the FARC's former second-in-command.
Mr. Reyes was killed in March when Colombia's military staged
a contentious cross-border raid into Ecuador, where he was
camped.
The
FARC itself has suggested the files are fake. A FARC statement
published on the Web site of Venezuela's
Information Ministry
ridiculed Colombia's claims about the computer files, saying
computers couldn't have survived the Colombian army attack "even
if they had been bullet-proof."
A
senior staffer in the U.S. Senate, who had been briefed on
the contents of the files, cautioned that
Mr. Chávez
is known for his bombast, and that while tantalizing, the information
in the files would need careful corroboration before action
is taken against Venezuela. "We need to see proof of what
is mentioned in the reports," the staffer said.
There have been some recent indications that the computers
contain accurate information. Police in Costa Rica staged a
successful raid on a home belonging to alleged FARC sympathizers,
and recovered $480,000 in cash, guided by information from
the documents suggesting the money would be located there.
In addition, Ecuador's interior minister confirmed that he
had met with Mr. Reyes, after an email describing the previously
secret meeting was found on the laptops and made public by
Colombia.
The FARC, which has been fighting for control of Colombia
for nearly a half-century, funds itself mostly through drug
trafficking and kidnapping for ransom. The U.S. considers it
to be one of the world's main cocaine suppliers.
The FARC is considered a terrorist organization by the U.S.,
Canada, Colombia and the European Union. For the U.S., any
group that deliberately attacks civilians for political reasons
merits such a designation. With troop strength estimated at
around 9,000 fighters, that would make the FARC Latin America's
oldest and largest such group.
However,
Colombia's neighbors, including Venezuela, Ecuador and Brazil,
don't consider the FARC to be a terrorist
organization.
Indeed, Mr. Chávez has hailed the group as brother revolutionaries.
He has thrown Venezuela's weight behind an effort to remove
the FARC from terrorist lists and instead grant the group diplomatic
recognition as a "belligerent army."
According
to the senior U.S. intelligence official, the Colombian government
delivered "thousands" of
the controversial documents to Washington in March. Since
then, American technical
experts have studied them for signs of forgery and to assess
whether they correspond to the methods the FARC typically uses
to communicate.
"There are no indications whatsoever that they've been
fabricated by the Colombians," the official said.
The
official said that the most troubling information in the
files suggested the FARC's willingness to purchase
virtually
any type of weapon from any source. The official said Mr. Chávez's
government has increasingly been willing to help the FARC reach
international buyers. The official cited the FARC's particular
desire to acquire surface-to-air missiles, although he said
there weren't any signs of the guerrilla movement succeeding.
The FARC Situation
During
a speech Wednesday on Latin American relations, President
Bush brought up the FARC situation. "Colombia
faces a hostile and anti-American neighbor in Venezuela,
where the
regime has forged an alliance with Cuba, collaborated with
FARC terrorists, and provided sanctuary to FARC units."
According
to a study last week from the Senate Foreign Relations Committee,
sanctions against Venezuela
could backfire if done
poorly. The U.S. would need to rally significant regional support
or risk that sanctions become "counterproductive" by
stirring nationalist or anti-U.S. sentiments.
Venezuela has mounted a vigorous diplomatic offensive to block
any move by the U.S. to declare the nation a terrorism sponsor.
Such a declaration would prompt U.S. economic sanctions,
disrupt $50 billion in annual bilateral trade and jolt the
already jittery global oil market, since Venezuela is a major
oil producer.
In
a speech last month in New York, Mr. Álvarez, Venezuela's
ambassador, warned the U.S. would pay a heavy economic price
if it made any such move. "There will be very grave economic
consequences," Mr. Álvarez said, adding that some
230,000 U.S. manufacturing jobs depend on U.S. exports to Venezuela,
which in turn sends some 1.58 million barrels of oil daily
to the U.S.
The
documents suggest Mr. Chávez is personally involved
in helping the guerrillas. In a September 2007 message to the
FARC's ruling body, a commander wrote: "Chávez
is studying our documents and has said that just like Fidel
[Castro] has decided to delegate his other responsibilities
to concentrate on the Venezuelan situation, he [Chávez]
is ready to do the same to dedicate more time to Colombia."
Colombia
has long accused Venezuela of letting the FARC operate on
its side of the border, allegations the
Venezuelans have
denied. But according to one 2005 email, from Jorge Briceño
(known as Mono Jojoy, a top FARC military commander), the rebels
at that time had some 370 guerrillas and urban sympathizers
operating inside Venezuela.
Getting 'Rockets'
One
email, apparently sent by a FARC commander known as "Timochenko" to
the guerrillas' ruling body in March 2007, describes meetings
with Venezuelan naval-intelligence officers who offer the FARC
assistance in getting "rockets." The Venezuelans
also offer to help a FARC guerrilla travel to the Middle East
to learn how to use the rockets.
Colombian
military analysts believe the reference is to shoulder-fired
antiaircraft missiles, a weapon that
the guerrillas desperately
need if they hope to blunt Colombia's recent gains. "The
FARC realizes that its military problem is air power," says
Gen. Oscar Naranjo, who heads the country's national police.
In
another email dated early 2007, FARC commander Iván
Márquez describes meetings with the Venezuelan military's
intelligence chief, Gen. Hugo Carvajal, and another Venezuelan
officer to talk about "finances, arms and border policy." Mr.
Márquez relates that the Venezuelans will provide the
guerrillas some 20 "very powerful bazookas," which
Colombian military officials believe is a reference to rocket-propelled
grenade launchers.
An officer reached at Gen. Carvajal's office said the general
was the only person authorized to comment and he couldn't be
reached because he was traveling.
At
the meeting with Gen. Carvajal, another Venezuelan general
is described as offering the port of Maracaibo
to facilitate
arms shipments to the guerrillas. The general suggests piggybacking
on shipments from Russia -- from which Venezuela itself is
buying everything from Kalashnikovs to jet fighters -- to "include
some containers destined to the FARC" with various arms
for the guerrillas' own use.
A spokesman at the Russian embassy in Washington declined
to comment.
The
proposals to obtain weaponry are part of a broad program
of economic and political support for the
FARC from Mr. Chávez's
government, some of which was detailed in emails that were
made public in the days just after the cross-border military
raid that yielded the computer files.
Another
email describes a November meeting between two FARC commanders
and Mr. Chávez. The commanders, Ricardo Granda
and Iván Márquez, report back in the email that
Mr. Chávez gave orders to create "rest areas" and
hospital zones for the guerrillas to use on the Venezuelan
side of the border.
Many
documents talk about how to fit generous offers of Venezuelan
aid to the FARC's long-term "strategic plan" of taking
power in Colombia. In one document dated January 2007, one
top FARC commander speaks of a "loan" for $250 million
to buy arms which the FARC will pay back once it has reached
power. "Don't think of it as a loan, think of it as solidarity," says
Mr. Rodríguez Chacin, the interior minister, in another
document.
Mr.
Rodríguez Chacin's press office didn't respond
to a request for comment. Earlier this week, he dismissed Colombian
newspaper reports that Interpol had confirmed that the computer
documents were authentic, according to an Interior Ministry
press release. "Imagine somebody taking [evidence] home
and manipulating it as he wants, and afterwards presenting
it," he said. "What court in the world will accept
that evidence?"
While
the documents indicate that the FARC is appreciative of Venezuela's
efforts, privately the guerrillas
occasionally
make fun of the Venezuelans' work habits. "It hasn't been
easy for us to adapt to the way of being of the Venezuelans," complains
Mr. Reyes in one document. "It doesn't seem as if they
are conscious of their boring lack of formality." Mr.
Chávez "always leaves things until the last moment."
-David
Gauthier-Villars in Paris and David Crawford in Berlin contributed
to this article.
- jay.solomon@wsj.com1
Pedro
Miguel Burelli is a financial consultant, a former member
of PDVSA board of director and ex head of JPMorgan Capital
Corporation – Latin America.. Petroleumworld
does not necessarily share these views
Editor's
Note: This article was originally posted on www.pmbcomments.com,
on 05 09 2008. Petroleumworld reprint this article in the interest
of our readers.
All
comments posted and published on Petroleumworld, do not reflect
either for or against the opinion expressed
in the comment as an endorsement of Petroleumworld.
All comments expressed are private comments and do not
necessary reflect
the view of this website. All comments are posted
and published without liability to Petroleumworld.
Fair use Notice: This site contains copyrighted material the
use of which has not always been specifically authorized by
the copyright owner. We are making such material available
in our efforts to advance understanding of issues of environmental
and humanitarian significance. We believe this constitutes
a 'fair use' of any such copyrighted material as provided for
in section 107 of the US Copyright Law. In accordance with
Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107. For more information go to: http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml.
All works published by Petroleumworld are in accordance with
Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without
profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving
the included information for research and educational purposes.
Petroleumworld has no affiliation whatsoever with the originator
of this article nor is Petroleumworld endorsed or sponsored
by the originator.
Petroleumworld encourages persons to reproduce, reprint, or
broadcast Petroleumworld articles provided that any such reproduction
identify the original source, http://www.petroleumworld.com
or else and it is done within the fair use as provided for
in section 107 of the US Copyright Law. If you wish to use
copyrighted material from this site for purposes of your own
that go beyond 'fair use', you must obtain permission from
the copyright owner.
Internet web links to http://www.petroleumworld.com are appreciated
Petroleumworld
welcomes your feedback and comments: editor@petroleumworld.com.
By using this link, you agree
to allow E&P to publish your
comments on our editor's letters page.
Petroleumworld News 05/10/08
Copyright© 2008
respective author or news agency. All rights reserved.
We welcome
the use of Petroleumworld™ stories
by anyone provided it mentions Petroleumworld.com as
the source. Other stories you have to get authorization
by its authors.