Tensions escalate between Colombia and Venezuela

BOGOTA, (Reuters) – Colombia said it is preparing to  defend against a possible foreign military attack amid growing  tensions with neighbouring Venezuela, while Venezuelan President  Hugo Chavez said yesterday Colombia would regret any actions  that hurt his country.

Without specifically accusing Venezuela, Colombian Defense  Minister Gabriel Silva was quoted as saying on Sunday that his  country was preparing a strategy to ward off any attack.

Colombia, a close ally of the United States, and Venezuela,  whose leader Chavez is one of the most strident critics of the  United States in Latin America, are locked in a growing  political and trade dispute. Chavez, an outspoken socialist,  accuses the United States of planning to invade Venezuela with  the help of Colombia, a charge the United States denies.

The two Andean countries almost went to war in 1987 in a  dispute over a maritime border in the Caribbean Gulf.
Chavez ordered tanks to the Colombian border in 2008 after  Colombia raided a rebel base over the frontier inside Ecuador.  Chavez ally President Rafael Correa condemned the raid as an  aggression. Tensions eased after a summit a week later.

“In Colombia, we have concentrated on the internal threat.  But the risk is growing because what has been clearly and  directly presented is an eventual action against Colombia from  outside,” Silva told El Tiempo newspaper.

Colombia for decades has struggled to subdue Marxist rebels  profiting from the cocaine trade inside the country.
“Colombia was not used to thinking about this eventuality  in its foreign policy and defense strategy. Unfortunately now  we have to put this variable on the map. There is a risk of a  foreign aggression,” Silva said.

Colombia last week activated seven new army battalions,  including two along the Venezuelan frontier.
Chavez on Nov. 8 told Venezuelan troops to be ready for a  possible war with Colombia and restricted Colombian imports to  protest an agreement allowing U.S. troops more access to  Colombian bases, an accord he says threatens his OPEC nation.

“We are not preparing any aggression against Colombia or  against anybody,” Chavez said on his Sunday television show.  But he said his country would be prepared for any attack.  He called Colombia’s government a declared enemy of Venezuela.

“Believe me, bourgeoise of Colombia, if you hurt Venezuela  you’ll regret it. We are not unarmed. We do not have our arms  crossed,” Chavez said.

Chavez last week accused the Netherlands of aggressive  behavior for allowing the U.S. military access to airfields in  the self-governed Dutch Antilles and Aruba.

Yesterday, Chavez said the United States was spying on his  government with unmanned drones that fly from Colombia as well  as the islands off Venezuelan’s Caribbean coast. He called the  incursions by the unmanned planes “acts of war” and ordered his  air force to shoot them down if they are seen again.