Chavez says unknown submarine enters Venezuelan seas

CARACAS, (Reuters) – President Chavez said yesterday an unidentified nuclear-powered submarine violated  Venezuelan territorial waters this week and was chased away by  the South American nation’s navy.

“It escaped because it is much faster than our vessels,”  Chavez said in a late-evening call to state television. “We’re  investigating, fortunately our marines resisted provocation.”

Chavez is wont to raise the specter of possible foreign  threats to his socialist government, especially from the United  States. He gave scant details of the incident that he said took  place on Tuesday.

“We can’t accuse anyone because we don’t have details,” he  said. “You know how the empires used to go around the Caribbean  poking their noses everywhere using satellite spying.”

Drug-traffickers in the region are known to have begun  using submarines to transport cocaine from Colombia to the  United States and further afield.

“Obviously, from its speed and size, it’s a nuclear-powered  submarine. Anyway, we’re checking,” Chavez added.

In brief comments, he also lambasted U.S. drug and crime  official William Brownfield for remarks this week about an  “explosion” of drug trafficking through Venezuela.

A former ambassador to Venezuela, Brownfield is currently  the top official for international narcotics and law  enforcement affairs at the U.S. Department of State.

Chavez said Brownfield was “ridiculous” and his government  would give a formal response shortly.