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U.S. Sailor to Be Expelled

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From Associated Press

President Hugo Chavez said Thursday that Venezuela was expelling a U.S. Navy officer accused of passing secret information from the Venezuelan military to the Pentagon.

He also accused Navy Cmdr. John Correa of encouraging Venezuelan officers to consider overthrowing the government, which weathered a brief coup in April 2002.

Chavez warned that he would throw out all U.S. military attaches if further suspected espionage occurred. The U.S. Embassy denied that any of its military attaches had done anything wrong.

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Venezuela’s accusations of espionage, which began last week, have heightened tensions in an already rocky relationship between Washington and Caracas. Chavez, whose nation is a major supplier of oil to the United States, is an outspoken critic of U.S. economic policies.

“We have declared the United States Navy commander named John Correa persona non grata. He should leave the country immediately,” Chavez said in a nationally televised speech celebrating the seventh anniversary of his government.

“We warn the imperial government of the United States that if their military attaches in Venezuela continue to do what this commander has been doing, they will be detained, and the next step would be to withdraw the whole so-called military mission of the United States,” he said, drawing cheers and applause from an audience of several thousand.

The U.S. Embassy received a letter from Venezuela on Tuesday asking Correa to appear before military prosecutors, and Thursday got another letter ordering him to leave the country, embassy spokeswoman Salome Hernandez said.

“None of the military attaches at the U.S. Embassy in Caracas was or is involved in inappropriate activities,” she said, adding that the embassy has 21 military personnel in Venezuela compared with Venezuela’s 65 military officers working in the United States.

U.S. Ambassador William Brownfield said the communique from Venezuela’s government accused Correa only of conducting himself in a way that did not conform to international agreements.

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“We have not received any communication from the government that explains the reason” for the expulsion, Brownfield told Venezuelan TV channel Globovision.

Neither Hernandez nor the envoy commented on whether Correa was still in Venezuela.

Chavez said he had evidence that Correa met with a group of Venezuelan officers to drum up support for a coup attempt modeled after the 1989 U.S. military invasion of Panama that ousted Manuel Noriega.

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