Pubdate: Fri, 16 Sep 2005
Source: Los Angeles Times (CA)
Section: World News
4.story
Copyright: 2005 Los Angeles Times
Contact:  http://www.latimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/248
Authors: Paul Richter and Chris Kraul, Times Staff Writers

VENEZUELA GOVERNMENT UNHELPFUL IN WAR AGAINST DRUGS, U.S. SAYS

The Declaration Is Likely To Further Sour Relations Between The Countries. 
Chavez Government Says America Has No Right To Label Others As Pariahs.

WASHINGTON - The Bush administration declared Thursday that Venezuela had 
failed to cooperate in the fight against drug trafficking, a move likely to 
worsen already strained relations between the countries.

The administration said the government of Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez 
had reduced anti-drug cooperation with the United States, replaced 
qualified drug officials with unqualified political loyalists and, through 
neglect, allowed more narcotics to flow through its borders to the United 
States and Europe.

Venezuela "has been a disappointment," John P. Walters, director of the 
Office of National Drug Control Policy, told reporters, adding that Chavez 
"acts as if he no longer wants a productive relationship with the United 
States."

The administration's move, part of a congressionally required report, came 
amid continuing friction between Washington and Chavez, a populist with 
strong ties to Cuba who has expressed strong anti-U.S. sentiment. 
Washington has charged that Chavez is a regional troublemaker who is 
undermining democratic institutions in Venezuela and threatening to 
destabilize neighboring countries through support for radical leftist groups.

Venezuelan officials, anticipating the move in recent weeks, have 
complained publicly that the United States has no right to label others as 
pariahs. An official at the Venezuelan Embassy in Washington declined to 
comment on Thursday's declaration.

Although it does not involve financial penalties, branding Venezuela 
uncooperative in the fight against drugs is a symbolic slap that is certain 
to anger the Chavez government.

The U.S. is required to cut off aid to countries that do not cooperate in 
the anti-drug effort. In this case, the White House waived the requirement 
so it could continue to fund a series of small programs aimed at developing 
political parties and other democratic institutions in Venezuela.

That move also may annoy Chavez: The administration hopes to continue to 
fund groups that may include some of the Venezuelan president's political 
opponents, analysts said.

The move "reflects a bilateral relationship that has steadily 
deteriorated," said Peter DeShazo, who was the State Department's 
second-ranking diplomat for Latin America until last year and is now 
director of the Americas Program at the Center for Strategic and 
International Studies in Washington.

A significant amount of Colombian cocaine and heroin passes through lightly 
protected borders into Venezuela en route to the United States, officials 
say. In past years, Venezuela has cooperated with U.S. Drug Enforcement 
Administration efforts to monitor and impede the flow of drugs from 
laboratories in the Colombian jungle. Those efforts have suffered as 
relations between Washington and Caracas have grown increasingly strained.

In July, Venezuela complained that DEA agents were spying on the 
government, and suspended some cooperative undercover operations, including 
so-called controlled deliveries, or sting operations, involving drug 
shipments originating in or passing through the country. The U.S. has since 
suspended visas of two Venezuelan national guard officers suspected of 
being involved in drug trafficking.

Venezuelan officials have recently said they would like to build a new 
relationship. U.S. law enforcement agents who asked not to be named 
expressed dissatisfaction in interviews this week over a new U.S.-Venezuela 
"working agreement." It gives U.S. agents less latitude in carrying out 
anti-drug operations compared with British and Russian agents fighting 
organized crime there.

In a news conference with Walters, Nancy J. Powell, the acting assistant 
secretary of State for narcotics and law enforcement, said Thursday's 
declaration resulted from the Venezuelan government's refusal to cooperate 
in anti-drug efforts and data-sharing programs and from a "negative 
publicity campaign" against the DEA.

The U.S. process that determines whether a country is deemed to be 
cooperating in the war on drugs has long been controversial among Latin 
American officials who question whether the nation that is responsible for 
the lion's share of demand should be censuring others.

Some analysts wondered whether the U.S. "name and shame" approach would 
bring more cooperation or further complicate a troubled relationship.

"Whatever substance there is to Venezuelan authorities' cooperating or not 
will be different to extract from the now-spiraling political conflict 
between the U.S. and Venezuela," said John Walsh, a senior associate at the 
Washington Office on Latin America. "The drug war is now one more 
politicized issue in U.S.- Venezuela relations."

Daniel Erikson, director of Caribbean programs at Inter-American Dialogue, 
a Washington think tank, said the relationship between the countries had 
been repeatedly buffeted by events, including a comment last month by 
religious broadcaster Pat Robertson that the U.S. should assassinate Chavez.

"Given the whole political climate   it's going to be like getting Humpty 
Dumpty together again when it comes to U.S.-Venezuelan cooperation," 
Erikson said.

The annual drug report named one other country, Myanmar, as failing to 
cooperate on anti-drug work. The nation has also been named in previous years.

- ---------- Richter reported from Washington and Kraul from Coral Gables, Fla.
- ---
MAP posted-by: Elizabeth Wehrman