Report: caution on U.S. sanctions on Venezuela

pbachelet@MiamiHerald.com

Slapping sanctions on Venezuela for supporting leftist Colombian guerrillas would make President Hugo Chávez more popular and diminish U.S. standing in Latin America,warns a report prepared by the Republican staff of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

Several lawmakers, including Florida Republican Reps. Connie Mack and Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, have called on the Bush administration to designate Venezuela as a state sponsor of terrorism, following reports that Chávez is supporting the FARC guerrillas.

The State Department has not ruled out putting Venezuela on its list of countries that support terrorism, saying it would not make a determination until it carefully investigates the contents of several computers, belonging to slain rebel leader Raúl Reyes and captured by Colombian security forces.

Putting Venezuela on the list could mean broad, Iran-like sanctions against the South American country, a top exporter of oil to the the United States. Washington and others consider the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, known by the Spanish acronym FARC, a terrorist organization.

The report says it would be counterproductive to sanction Venezuela without regional support, something the text admits would be difficult to pull off.

Information allegedly retrieved from Reyes' computers show Venezuela and Ecuador were in close contact with FARC guerrillas, and Venezuela may have been in the process of providing up to $300 million in financial support for the rebels.

The report ``strongly cautions that policymakers must be wary of the implications of poorly thought out sanctions which might isolate the United States.''

''If Venezuela is found to be complicit, the U.S. would be wise to allow for the regional dynamic to take its course,'' the report says. 'If the U.S. reacts too strongly, attention will go from Venezuela's transgressions to yet another example of `American intervention' and strong-arm tactics.''

Colombian security forces seized the computers after bombing and then swooping into a FARC camp in Ecuador and retrieving the body of Reyes. The March 1 incident triggered diplomatic tensions with neighboring Venezuela and Ecuador.

To garner more regional support and pressure Venezuela, the report recommends releasing all the computer information. ``Once the nature of FARC activities and the alleged relationships of some countries with the FARC are verified and exposed, it will be difficult for the complicit countries to continue to support the FARC through action or inaction.''

The report was prepared by Carl Meacham, an aide on Latin American issues to Sen. Richard Lugar (R-Ind.), the ranking member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. Meacham traveled to Ecuador and Colombia March 18-19.

The text says the Colombians were ''ambiguous'' on the possibility of more U.S. sanctions. On one hand, they recognized that limiting Venezuela's oil income could slow down the country's purchase of advanced weapons that Colombians fear. But they also noted that Venezuela is Colombia's second largest trading partner after the United States, and a ''complete shut-down'' of bilateral trade could cost Colombia 100,000 jobs.

The report also recommends the administration act carefully so as not to ''impinge U.S. commercial prospects in Venezuela'' and not label countries as terrorist backers ``simply because they are carrying out their perceived national interest in maintaining relations with Venezuela.''

 

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