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ed316
06-21-2006, 06:05 PM
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Morales: U.S. Sending Soldiers in Disguise

Bolivian President Evo Morales Accuses U.S. of Sending in Soldiers Disguised As Students, Tourists

By FIONA SMITH

The Associated Press

LA PAZ, Bolivia - President Evo Morales' latest anti-U.S. diatribe came in a speech to thousands of peasants in his political stronghold: The United States is sending soldiers disguised as students and tourists to Bolivia.
The accusation, rejected Wednesday as unfounded by the U.S. Embassy, comes as Morales faces attacks by political opponents for his cozy relationship with President Hugo Chavez's Venezuela, including accepting aid from that country's military.

It's not clear how many Venezuelan troops are in Bolivia, but Venezuelan pilots have been ferrying Morales around the country for the past two weeks in two loaned military helicopters as he campaigns ahead of July 2 elections for an assembly that is to retool Bolivia's constitution.

Morales' accusation also comes as Bolivia seeks to extend a preferential trade agreement that has been a big boost to South America's poorest country, helping Bolivia export $380 million in goods to the United States last year.

Vice President Alvaro Garcia Linera is expected to head to Washington next month to lobby for an extension of the Andean Trade Promotion and Drug Eradication Act, which expires Dec. 31.

Relations between the two countries have been frosty since Morales took office in January, and U.S. officials have said it's unlikely Bolivia will get an extension. Washington wants Bolivia to join Peru and Colombia in signing bilateral free-trade agreements.

During Morales' speech Tuesday in Cochabamba state, home of his political base, he mentioned that U.S. Ambassador David Greenlee had sought a meeting with him.

"He asked for a meeting. I don't know what he's looking to discuss. I'm not at all afraid of talking or perhaps he's angry," said Morales.

"But I also have the right to complain because U.S. soldiers disguised as students and tourists are entering the country," said Morales, a leftist Aymara Indian whose plan for Bolivia includes the nationalization of its natural gas industry.

Morales offered no evidence to back up the claim. His spokesman, Alex Contreras, said Morales would be providing evidence, though he did not say when.

The U.S. Embassy issued a statement calling Morales' accusation "unfounded."

"We reiterate once more that we are supporting Bolivian democracy in a consistent way," the statement said.

On Sunday, during a meeting with coca growers, Morales had uttered a phrase in the native Quechua language that may have irritated the U.S. ambassador.

"I shouted, 'Qausachun coca (long live coca!), wanuchun yanquis (die Yankees!),' and perhaps that could have angered him," said Morales. "If he complains, I, too, have the right to complain."

Morale often intoned the incendiary Quechua phrase in speeches during his years as head of the coca growers' union, a post he continues to hold today.

Coca is the basis of cocaine. But it is also a widely used stimulant with traditional medicinal and spiritual uses in Bolivia. Morales' government and Washington have been at loggerheads over his promotion of coca leaf for export in products including tea, toothpaste and shampoo.

Tuesday's remarks were Morales' second direct reference to the United States in recent days. Last week, he told a crowd that he was prepared to defend his revolution with arms against any U.S. threat.

Earlier this month, Morales said without offering specifics that the United States had tried to assassinate him in the past.

Morales' main political opponent, former president Jorge Quiroga, accused him this week of compromising Bolivia's sovereignty by inviting so many Venezuelan soldiers.

Venezuelan Embassy officials did not immediately return phone calls seeking comment on how many of the country's soldiers were in Bolivia.

Military cooperation with the United States, meanwhile, has ebbed. The U.S. Embassy would not specify how many Department of Defense employees it has in Bolivia, saying only that they number about a few dozen.

Morales has taken advantage of widespread resentment of the foreign policy of U.S. President George W. Bush's government to boost his populist agenda to fight poverty and hunger in Bolivia.

Morales nationalized the country's natural gas industry on May 1 and has vowed to turn over to landless peasants parcels owned by absentee landlords who have let them lie fallow.



Associated Press writers Carlos Valdez and Frank Bajak contributed to this report.



Copyright 2006 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Copyright © 2006 ABC News Internet Ventures



This guy has been hanging out with Hugo too much.

HOLLiS
06-21-2006, 06:51 PM
I thought the opinion of the Left was the US forces are stretched too thin in Iraq. We have extras NOW??

Laworkerbee
06-21-2006, 08:42 PM
It's not clear how many Venezuelan troops are in Bolivia, but Venezuelan pilots have been ferrying Morales around the country for the past two weeks in two loaned military helicopters as he campaigns ahead of July 2 elections for an assembly that is to retool Bolivia's constitution.

Seems someone else's military is interferring in Bolivia's internal affairs eh?

Rictor
06-21-2006, 11:13 PM
Since they were invited, no. US troops are stationed in dozens of countries around the world, and yet if I were to claim that their presence is illegitmate and wrong I would never hear the end of it.

KB
06-22-2006, 12:23 AM
This guy has been hanging out with Hugo too much.

Evo heard that every spring break the SEALS and SF guys overrun Cancun disguised as drunken college students. Posing as a drunken, topless coed in the wet t-shirt contest has been alleged to be a particularly effective cover.

chuckster
06-22-2006, 12:46 AM
He needs to put his tinfoil hat back on. The CIA branewave projector is getting to him.

Mr.Armageddon
06-22-2006, 01:11 AM
I thought the opinion of the Left was the US forces are stretched too thin in Iraq. We have extras NOW??
Well why are not outstretched in Iraq but we are in other areas in the world. Some say we don't even have enough troops if a disaster happened on U.S. soil.

HOLLiS
06-22-2006, 01:27 AM
If we get overstretched, I will let everyone know, when I get called up..

charliepage
06-22-2006, 04:00 AM
Yeah I heard about this...I thought I was paranoid, he has it pretty bad. :/

Kilgor
06-22-2006, 05:27 AM
So if you see any fat people talking very loudly, report them at once to the village commisar !

foxtrot023
06-22-2006, 10:54 AM
This guy has been hanging out with Hugo too much.

yep, him and Hugo are the Dumb and Dumber of international politics

http://www.eliberoamericano.com/public/noticias/evomoralesyhugochavez_noticias_379.jpg

Bert
06-22-2006, 11:28 AM
More like Laurel and Hardy.

BlackRain
06-22-2006, 12:09 PM
You can't really be too upset with Evo Morales.

http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/media/images/39467000/jpg/_39467978_11moralesafp203.jpg

He's mentally handicapped.

His stellar biography reveals he is an uneducated, peasant who used be involved in the cocaine trade.


The head of the domestic workers' union, Casimira Rodriguez, a Quechua Indian, was named Justice Minister.

Rodríguez's qualifications to be Justic minister you might ask? Why she was a former housekeeper.



He needs the USA to distract the Bolivian citizens from their own internal plight (the poorest country in South America). So when the spotlight starts focusing on him and his policies; he starts up again with American soldier "bogeymen".

The US policy right now is to ignore Bolivia and Venezuela and not feed into their rhetoric.


"The worst enemy of humanity is capitalism" -- President Evo Morales

foxtrot023
06-22-2006, 12:25 PM
from their own internal plight (the poorest country in South America). So when the spotlight starts .



Hardly his fault. Bolivia was screwed over by previous presidents, juntas etc. However he isn´t helping the economy get better either, and those nationalizations will come to bite Bolivia in the arse in the future

CPLHUNTER
06-22-2006, 12:56 PM
If we get overstretched, I will let everyone know, when I get called up..

I'll be there too, good ole inactive reserve

BlackRain
06-22-2006, 01:02 PM
Hardly his fault. Bolivia was screwed over by previous presidents, juntas etc. However he isn´t helping the economy get better either, and those nationalizations will come to bite Bolivia in the arse in the future


Very true.

No foreign company will be willing to risk capital or equipment in developing Bolivia's ecomony only to have it stolen by the state.

The communists/socialist movement is just walling themselves off from outside development.

Seriously, they view Cuba as a viable economic model?

foxtrot023
06-22-2006, 01:48 PM
you guys wanna laught your butts off?

Check this diatribe by Chavez- it even has subtitles in english

http://www.11abril.com/index/videos/ChavezHitBush20060319.wmv (http://www.11abril.com/index/videos/ChavezHitBush20060319.wmv)

pay special atenttion when he says Mr. Bush you are the worse, how do you say the worse in English?(siad in Spanish) The last, Mr. Bush, you are the last......lmao

Bert
06-22-2006, 02:31 PM
That's his weekly propaganda show - 'alo presidente' - I didn't know it was that inane.

charliepage
06-22-2006, 07:11 PM
lol I could watch that all day, "You are the last!". :p

Henry's Fork
06-23-2006, 07:58 AM
This guy has been hanging out with Hugo too much.

True. That stuff on Chavez's desk sure makes them two a little paranoid.

foxtrot023
06-23-2006, 10:24 AM
Yesterday I had the ¨honor¨ of seeing Chavez in the flesh in a reception in Panama. Ill say that the guy sounds like the goffy guy from work that you are sure will be hilarious when he gets drunk, with a dash of Homer Simpson in him. Did not talked to him, but I was hard pressed not to scream Mr. Dangerous!! except for the fact that my boss would not have liked that one bit (we were the imperialist undercover agents)

Bandeirante
06-24-2006, 09:29 AM
yep, him and Hugo are the Dumb and Dumber of international politics

http://www.eliberoamericano.com/public/noticias/evomoralesyhugochavez_noticias_379.jpg


Do you have noisy neighbours who disturb you?

Bolivia nationalized the Venezuelan Pumas

http://i43.photobucket.com/albums/e372/Babitonga/evo.jpg

http://i43.photobucket.com/albums/e372/Babitonga/evo2.jpg

http://i43.photobucket.com/albums/e372/Babitonga/Curly_Pres.jpg

If you are being disturbed by noise from a neighbour you can:

Approach the noise-maker and explain politely that you are being disturbed. You may find this difficult, but often people are unaware that they are causing a problem. Most will be glad to do what they can to reduce noise. However, approach the matter carefully if you think your neighbour might react angrily to a complaint.
If the problem continues, start a diary recording dates, times and cause of the noise, and the effects it has on you. Write to your neighbour explaining the problem, referring to any conversations you may have had and what, if anything, they agreed to do about it. Keep a record of any conversations you have or letters you write. If your neighbours are tenants, discuss your problem with the landlord. Most conditions of tenancy require that tenants do not cause nuisance to neighbours and the landlord should take action.http://i43.photobucket.com/albums/e372/Babitonga/selva9.jpg

foxtrot023
06-26-2006, 10:57 AM
well Brazil isn´t taking crap from Bolivia. Good for Brazil and congrats on being oil self sufficient!