Colombia takes Chavez war talk to Security Council
BOGOTA (Reuters) - Colombia brought what it called threats of war from neighbouring Venezuela to the U.N. Security Council on Wednesday after Hugo Chavez, leader of the neighbouring country, told his army to get ready to fight.
For months Chavez has said that a military pact signed in October between Bogota and Washington could set the stage for a U.S. invasion of Venezuela from Colombian territory.
The United States and Colombia dismiss that idea, saying their cooperation is aimed strictly at combating drug traffickers and Marxist insurgents within Colombia.
During a televised address on Sunday, Chavez ordered his military to prepare for war as the best way to preserve peace.
Colombia responded with a letter to the U.N. Security Council "about Venezuela's threats of using force against Colombia," a foreign ministry statement said, asking that the letter be distributed to all members of the council.
The formal complaint could further anger Chavez, the fiery leftist revolutionary who once called former U.S. President George W. Bush "the devil".
"We've handed over a letter explaining in detail concerns Colombia has about remarks by President Chavez and other sensitive matters," Foreign Minister Jaime Bermudez told Reuters at an Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation Summit in Singapore.
"We have always said the door for dialogue is open... we have still not had any contact," he said. Continued...




