USA expels Venezuela diplomats in row


| Oct. 2, 2013 | Caracas, Venezuela


Published by USA Today

Three Venezuelan diplomats were ordered out of the United States in response to the tossing of three U.S. diplomats by Venezuela, which accused the Americans of trying to sabotage the country.

Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro expelled U.S. charge d'affaires Kelly Keiderling and two other diplomats Monday, accusing them of conspiring with "the extreme right" to sabotage the South American country's economy and power grid.

Late Tuesday, the State Department said it was expelling Venezuelan charge d'affaires Calixto Ortega Rios and Second Secretary Monica Alejandra Sanchez Morales at the Washington embassy and Consul Marisol Gutierrez de Almeida at the Houston consulate. It gave them 48 hours to leave the U.S., the same time frame set by Venezuela for the U.S. envoys.

"It is regrettable that the Venezuelan government has again decided to expel U.S. diplomatic officials based on groundless allegations, which require reciprocal action. It is counterproductive to the interests of both our countries," the State Department said.

The expulsion of three American diplomats from Venezuela with the words "Yankees go home" is a "smoke screen" to cover up the government's inability to manage a country that is descending into economic chaos despite its huge oil wealth, critics said Tuesday.

With more than 45% annual inflation, shortages of basic items such as toilet paper and newsprint as well as ever more frequent power outages, many are growing tired of Venezuela's inefficiencies.

Maduro's "erratic behavior is just a pantomime to divert attention from the chaos Venezuela is in," said Samuel Akerman, 28, an engineer.

Opposition leader Henrique Capriles Radonski described the move on Twitter as a "smoke screen" to distract Venezuelans from Maduro's failure to right an economy plagued by poor production and a corrupt state-run petroleum industry.

The move was announced on state television by Maduro, who echoed the language of his predecessor, Hugo Chávez. "Get out of Venezuela," and "Yankees go home," he shouted.

The two countries have not had ambassadorial-level links since 2010, making Kelly Keiderling, the acting chargé d'affaires and one of the three Americans expelled, the senior most U.S. diplomat in the country.

"We completely reject the Venezuelan government's allegations of U.S. government involvement in any type of conspiracy to destabilize the Venezuelan government," read a U.S. statement.

The last expulsion of U.S. diplomats took place in March, on the day that Maduro later announced Chávez's death. Since then, various accusations have been made against U.S. citizens and officials, hit by various charges of spying and plotting to kill Maduro.

The behavior has followed a pattern in recent weeks. Maduro skipped the U.N. General Assembly last week citing "provocations that could threaten (his) life" and saying that he had evidence that at least two former U.S. officials, under President George W. Bush, were masterminding the plots against him. No evidence was produced.

On his way to China in recent weeks, a row erupted in which Maduro accused the U.S. of denying permission to fly through the American airspace of Puerto Rico. The U.S. said that no proper request had been made, yet permission was swiftly granted.

"Denying a head of state permission to fly through airspace that they (the U.S.) colonized is a grave error," said Maduro on state television.

It was not clear why Maduro's plane needed to fly over Puerto Rico in the first place. Industry experts said the flight path to the stopover in Paris was much farther south.

It is not only the United States that Maduro believes is out to get him.

France's Airbus is accused of sabotaging Maduro's presidential plane after five months of maintenance. A "serious fault" was found in one wing, according to the president. Airbus has said that it will aid a Venezuelan investigation.

While the allegations are failing to make waves abroad, critics say they play well to Maduro's home crowd — one that is disappointed with the country's economy and a lack of strong leadership, which it had in Chávez.

Gloria Torres is on Maduro's side.

"We've had enough of the Americans' fight against the Venezuelan people, with their guerrillas, infiltrators and conspirators," said Torres, 47, who before Chávez died organized community prayer vigils for him.