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Colombia, Venezuela, Ecuador in tense standoff after raid

BOGOTA—Venezuela and Ecuador moved their troops to their border with Colombia and engaged in a war of words as they found themselves Monday in tense standoff over Colombia’s anti-guerrilla raid into Ecuador.
Ecuadoran President Rafael Correa said late Sunday he had ordered the deployment of troops to the northern border and an “immediate expulsion” of Colombian Ambassador Carlos Holguin as a result of Saturday’s raid, in which Raul Reyes, the second-ranking commander of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), was killed.
Ecuador earlier recalled its own ambassador to Bogota and warned that Colombia’s actions might result in “ultimate consequences.” Correa also canceled a visit to Cuba to deal with the crisis at home. From Caracas, Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez said he was sending 10 army battalions equipped with tanks and fighter aircraft to his country’s border with Colombia.
Correa’s initial reaction to the raid was relatively calm. But he admitted he had become angry when he learned the FARC rebels “were not killed in hot pursuit, but were bombed and massacred in their sleep.” In a statement released earlier Sunday, Colombian Foreign Minister Fernando Araujo extended Bogota’s apology for the action, but said the Colombian military “had to take over the border area” because it needed to locate “the place from which it took fire.”
But late, the tone hardened when a spokesman for Colombian President Alvaro Uribe accused Correa of making commitments to the FARC. He said documents found in computers belonging to Reyes showed that “Correa has a relationship and commitments with the FARC.”
Colombian police chief Oscar Naranjo added the discovered documents indicated that Ecuadoran Security Minister Gustavo Larrea had been in contact with Colombian rebels to inform them “on behalf of Rafael Correa” that the Ecuadoran president “was interested in making relations with the FARC official.”
Chavez meanwhile said Ecuador “can count on Venezuela for whatever it needs, in any situation.” “We don’t want war,” said Chavez, “but we won’t let the Empire or its lap dog President Uribe try to make us weaker.” The Empire is Chavez’s standard reference to the United States.
Chavez also ordered his foreign minister to shut down the Venezuelan embassy in Bogota and tell all officials to come home. Venezuela’s ambassador to Colombia had already been recalled in November during a previous Chavez-Uribe spat. The United States, which has been backing Colombia in its decades-long fight against leftist guerrillas, said it was monitoring the situation in South America.—Agencies
 

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