CARACAS, Wednesday November 26, 2008 | Update
Politics
At 9:00 a.m. Russian destroyer "Admiral Chabanenko" entered
La Guaira seaport, north Caracas, firing the traditional
21-gun salute to the host country, Venezuela, whose infantry
replied with the same number of gun shots as a welcome greeting,
but nuclear-powered battle cruiser Peter the Great was unable
to dock because of its large size.
The Venezuelan government signed in 1967 the Treaty for the
Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons in Latin America and the Caribbean
(Treaty of Tlatelolco).
Such a convention, which was ratified in 1970 by the Venezuelan
government, provides for the parties to undertake to prohibit
and prevent in their territories "the testing, use, manufacture,
production or acquisition by any means whatsoever of any nuclear
weapons, by the Parties themselves, directly or indirectly,
on behalf of anyone else or in any other way" as well as "the
receipt, storage, installation, deployment and any form of
possession of any nuclear weapons". However, nuclear-powered
cruiser Peter the Great is anchored in Venezuelan waters.
Demetrio Boersner, an expert in foreign affairs, makes the
difference between nuclear propulsion and nuclear weapons.
"I do not think that nuclear propulsion is included in the
nuclear ban. This vessel does not appear to carry nuclear
weapons, but only uses nuclear propulsion," he said.
Reyes Theis
EL UNIVERSAL
10:07 AM. DIPLOMACY. Admired by the Colombian guerrilla after his coup attempt in 1992, the then lieutenant colonel Hugo Chávez Frías received financial support by the Colombian Revolutionary Armed Forces (FARC) for his projects after his capture that year. This mostly explains the relationship and "debt" between the parties, as revealed by a paper of the International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS) of the United Kingdom.