View Full Version : ChevronTexaco's Venezuelan Field Contains 4Bln Cubic Feet Of Gas - PDVSA
Gold9472
07-19-2005, 05:56 PM
ChevronTexaco's Venezuelan field contains 4 bln cubic feet of gas - PDVSA
http://www.forbes.com/markets/feeds/afx/2005/07/11/afx2130915.html
Chevron Statement:
http://www.chevron.com/news/press/2005/2005-06-20.asp
07.11.2005, 07:12 AM
CARACAS (AFX) - The field discovered by ChevronTexaco Corp's Venezuelan unit at an offshore well in the Deltana platform contains 4 bln cubic feet of gas, said Luis Vierma, vice-president for production and exploration of state-owned oil company Petroleos de Venezuela (PDVSA).
Chevron had estimated last month that some 2 bln cubic feet of gas may be contained in that field.
Vierma was quoted as saying by daily Panorama yesterday that the results are 'highly interesting'.
Chevron has almost entirely completed its exploration programme in record time, Vierma said.
Gold9472
07-19-2005, 06:00 PM
Chavez Stokes Confrontation Over U.S. Role in Venezuela
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/07/18/AR2005071801370.html
By Monte Reel
Tuesday, July 19, 2005; Page A15
CARACAS, Venezuela -- After the rumble of tanks died down and the last soldier high-stepped past the spectators' pavilion, President Hugo Chavez told the thousands attending Venezuela's Independence Day parade July 5 that no invading army could match the fighting force that had just marched by, "armed to the teeth."
The hypothetical invasion he invoked was patently clear: Two days before, Chavez announced the discovery of evidence that the United States had drawn up blueprints to invade Venezuela, a plan he said was code-named "Operation Balboa."
American officials dismissed the claim as fiction, just as they have denied Chavez's repeated assertions that the CIA is trying to assassinate him, or that the Bush administration was behind the military coup that briefly toppled his government in April 2002.
There is little doubt, however, that relations between Venezuela and the United States, strained for years, are plunging to new lows.
Chavez has always been outspoken in condemning what he calls "U.S. imperialism," mocking President Bush as "Mr. Danger" and Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld as "Mr. War." But Venezuelan officials insist that his recent threats to sever ties with Washington -- thereby suspending the export of 1.5 million barrels of oil per day -- are more than the rhetoric of a populist rallying domestic support.
"When the president talks, it is not a joke," said Mary Pili Hernandez, a senior Foreign Ministry official. "The only country Venezuela has bad relations with is the United States; with all other countries we have good or very good relations. But with just one word, the U.S. could resolve all of the problems. That word is 'respect.' "
Chavez asserts that the 21st-century equivalent of the Cold War is the developed world's thirst for oil -- and its attempts to manipulate weaker governments to secure it. Oil-rich Venezuela sells 60 to 65 percent of its crude oil to the United States, making it the fourth-largest oil supplier to the U.S. market. This year, near-record-high oil prices have helped Chavez finance a variety of social programs that he vows will make the country more independent of U.S. influence.
Observers say the oil revenue also has emboldened Chavez's foreign policy strategy. He has recently inked oil agreements with Argentina, Brazil and his Caribbean neighbors, and has launched efforts to strengthen ties with China through oil accords.
Rafael Quiroz, an oil industry analyst in Caracas, said the Chavez government believes that the conflict between developing countries endowed with such natural resources and nations with high demands will only intensify in coming years. Chavez would like to precipitate that conflict, Quiroz said.
"I think he's correct to try to speed up that kind of confrontation, because the developing world -- where 85 percent of world reserves are -- will stand in a better place after that," Quiroz said. "Every day it is more apparent that oil is fundamental for Venezuela in its international relations, and it is the main ingredient Chavez uses to form strategic alliances."
Venezuela could find other buyers for oil and the United States could find other suppliers, but both have sound financial incentives to continue the current trade arrangement. If Venezuela cut supplies, the United States would probably have to pay more to fill the gap, hiking domestic fuel prices.
Venezuela would also suffer because of higher shipping and infrastructure costs, according to U.S. officials. There are now five refineries in the United States specifically tooled to process Venezuela's variety of heavy crude oil; no other countries are similarly equipped, officials said.
"It would be a disruption, but at the end of the day, no one country can control the international oil market," said William R. Brownfield, the U.S. ambassador to Venezuela.
U.S. officials have also complained about strains in the traditionally cooperative efforts against drug trafficking. Earlier this year, the Venezuelan National Guard seized equipment from neighboring Colombia's anti-drug task force, which works closely with the United States. And last month, the head of Venezuela's drug-fighting squad -- whom international drug agents had considered very supportive -- was fired.
Venezuelan authorities bristle at suggestions they are being uncooperative in law enforcement matters. They argue that the U.S. government follows a double standard, pointing in particular to the case of Luis Posada Carriles, a former CIA operative who participated in the failed Bay of Pigs invasion of Cuba in 1961. A naturalized Venezuelan citizen now in a Texas prison on immigration charges, Posada, 77, has been accused of bombing a Cuban airliner in 1976, killing all 73 aboard. He was arrested in Venezuela on terrorism charges but escaped from prison in 1985.
After becoming embroiled in a network run by former White House aide Oliver L. North to smuggle weapons to anti-government rebels in Nicaragua, and an alleged assassination attempt against Cuban President Fidel Castro for which he was imprisoned in Panama, Posada was spotted in Miami earlier this year. U.S. officials indicated they were unaware of his whereabouts, but in May, after he was interviewed by the Miami Herald, he was arrested and sent to a detention facility in El Paso. He is now seeking asylum to protect him from a Venezuelan extradition request. He faces a hearing in August.
The Posada case is as complex as a spy novel, but Venezuelan authorities say it boils down to this: If the United States is serious about prosecuting the war on terrorism, it should extradite Posada -- whom they compare to Osama bin Laden -- to face justice in the airliner bombing.
"If you have a president who speaks all the time about the importance of fighting terrorism," said Hernandez, the Foreign Ministry official, "we don't understand" the U.S. reluctance to extradite Posada. "The main reason to do it is to give justice to the families of the 73 people who died."
Posada's attorneys assert that he essentially was acquitted twice -- first by a Venezuelan military court, then by a civilian court that failed to convict him. His attorney here, a former intelligence officer named Joaquin Chaffardet, was indicted but never convicted for allegedly organizing Posada's prison break.
"I absolutely justify that decision," Chaffardet said of Posada's escape, adding that he was convinced Posada could never get a fair trial in Venezuela. "It is not justice to have someone waiting nine years for a trial after being acquitted already."
Venezuelan authorities say the civil case against Posada was still proceeding when he escaped. Posada's defenders insist the Venezuelan extradition request has nothing to do with bringing a terrorist to justice; they say Chavez is simply using the case as a tool against the United States.
Political opponents of Chavez also criticize the president's repeated claims that the CIA is backing a plot to murder him. On June 24, the government canceled an annual military parade, citing reports of an assassination plot against Chavez. On Independence Day, he watched a parade of the newly formed military reserve force that he hopes will eventually grow to 2 million loyal defenders. One group of opposition legislators calculates that Chavez has increased funding for his own security by 673 percent in the past six years.
The president's security concerns are not surprising, since he was temporarily toppled by a coup three years ago. Earlier this month a judge ruled that the opposition group Sumate -- accused of accepting $31,000 from the U.S. government-funded National Endowment for Democracy -- must stand trial for its alleged role in inciting the coup.
One of the group's members, Maria Corina Machado, also is charged with civil rebellion for her role in the government that replaced Chavez for two days, until loyalists returned him to power. In May, Bush met with Machado in the White House, a move that infuriated Chavez. A State Department spokesman earlier this month defended Sumate, saying the group is devoted to educating voters and encouraging democracy.
"The judicial actions that are being taken here are, from our perspective, simply part of a Venezuelan government campaign that's designed to intimidate members of civil society and prevent them from exercising their democratic rights," Tom Casey, a State Department spokesman, said at a July 8 briefing.
U.S. officials say the atmosphere between the two countries is tainted with so much bad blood that no simple solution is likely to wash it away.
"We are going to constantly be in his cross hairs," one senior U.S. official said of Chavez. "We're talking about a man who has gone through all of his adult life in confrontation mode. It's not a question that we will have a negative relationship with him."
Gold9472
07-19-2005, 06:12 PM
Venezuela Discovers More Oil - Bush Plans Invasion
http://www.eastbaynews.org/stages/word_stage1.php?EBN=050711_1_word
(Gold9472: Never heard of eastbaynews.org)
Clif Ross
07/11/05
MÉRIDA, VENEZUELA - The State oil company of Venezuela, PDVSA, confirmed today the discovery of four billion square feet of natural gas in western Venezuela, believed in June to have only been 2 billion square feet. It also confirmed that it possesses the largest single reserve of oil in the world. In addition to the estimated 78 billion barrels of conventional oil reserves, there are 235 billion more barrels of heavy and extra-heavy crude, known as Orimulsion, in the Rio Orinoco region. This means that Venezuela possesses under her soil nearly fifty percent of the total amount of oil in the entire Middle East. Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Kuwait, Abu Dhabi, Iran and Qatar have a combined total of 676 billion barrels while Venezuela´s total alone is 313 billion barrels.
This might go a long way in explaining why the Bush Administration has made extensive plans for an the invasion of Venezuela. Plans for a joint U.S.-NATO invasion of Venezuela date back to May 3, 2001, according to an article published in last week´s edition of Venezuelan weekly "Las Verdades de Miguel." The plan was dubbed "Operation Balboa" and drawn up by the Southern Command under George Bush, according to the report, written by José Luis Carpio. The invasion had as its objective to "remove Hugo Chavez from power, using the same strategy employed in the war against Iraq" with a massive midnight bombing campaign, followed by an invasion and occupation of the country.
President Hugo Chavez had mentioned Operation Balboa on Sunday, July 3, in his weekly television show, Alo Presidente, but without offering details. At that time Chavez said he knew "in detail" about the plan and he also proposed an "Operation Counter Balboa," an operation which may already be underway.
For several months now the Venezuelan Military has been conducting joint exercises with the civilian population in preparation for national emergencies like "earthquakes, tsunamis and invasions by foreign forces." They have also made recent purchases of 100,000 small arms and helicopters from Russia and begun developing plans to build up a national civilian defense force to repel any foreign aggression.
"Operation Balboa" appears not to have been implemented beyond the design stage, but neither have the plans been scrapped. According to Carpio, "The plans presented by the North Americans continue in effect and the possibility remains, according to the sources of information that have been consulted, of the appearance of unidentified groups attacking U.S. citizens or interests, which would give greater justification for an intervention." This latter scenario may already be in the works and has historical precedents dating back all the way to the Mexican American War.
Under President Andrew Jackson the U.S. made military incursions into Mexico numerous times to provoke an attack on their soldiers for an excuse for the war in which the U.S. carried away half of Mexico as war booty. Prior to the invasion of Panama in December of 1989 the U.S. provoked attacks on U.S. personnel by running roadblocks, attacking and insulting Panamanian Defense Forces and this eventually provided the pretext for the eventual invasion.
In a U.S.-Contra operation, reminiscent of the CIA's terrorist war against Sandinista Nicaragua in the 1980s, these "unidentified groups" Carpio mentioned are known as paramilitaries and they are currently operating along the Colombia-Venezuelan border. Like the Contras, they are sustained by cocaine money and the work of these paramilitaries is not only to instill terror in the local population. So far they have also been responsible for killing nearly one hundred peasant leaders committed to the Bolivarian Revolution of Venezuela.
The plan, according to Diario Vea, seems to be "to clear important peasant areas of Bolivarian activists" with the aim of creating "focos of civil war" and this civil war, in turn, "would offer a pretext to North American circles for an intervention in Venezuela."(Diario Vea, July 7, 2005).
Venezuelan weekly, Quinto DÃ^a, (July 1-8, 2005 edition) reports incursions by U.S. Marines into Venezuelan territory from bases in Colombia. Although officially denied by both the U.S. and Venezuelan military authorities in Caracas, residents along the Rio Arauca insist that "the marines have already detained people in Venezuelan territory, taking them into Colombia where they're tortured or threatened."
Other U.S. plans to destroy the Bolivarian Revolution appear to include the assassination of Pres. Chavez and the purchase of the forthcoming Venezuelan municipal elections set for August 7. Rumors of assassination attempts have been swirling around Caracas for several weeks and at least one arrest was made of a man with a sniper's rifle and several thousand dollars in cash in hand.
Security for Pres. Chavez has been stepped up, however, the new measures don't seem to have affected the pace of his seemingly constant public life.
The Bolivarian Government of Venezuela has made it clear that the elections are not for sale and it has begun legal proceedings against leaders of the opposition group, Súmate, for taking money from the U.S. and other foreign governments so as to subvert Venezuela's democracy, an act universally defined as treason.
Regardless of what poison the U.S. may be brewing up for Venezuela´s democracy, the plan will more than likely backfire. Chavez has sworn that if they make an attempt on his life, Venezuela won´t sell another drop of oil to the U.S. With Chavez´s popularity now standing at 70%, the nation sitting on top of the greatest energy wealth of any one nation in the world, and Latin American unity continuing apace under Chavez´s leadership, the Bolivarian Revolution is holding a full house to Bush´s bluff. The neocons have met their strategic match in Chavez and it might pay off better in the long run to fold now than to continue raising the stakes and risk losing the pot.
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somebigguy
07-19-2005, 09:43 PM
"Bush Plans Invasion"
Hahaha, how true!!!
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