UPDATE 2-Chavez says Venezuela jets intercepted US plane

Fri Jan 8, 2010 10:24pm EST

* Chavez says plane was P-3

* U.S. says it did not violate Venezuelan airspace (Adds U.S. denial)

CARACAS Jan 8 (Reuters) - President Hugo Chavez said he ordered two F-16 jets to intercept a U.S. military plane that twice entered Venezuelan skies on Friday, but Washington said none of its planes flew over the South American country's airspace.

Brandishing a photo of the plane, which he described as a P-3, Chavez said the overflight was the latest violation of Venezuelan airspace by the U.S. military from its bases on the Netherlands' Caribbean islands and from neighboring Colombia.

"They are provoking us ... these are warplanes," he said.

Chavez said the F-16s escorted the U.S. plane away after two incursions lasting 15 and 19 minutes each.

A spokesman for the the U.S. Defense Department denied Chavez's assertion, saying in an e-mail: "We can confirm no U.S. military aircraft entered Venezuelan airspace today. As a matter of policy we do not fly over a nation's airspace without prior consent or coordination."

Senior Obama administration officials said the U.S. Southern Command was unaware of any incident involving U.S. government aircraft in Venezuelan airspace on Friday.

The perceived threat of U.S. intervention has become a central element of Chavez's political discourse and a rallying cry for his supporters.

Foes say Latin America's loudest U.S. critic is hyping the idea of a foreign threat to distract Venezuelans from domestic problems such as economic recession, rampant crime and inadequate public services.

The socialist leader surprised the diplomatic world in December when he accused the Netherlands of abetting potential offensive action against his government by granting U.S. troops access to its islands close to Venezuela.

The Dutch government says the U.S. presence on Curacao and Aruba -- where about 250 Air Force crew and ground staff are based -- is only for counternarcotics and surveillance operations over Caribbean smuggling routes. (Reporting by Frank Jack Daniel; Additional reporting by Doug Palmer; Editing by Peter Cooney)

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Comments (3)
hasty1695 wrote:
Someone needs to take chavez out of the picture.

Jan 08, 2010 8:20pm EST  --  Report as abuse
Dave101 wrote:
They say a picture is worth a 1,000 words. If what Chavez is correct then he needs to show the picture. This aircraft evolution can be validated and if as usual Chavez is full of hot air and only sabre waving then he needs to be silenced. The two governments can use their plausable deniability all they want so now it is time to put up or shut up.

Jan 09, 2010 1:48pm EST  --  Report as abuse
wcaj wrote:
As a former P3 pilot, I can assure the world that a P3 is not the aircraft we would be penetrating Venezuelan airspace with. 10 captured or killed P3 aircrew would look pretty bad on next year’s Nobel Peace Prize application. There is no picture, because there is only hot air from this Socialist dictator.

Jan 09, 2010 3:18pm EST  --  Report as abuse
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