| SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico - Puerto Rico 's delegate to Congress
      has warned Attorney General Janet Reno that any effort to forcibly
      remove protesters from a military training ground in the U.S.
      territory would be a "dangerous" mistake that could
      lead to violence. Delegate Carlos Romero Barcelo made the statement in a letter
      made public Sunday. The letter was sent to Reno last week. "You must be aware that the situation would rapidly become
      very confrontational and dangerous if such attempts were to be
      made," Romero Barcelo said in the letter. Protesters have occupied the U.S. Navy bombing range on the
      outlying island of Vieques to press Puerto Rico 's demands that
      the military leave. Opposition to the Navy flared after an errant
      bomb killed a civilian security guard at the training ground
      in April. President Clinton appointed a panel to consider Puerto Rico
      's demands and is expected to make a decision on the matter in
      the next few weeks. Protesters fear they could be arrested if
      Clinton decides against them. "Such an action would play into the hands of those who
      are using Vieques as a tool to try to create a confrontation
      with the U.S. Navy and the United States," Romero Barcelo
      said in his letter.
     | NEW YORK - U.S. Vice President Al Gore supports pulling the
      U.S. Navy off the Puerto Rican island of Vieques, according to
      a column published Tuesday by the El Diario-La Prensa
      newspaper. The U.S. naval base, which has occupied a major part of the
      island since 1941, must look for another place to conduct its
      operations, Gore is quoted as saying in New York's leading Spanish-language
      newspaper. In his column, the newspaper's acting editor, Gerson Borrero,
      said that Gore offered his comments during a meeting last week
      with New York state senators. "I agree, they (the Navy) should be out of there,"
      Gore said in response to a question posed by veteran Puerto Rican
      Sen. Olga Mendez at the meeting last Tuesday at a Manhattan hotel,
      according to Borrero. "We must look for another base for the Atlantic Fleet,"
      said Gore, the Democratic presidential frontrunner at this point
      for the 2000 election. Until his comment, the vice president did not enjoy the support
      of Sen. Mendez, who in 1978 became the first Puerto Rican elected
      to a state legislative post. For years the residents of Vieques have battled to get the
      U.S. Navy to vacate the island. Their efforts intensified after
      the death of David Sanes last April. Sanes, a security guard at the naval base, was killed by a
      bomb dropped on his work station during military maneuvers by
      U.S. and other Allied nations warships. Protests by Puerto Ricans , also supported by Gov. Pedro Rossello,
      prompted President Bill Clinton to appoint a committee to assess
      the situation and report their findings before a decision was
      made on the future of base located in Puerto Rican territory. The Puerto Rican government named a committee, with representatives
      from the island's three parties, concluded that the U.S. Navy
      should leave Vieques . This report was forwarded to President
      Bill Clinton and Gore.
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