"If a military incursion would have happened in Peru, it would have been unacceptable," he said.
One of Colombia's few backers at the OAS meeting was acting U.S. representative J. Robert Manzanares, who said the Colombian troops ordered into Ecuador had a right to "pursue this terrorist menace."
President Bush also weighed in. Before the session began, he read a statement to reporters in which he touted a proposed free-trade agreement with Colombia, saying it would counter "those seeking to undermine democracy."
Venezuela and Ecuador earlier sent troops to their borders with Colombia, recalled their ambassadors and expelled Colombia's. The government in Bogota has so far refused to respond in kind.
But Chavez faced mounting criticism at home for involving Venezuela in a tiff that many Venezuelans see as none of his business. A former defense minister, retired Gen. Raul Baduel, told reporters in Caracas, the Venezuelan capital, that deploying troops to the Colombian border was "confused."
"This is a desperate attempt by President Chavez to use the military for political and personal ends, making them participants in an action whose consequences could be disastrous," said Baduel, a former Chavez confidant turned critic.
Tensions have been building since Colombia revealed Saturday morning that it killed Reyes and 16 other guerrillas in an operation Uribe said started in Colombia and spilled over into Ecuador.
Correa said Uribe lied to him in justifying the incursion as a matter of hot pursuit. Chavez, meanwhile, described Colombia as the region's militaristic "new Israel" and threatened war if troops entered Venezuela.
Colombian OAS representative Camilo Ospina repeated his country's earlier apology to Ecuador. But he quickly went on the offensive, charging Ecuador and Venezuela with openly harboring and supporting the FARC. He said the assertion was bolstered by contents of the rebels' laptop computers, which among other things indicated that Reyes had met with Ecuadorean Interior Minister Gustavo Larrea.
"It was not an area of transit but a permanent camp" that Colombia attacked, Ospina said. He mocked Larrea's explanation that his meetings with Reyes had a "humanitarian purpose." Larrea should have turned Reyes over to Interpol, Ospina said.
A U.S. intelligence official in Washington said he could not confirm reports that American spies had tipped off the Colombian authorities that Reyes was using a satellite telephone that allowed him to be tracked.
The official acknowledged, however, that U.S. officials have such capabilities and that they share information with allies such as Colombia.
U.S. officials played down the possibility that the developments could touch off a war in the Andes.
"People are pretty much focused on the diplomatic track, and I don't think anyone expects it will lead to anything else," said a senior State Department official.
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chris.kraul@latimes.com
patrick.mcdonnell@latimes.com
Kraul reported from Bogota and McDonnell from Buenos Aires. Times staff writer Paul Richter in Washington and special correspondent Mery Mogollon in Caracas contributed to this report.