by Stephen Lendman
On December 3, 2006 voters in Venezuela will again get
to choose who'll lead them as President for the next
six years. There's no doubt who that will be as the
people's choice is the same man they first elected
their leader in December, 1998 with 56% of the vote
and reelected him in July, 2000 after the adoption of
the Bolivarian Republic's new Constitution with a 60%
total. They then saw him survive three failed
US-directed and funded attempts to unseat him
beginning with the aborted two-day coup in April,
2002, followed by the 2002-03 crippling oil strike,
and then the failed August, 2004 recall referendum.
Chavistas must believe the man they revere has at
least more six lives and will use one of them in a few
weeks to continue in the job the Venezuelan people
won't entrust to anyone else as long as he wants the
job.
They may also hope he has as much good fortune and as
many lives as his friend and ally Fidel Castro who in
nearly 48 years as Cuba's leader survived over 5,700
US-directed terror attacks against his country and
about 600 US attempts to kill him - an astonishing
survival record against a powerful and determined foe
still trying to remove him to reinstate oligarchic
rule over the island state. The Bush administration
has the same fate in mind for Hugo Chavez Frias and
won't sit by quietly allowing Bolivarianism to
flourish and spread which it's doing as more people
in the region and beyond are fed up with the old order
and want the same benefits Venezuelans have. It's
playing out now in Bolivia, on the streets of Mexico
and in the run-up to the December 3 Venezuelan
presidential election where the people show up in
massive numbers most every time Chavez makes a public
campaign appearance.
Since beginning his presidency in February, 1999, Hugo
Chavez and his Movement for the Fifth Republic Party
(MVR) have transformed Venezuela from an oligarchy
serving the rich and powerful to a model democratic
state serving all the people. From the start, Chavez
kept his campaign promise and began implementing his
vision for political and social change. He held a
national referendum through which the people decided
to convene a National Constituent Assembly to draft a
new Constitution that was overwhelmingly approved in a
nationwide vote in December, 1999. It became
effective a year later, changed the country's name to
the Republica Bolivariana de Venezuela, and mandated
Hugo Chavez's broad revolutionary vision for a system
of participatory democracy based on the principles of
political, economic and social justice. Ever since,
the people of Venezuela haven't looked back and won't
now tolerate a return to the ugly past they'll never
again accept willingly.
The Chavez Campaign
Hugo Chavez began his reelection campaign by registering his candidacy at the National Electoral Council (CNE) on August 12, affirming his confidence in the country's electoral process and saying that his campaign "must be above all a debate about ideas, an opportunity to elevate the level of debate and the political culture." Afterwards he addressed many thousands of his red-shirted supporters in Caracas Square and told them the "Bolivarian hurricane" was beginning with a goal of achieving 10 million votes that would assure a convincing electoral victory in a nation of 27 million people and just over 16 million registered voters according to the CNE as of September 4. If he achieves it, he'll have gotten the highest ever vote total in the country's history. He sounded an optimistic note adding "The Bolivarian hurricane will become a million hurricanes in all corners of the country, carrying forward the Bolivarian project and defending the revolution."
Two polls out in September indicate he may be on track
toward his goal although their results show a wide
variance. Datanalisis reported Chavez had a voter
preference of 58.2% (41% ahead of his closest rival)
while IVAD's percentage was 76.9%. And the most
recent October University of Miami School of
Communication/Zogby International poll shows Chavez
with a 59% voter support compared to 24% for his only
serious rival, Manuel Rosales (discussed more fully
below). The Zogby poll also gave Chavez an
overwhelmingly popular approval rating among
Venezuelan voters based on his job performance. If
the median between these poll results is closest to
the right number on December 3 and the voter turnout
is high enough, that would translate to a stunning
victory for Hugo Chavez whether or not it's with the
10 million vote total he hopes to get.
Chavez's current overwhelming popularity is consistent
with the results of the Chilean firm Latinobarometro
interviews conducted with 20,000 Latin Americans in 18
countries in 2005. It found a higher percentage of
Venezuelans calling their government "totally
democratic" than any other nationality surveyed as
well as Venezuelans expressing the highest degree of
optimism about their country's future in the region.
These results contrast to the pre-Chavez era when the
country was ruled by oligarchs, ordinary people had no
political rights and the level of poverty was extreme
enough to cause street riots the government chose to
violently suppress. Hugo Chavez changed all that, and
he's campaigning now on his Bolivarian record of
accomplishment that made him a national hero to most
Venezuelans who only want him as their President as
long as he wants the job.
Chavez's plan to continue in office is part of his "Miranda Campaign" to go beyond the traditional party structure by forming local "platoons" of the "Miranda Campaign Command" across the country. It began with the swearing in of 11,358 battalions and 44,698 squads nationwide to mobilize all Venezuelans to vote on election day and to supervise and handle security, logistics, vote tabulation and other aspects of the voting process. Overall the aim is to bring together 200,000 grassroots leaders of the Revolution who then will be assigned the task of convincing 10 others to vote for Chavez that would mean 2 million votes if successful. In addition, other organizations representing social sectors, workers, peasants, women, small business owners and indigenous groups will be mobilized to support the campaign to build the "new socialism of the 21st century." Chavez also wants to hold a nationwide recall referendum half way through his next term in 2010, if he's reelected, to let the Venezuelan people decide if the Constitution should be amended to eliminate the current two-term presidential time in office limit. He also announced his Simon Bolivar National Project which includes the following:
-- a new socialist ethic especially against corruption
-- a new socialist productive model expanding the social economy
-- a revolutionary protagonist democracy under which the highest priority would be power to the people including through communal councils
-- the Bolivarian ideal of supreme social happiness
-- a new internal geopolitics (focused on internal development)
-- a new international geopolitics based on a multipolar world focused against US hegemony, and
-- assuring Venezuela is a global energy power by developing its Orinoco Belt extra-heavy reserves and raising its daily oil production to six million barrels daily
Hugo Chavez was greeted on September 1 by tens of thousands of supporters after returning from his international diplomatic tour. He went seeking to establish and solidify alliances and gain support for Venezuela's campaign for the Latin American seat on the Security Council for which voting began on October 16 in the General Assembly but that has been deadlocked since because of US coercive tactics. Chavez told his supporters "This is an election (for president) on whether we want to continue to be an independent republic or return to being a North American colony." He added: "For the first time in history, Venezuela is occupying a privileged position in the world, a position of respect....because we defend with a clear voice the interests of the countries of the Third World and the sovereignty of the peoples." Chavez has a lot of support to do it from most Venezuelans and the 25 political organizations that nominated him including the MVR's coalition partner Patria Para Todas, Podemos and several smaller parties. But Chavez also knows what he's up against, and said he is "the candidate of the revolution....and the national majority (and that other candidates are) tools of the US government. In this electoral process there are two candidates only, namely Hugo Chavez and George W. Bush."
On September 9, Chavez's electoral campaign battalions
and platoons were sworn in as part of his "Miranda
campaign" to confront "North American imperialism."
It was done at a huge rally and march of hundreds of
thousands of supporters in Caracas. Chavez used the
occasion to propose the formation of a single united
political party of the Bolivarian Revolution to be
formed in 2007 after the upcoming election. In a
speech he called for unity to further "consolidate and
strengthen" the spirit of Bolivarianism. He said he
wanted it to be the "great party of the Bolivarian
Revolution (and that) it should represent the republic
and the revolution to the world and establish the
strongest connections with the greatest revolutionary
parties throughout the world."
The Opposition
A final unknown number of the currently 18 or so
announced candidates will be on the ballot on December
3 opposing Hugo Chavez, but only one is of consequence
because the US picked and backs him - Zulia state
governor (who by law should have relinquished his
office to run for president but for whom the CNE made
an exception and allowed him to remain in office) and
regional Un Nuevo Tiempo party member Manuel Rosales.
The other more prominent ones, including Primero
Justicia candidate Julio Borges, dropped out to unite
behind him as the main standard-bearer of the
opposition thus ruling out a primary the US-funded
right wing NGO Sumate planned to hold but then
cancelled.
It still remains to be seen what strategy the
opposition will decide on or even which, if any, of
them will show up on election day. Already Accion
Democratica, Venezuela's largest opposition party in
size of membership, at first refused to back any
candidate. The AD's General Secretary, Henry Ramos
Allup, said the only option is to abstain from the
election and that Rosales, Borges (before he dropped
out of the race) and other candidates are "like drunks
fighting over an empty bottle." Others in his party
disagree though calling for an exercise of "democratic
resistance." Still it's clear to all in the
opposition, Chavez is so far ahead in the polls
there's no chance anyone can defeat him in a free,
fair and open election so it's likely Rosales was
chosen to run with something else in mind, and his
strategy will show it as the campaign unfolds and
especially as election day approaches.
Clearly the US had the final say in picking him for
whatever strategy is planned that may have a lot to do
with the fact that he's the governor of the state of
Zulia that has 40% of Venezuela's oil and where in the
past energy elites there supported the state's
independence to free it from the government in
Caracas. Rosales also favors this idea (likely with a
little coaxing from his US allies) and has called for
a referendum to let the people of Zulia decide. He's
also very close to the Bush administration and was the
only governor to sign the infamous "(Pedro) Carmona
Estanga Decree" after the 2002 coup that dissolved the
elected National Assembly and Supreme Court and
effectively ended the Bolivarian Revolution and all
the benefits it gave the Venezuelan people (for two
days).
Rosales' electoral plan, with considerable US National
Endowment for Democracy (NED)-funded through Sumate
support, should become clear close to or right after
the December 3 election if he's able to win a majority
of the votes in his own state. He may then try to go
ahead with an independence referendum, claim fraud in
the rest of the country, and make plans to declare
himself president of the independent state of Zulia if
he, in fact, moves to break away and form it. The
Chavez government, of course, will never accept this,
and the Sumate/Rosales/Bush administration opposition
may use this as as justification to confront it
violently when any attempt is made to stop them. This
could provide the US a pretext it may be seeking to
intervene militarily for whatever reasons it gives
such as protecting the lives of US citizens and
defending democracy and human rights. If it happens,
it would be the same kind of stunt Ronald Reagan used
to invade Grenada in 1983 and GHW Bush used to do the
same thing against Panama in 1989. On both those
occasions, the US acted against leaders who never
threatened the US or its citizens. They were forcibly
deposed solely because they were unwilling to obey
"the lord and master of the universe" from el norte.
The same scenario may be planned for Venezuela after
the upcoming election. It won't be long before we
find out.
Another possible strategy planned may be similar to
what happened in the 2005 National Assembly elections.
When it was clear then the major opposition
candidates couldn't win, they dropped out claiming
fraud that didn't exist. It was a cheap transparent
stunt decided on a few days before the vote as a way
to avoid a humiliating defeat, but it gave the
corporate-run media a chance to trumpet their black
propaganda and characterize a free and fair election
as tainted. The tone out of Washington is always
antagonistic and grabbed on to this and at other times
with oxymoronic language like Venezuela under Chavez
is an "authoritarian democracy, an elected
authoritarianism, a threat to democracy, (and) an
elected dictatorship," all of it said without a touch
of irony. It also gave the opposition a chance to
chime in and say voter turnout was low (mostly because
opposition supporters had no one to vote for and
stayed home) and the results thus had no legitimacy.
So it organized street demonstrations in upscale
neighborhoods and suburbs to create a false sense of
turmoil and disorder.
There was also evidence uncovered at the time that
violence was planned for around the time of the
election to create unrest and further delegitimate the
results. This is how an oligarchy puppet regime in
the wings allied with the power structure in
Washington operates. They have no respect for the law
or norms of conduct and will use any means including
murder to try to regain the power they lost to Hugo
Chavez democratically. There's no doubt schemes have
already been cooked up quietly that will be sprung
between now and the election period. Already on
September 2, Caracas Diario Vea reported it learned
about a plot involving the right wing opposition.
It's called Plan Alcatraz and is aimed at making
unacceptable demands on the National Electoral Council
(CNE) sure to be rejected so as to allege fraud and
then organize street actions in protest including
occupying CNE offices. Manuel Rosales is part of the
scheme to lead the protests but he'd have to withdraw
from the race to do it, which so far he's unwilling to
do. He has been willing to consult with
representatives of the Bush administration and met
with them recently on a trip he made to south Florida
where he reportedly met with the president's brother,
Governor Jeb Bush.
Colombian right wing paramilitaries are also known to be involved and would be brought in to commit terrorist attacks along the border and in other parts of the country. If that happens, it won't be the first time as this tactic has been used before and foiled by Venezuelan police when a plot was uncovered and arrests were made. This kind of state-directed terrorism should come as no surprise to those familiar with the government and ideological position of Colombian President Alvaro Uribe that's hard right and in line with neocon Bush administration policy. Uribe comes from a wealthy land-owning family, has a history of links to the country's paramilitary death squads and drug cartels, and engaged in state terrorism in the various government positions he held for over 20 years that included kidnappings and assassinations of trade unionists, peasants in opposition groups, social and human rights activists, journalists and others. He's also committed gross violations of Venezuelan sovereignty and apparently still is doing it egged on by his US ally. In spite of it, or maybe in praise for it, the Wall Street Journal calls Uribe "(maybe) the most clear-thinking, courageous ally in the war on terror that the US has in Latin America." The Journal writer would have been right if she changed the preposition "on" to "of," and the adjectives "courageous" to "outrageous," and "clear-thinking" to "obedient."
In spite of his dubious background, Uribe was elected
and then reelected the country's president (in
elections heavily tainted with fraud) and was the only
South American leader to support the Bush
administration's invasion of Iraq. He even invited
the US to "invade" Colombia to help it double the size
of its military and supply it with weapons and
intelligence. He already benefits hugely from the
billions of dollars his government gets in "Plan
Colombia" military aid that's used to fight the FARC
and ELN resistance and has little to do with its
supposed aim to eradicate coca cultivation except in
areas controlled by those two groups. He's now the
Bush administration's strongest and most subservient
ally in the region, and thus it backs the right Uribe
claims he has to intervene militarily in violation of
another country's sovereignty - with bordering
Venezuela as the main target.
Reports are increasing that Uribe is directing his
policy of state terrorism against Venezuela by
continuing to send Colombian paramilitary hired
assassins illegally across the border. They're
apparently responsible for a large number of deaths in
the countryside, and some have even infiltrated into
metropolitan Caracas. High profile figures are also
becoming targets as was state prosecutor Danilo
Anderson who was killed in a December, 2004 car
bombing likely because he headed an investigation of
the hundreds of individuals (all from the opposition)
suspected of being involved in the 2002 aborted coup
attempt. More recently National Assembly (AN) for the
Movement for the Fifth Republic, campesino leader, and
Chavez supporter Braulio Alvarez escaped a second
assassination attempt when his car was attacked and
riddled with bullets. Alvarez is working with the
government to implement its land reform law that
redistributes large, underused land from the
latifundistas (large land owners) to landless
campesinos that surely is angering the rich landowners
who now with Uribe's help are striking back.
One of Hugo Chavez's top priorities when first taking
office in 1999 was land reform in a country run by
oligarchs including rich land owners. He's been
determined to rectify the inequality of land
distribution the 1997 agricultural census revealed -
that 5% of the largest landowners control 75% of the
land and 75% of the smallest ones only 6% of it. His
plan led to the current confrontation, but Hugo Chavez
is now responding more forcefully and on August 18
announced the creation of civilian/military security
units in the large farms that have been taken over in
Barinas, Apure and Tachina states. He's doing it to
combat the wave of kidnappings and assassinations
especially in areas bordering Colombia that are linked
to paramilitary death squads infiltrating into the
country. They likely are dispatched by Alvaro Uribe
and are employed by the latifundistas. Tachina has
been particularly hard hit by this invasion as the
number of killings there rose from 81 in 1999 to 93 in
2001, 212 in 2002 and exploded to 566 in 2005 for a
total of 2037 deaths in the last seven years. In
addition, the Caracas Daily Ultimas Noticias reported
in July that 70% of businesses in Tachina bordering
Colombia have to pay the paramilitaries a vacuna
(vaccine) as protection money to keep from being
attacked.
All this is mounting evidence that Hugo Chavez has
every reason to fear the Colombian president and sees
his close ties to the Bush administration as part of a
greater strategy to provoke a confrontation giving the
US a pretext to intervene to try to oust and
assassinate him. This also seems to be Uribe's aim as
Colombia and Venezuela share a common border, and he
fears for his own survival in a country plagued by
poverty and violence. Uribe has an ugly record
supporting the concentration of wealth and power while
cutting vitally needed social services. He's also
allowed his military and paramilitary assassins to
displace three million peasants, has one of the worst
records of state-directed terrorism in the world, and
has a long-term disregard for democracy and human
rights. Just across the border his people can see how
the Bolivarian Revolution has benefitted Venezuelans
and many of them have emigrated there to take
advantage of it. It's hard to imagine those staying
behind don't want the same things and may one day act
in their own self-interest to demand them.
Hugo Chavez also needs to be wary of the major new
base the US is building in Mariscal Estigarribia,
Paraguay, 200 kilometers from the Bolivian border even
though it's far south of Venezuela. Reportedly the
base will be able to handle large aircraft and house
up to 16,000 troops. Since July, 2005 small numbers
of fully-equipped US forces have been in Paraguay and
have been conducting secretive operations there. It's
led some military analysts and human rights groups to
suspect an interventionist operation is planned,
likely directed at Bolivia and its president Evo
Morales some of whose policies mirror those of his
friend and ally Hugo Chavez. But with enough troops
and long-range large aircraft in the region, the base
could also be used as a staging area for an operation
anywhere within its range that easily could include
Venezuela. The human rights group Servicio Paz y
Justicia (SERPAJ) in Paraguay believes the US wants
the country to be what Panama once was, and to be able
to operate there to control the southern cone region
of the continent.
It's also been reported that George Bush recently
bought a 98,842 acre farm in Paraguay to go along with
the 173,000 acres his father already owns there. Both
properties border Bolivia and Brazil and comprise 2.7%
of the whole country that comprises an area the size
of the state of California. It's not known what the
Bush family has in mind there or whether it may have
any connection to a planned US military intervention
in the region. It is known Paraguay has no laws
criminalizing money-laundering, anti-terrorism or
terrorist financing even though if does have an
extradition treaty with the US. It's also important
to be mindful of the fact that a dominant US family of
two US presidents now owns a sizable piece of real
estate in a country able to domicile a large number of
US forces. It may only be for whatever personal use
they have in mind, but it may not be and we can only
speculate on what that may be.
We don't have to speculate that the US also has
another major military base in Manta, Ecuador that's
much closer to Venezuela on Colombia's southern border
and is part of the US's increasing militarization of
the southern continent. The Pentagon says it's tasked
to carry out a variety of security-related missions,
but that's just code language for interventionist
ones. Ecuadorian presidential hopeful, Rafael Correa,
who'll now face a runoff vote on November 26 after a
tainted first round spoiled his victory, responded to
a question recently that he'd allow the base to remain
in his country provided the Bush administration gave
Ecuador the same basing rights in Miami. But even if
this base is closed, the US is currently building
another new one in the Dutch colony of Curacao (a
popular vacation destination that will be tainted by
it) that's located near the Venezuelan coast and near
the oil-rich state of Zulia.
It remains to be seen if he'll follow through if he
wins the presidency, but one positive development to
watch is Paraguay's decision not to renew a defense
cooperation agreement with the US for 2007 because
it's unwilling to grant US troops immunity from
prosecution by the International Criminal Court in the
Hague (ICC). The Court was established to assure
perpetrators of war crimes, crimes against humanity
and genocide are brought to justice. Foreign Minister
Ruben Ramirez announced his country's decision on
October 2 saying his government concluded under
international treaty law, exceptions to immunity are
only permissible for foreign diplomats and
administrative personnel. Paraguay is a member of the
South American Mercosur trade block that also includes
Brazil, Argentina, Uruguay and Venezuela. These
countries have also refused to grant US troops such
immunity in another sign the US is losing influence in
the region as more leaders in it are standing firm
against unreasonable demands from Washington as well
as its failed policies. Hopefully the spirit and
influence of Hugo Chavez is spreading.
US Intervention in Venezuela's Political Process -
Again
It's no secret the Bush administration wants to oust
Hugo Chavez, has already tried and failed three times
to do it, and is now planning another attempt at
whatever time and by whatever means it has in mind.
It may be staged in connection with the upcoming
December election and likely will be a reworked
version of what was tried earlier and failed but this
time with some new twists and going further than
before.
Hugo Chavez knows it's coming, has taken steps to
counter it when it does, and has a hard-to-trump ace
in his deck - the many millions of Venezuelans who've
already shown they'll come out in force to support
him, especially if the stakes are to keep him as their
president. Chavez witnessed some of that support when
he spoke at an October mass rally in Valencia in the
state of Carabobo and sounded the alarm about the Bush
administration's plot to destabilize the election and
assassinate him. He indicated to the crowd that
"friendly nations" have warned him about this and
said: "With God's favour this will not happen, but if
it (did) you know what you would have to do; the
Bolivarian Revolution at this stage does not depend on
one man." Chavez also said he's preparing for what he
expects will happen and "we are going to hit back so
hard that they will not stop running until they reach
Miami. Chavez may not have long to wait to find out if
his plan can best the one Washington has cooked up.
In the lead-up to whatever is planned, the Bush
administration is relying on the usual kind of covert
mischief from the CIA that specializes in it. It's
been at it all over the world for nearly 50 years and
in Venezuela since Hugo Chavez was first elected.
Author and international human rights attorney Eva
Golinger obtained top-secret CIA documents through
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests showing the
Agency had prior knowledge and was complicit in the
two-day 2002 aborted coup attempt to unseat President
Chavez and that the Bush administration provided over
$30 million in funding aid to opposition groups to
help do it.
It began in 2001 involving the same quasi-governmental
agencies that are always part of these kinds of
schemes - the National Endowment for Democracy (NED),
International Republican Institute (IRI), National
Democratic Institute (NDI), and US Agency for
International Development (USAID) which did its work
through its Office of Transition Initiatives (OTI).
These agencies funded and worked with the opposition
staging mass violent street protests leading up to the
day of the coup. The documents also showed NED and
USAID funded and were otherwise involved in staging
the 2002-03 crippling oil strike and the failed
August, 2004 recall referendum. The US State
Department, National Security Agency (NSA) and White
House had full knowledge of and had to have approved
each coup attempt.
Most people have some idea how the CIA operates
covertly but few know much about the National
Endowment for Democracy that was (in language Orwell
would have loved) established to "support democratic
institutions throughout the world through private,
nongovernmental efforts." If fact, its very much a
part of government and its purpose is to be the
somewhat overt counterpart to the CIA, and in that
capacity its hands are almost as dirty as the spy
agency short of having actual blood on them. The one
objective it pursues above all others is the
subversion of democracy including supporting the
removal of democratically elected leaders unwilling to
allow their countries to become submissive US client
states.
It's already been learned from information made public, including NED Quarterly Reports, that this agency actively supports anti-Chavez organizations in Venezuela and that removal of Hugo Chavez is one of its top priorities. It will also be reported soon in a new book by Eva Golinger called Bush v. Chavez: Washington's War on Venezuela that the Bush administration since 2005 has increased its (anti-Chavez) "interference by providing funding, training, guidance, and other contacts, and other strategically important ways to support the opposition's presidential campaign here." Golinger also reports the US anti-Chavez campaign includes the use of "psychological warfare within Venezuela, but also in the international arena, and in the United States." It's trying "to make people think that Venezuela is a failed or failing state with a dictator, which is how the US government refers to him."
NED is an old hand at this kind of dirty business
since it was established in November, 1982 by statute
as a supposedly private non-profit organization. It's
hardly that as Congress approves its funding as part
of the Department of State budget going to its sister
USAID agency. NED also gets some private aid from
several well-known right wing organizations including
supportive think tanks that provide considerable
funding for ultraconservative and business-friendly
enterprises.
USAID has considerably greater resources than NED to
pursue its activities which supposedly are to function
as an independent federal agency providing
non-military foreign aid. In fact, however, it's a
thinly disguised instrument of US foreign policy able
to do its dirty work while avoiding congressional
scrutiny. It, like NED, has in the past been an
instrument of US efforts to oust Hugo Chavez, and in
the run-up to the December election is likely to be
working with the opposition again as it was learned it
did in the other three attempts to oust the Venezuelan
leader. We'll have to wait to learn more about what
schemes CIA, NED, USAID and other US-related agencies
are planning until they begin unfolding or are
exposed in advance and are headed off before any harm
is done.
The Role of Sumate
Sumate is a nominal non-governmental organization (NGO) founded in 2002 by a group of Venezuelans led by Maria Corina Machado and Alejandro Plaz and now headed by Ms. Machado. It's true purpose and activities belie the claims it makes to be an organization of independent citizens supporting the democratic process and promoting the political rights of Venezuelans under the country's Constitution. In fact, it's a US-supported and funded anti-governmental organization dedicated to the overthrow of the Chavez government and the return of the country to its ugly past ruled by the former oligarchs and the interests of capital.
In the US this kind of activity or any foreign interference in elections would never be tolerated. US election law specifically prohibits foreign nationals or corporations from contributing to any federal, state or local political campaign, and it would be unthinkable to imagine there being any tolerance if it was learned a foreign government attempted to influence the electoral process here. None of this, however, applies to what the US does all over the world rountinely. At least post WW II, this country has a tainted history of meddling in the affairs of other countries almost like we had a birthright to do it. Put another way, according to "Washington-think," what's good for the US "goose" isn't allowed for any other country's "gander."
It's thus no surprise Sumate went on the Bush
administration payroll when it first gained prominence
in late 2003 becoming involved in organizing and
providing support for the 2004 failed recall
referendum signature collection process. Ever since
it's been at the center of anti-Chavez activities and
is liberally funded to do it by US agencies like NED
and USAID. As mentioned above, it cancelled a primary
it planned to hold after the main opposition
candidates dropped out so Manuel Rosales could run
unopposed against Hugo Chavez in the December
election. It's now moving ahead with the help of
millions of dollars of Washington-supplied opposition
candidate bankrolling. This was recently revealed in
132 USAID contracts made public that claimed the
funding to be politically neutral but which Hugo
Chavez believes is being used overtly and covertly to
undermine his government. USAID and NED now admit
they're spending (at least) $26 million on the
December election, and those organizations never
support democratically elected leaders running for
office who don't obey US neoliberal diktats.
Chavez has lots of past experience to back up his
claim of US interference and an added new one now
after the Bush administration named career CIA agent
Patrick Maher as the "mission manager" to oversee US
intelligence on Venezuela and Cuba. His previous job
was as deputy director of the CIA's Office of Policy
Support and his background includes having been an
architect of the counter-insurgency strategy in
Colombia as well as managing the agency's operations
in the Caribbean region. William Izarra, a former MVR
Party leader and the national coordinator of the
Centres for Ideological Formation that organizes
grassroots discussions about the Bolivarian
Revolution, believes this move elevates Venezuela and
Cuba into the "axis of evil" category along with Iran
and North Korea, and that heightens the risk of
trouble ahead.
The Chavez government knows something is afoot and is
taking preventive action by having Venezuelan
prosecutors bring conspiracy charges against Sumate
leaders. If convicted, Maria Corina Machado could
face up to 16 years in prison, and three other Sumate
members also face charges. The National Assembly also
intends to require "non-profit" groups like Sumate to
reveal their funding sources. In addition, it's
recommending Sumate be investigated for currency and
tax law violations, and Chavez has threatened to expel
US Ambassador William Brownfield whom he accuses of
causing trouble as he's done in the past. All this is
playing out in a highly-charged atmosphere of mistrust
that's well-founded according to Eva Golinger who
wrote "The Chavez Code: Cracking US Intervention in
Venezuela." The book cited clear evidence of the Bush
administration's intent to overthrow the Chavez
government, and Golinger recently said Washington is
"trying to implement regime change. There's no doubt
about it (even though it) tries to mask it saying it's
a noble mission."
The Prospect for Fall Fireworks in Venezuela
The Bush administration must believe while it's often
wrong it's never in doubt. It's already dealing with
two out of control conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan
and has blood-stained hands from its complicity with
Israel on their co-sponsored conflicts against Lebanon
and the one still raging in Palestine. Undeterred, it
seems determined to become even more embroiled in the
Middle East by planning a possible attack against Iran
according to some reliable reports (or at least
putting up a good bluff to do it), even though the US
public has grown disenchanted with George Bush's wars
and it shows in his low public approval rating. He's
even now drawing flack within his own party, and many
Republican candidates for Congress on November 7 see
him as radioactive and don't want him around. So why
would this administration be willing to risk making
things even worse by trying to forcibly remove a
democratically elected leader revered by his people
who will never stand by and allow their Bolivarian
Revolution to be taken away from them.
Here's why. Soon after the Bush administration came
to power, Vice President (and de facto head of state)
Dick Cheney said the US must "make energy security a
(top) priority of our trade and foreign policy." The
Iraq and Afghanistan wars followed what, in fact, was
"boss" Cheney's diktat with control of energy and its
security one of several key reasons why we're now
embroiled in the greater Middle East.
Now fast forward to June, 2006 and it gets more
chilling. The US Southern (military) Command in Latin
America (that has no business meddling in affairs of
state) concluded that efforts by Venezuela, Bolivia
and Equador to extend state control over their oil and
gas reserves threatens US oil security. A study it
conducted states: "A re-emergence of state control of
the energy sector (in those countries) will likely
increase inefficiencies and....will hamper efforts to
increase long-term supplies and production." Even
though the region produces only 8.4% of the world's
oil output, it accounts for 30% of US consumption, and
most of that comes from Venezuela and Mexico with each
of these countries supplying about an equal percentage
of our needs.
A secure supply and firm control of oil from the
region is crucial to the US, but most of all from
Venezuela because of its vast reserves (including its
immense untapped amount of Orinco Basin super-heavy
tar oil) that potentially are even greater than what's
now available from Saudi Arabia - although that's
debatable and merely suggesting it will open up a
torrent of disagreement that may be right. Still,
Venezuela, by any measure, has the greatest
hydrocarbon reserves in the hemisphere, and that makes
the country and Hugo Chavez target number one in this
part of the world for US energy security importance
and second only after the greater Middle East that
includes the Caspian Basin in Central Asia. Couple
that with the fact that the US sees Hugo Chavez as the
greatest of all threats it faces anywhere - a good
example that may and is spreading throughout the
region threatening US dominance over it and you have a
recipe for a determined effort to oust him by any
means including assassination and armed intervention.
Chavez, of course, knows the risk and so do the
Venezuelan people who proved in 2002 they will rally
en masse as they did then to restore their president
to office after the US-staged two-day April coup that
year briefly removed him. It's certain any attempt to
oust him again will be met with the same resistance,
and it's hard to imagine how intense it may be if the
US succeeds in killing him. There's no question
Washington wants to avoid six more years of Chavez
rule and officials there have said it in so many
words. They call Hugo Chavez "a clear and present
danger to peace and democracy in the hemisphere (and)
US strategy must be to help Venezuela accomplish
peaceful change (before 2007)." Heinz Dieterich, a
Chavez consultant, believes, as does Hugo Chavez, the
Bush administration is plotting to assassinate him to
prevent his serving another term in office.
So far there's been nothing more dramatic than the
usual US Chavez-bashing especially after his September
20 tour de force at the UN General Assembly when the
Venezuelan President had the courage to say what most
other world leaders think but only speak about
privately. The Bush administration responds claiming
the Chavez government is a dictatorship that supports
terrorism. It also unjustifiably accuses him
suppressing the media and repressing his opposition,
and it's guaranteed a Chavez victory will be
challenged with outrageous accusations of electoral
fraud arranged by a state-controlled CNE.
The truth on all counts is the opposite of the
rhetoric, yet the vitriol continues unabated from
Washington and is heard over the corporate-controlled
media in both countries. What should be reported (but
never is) is that the fairness of the Venezuelan
electoral system shames the corrupted one in the US
that's now run by corporate-owned and controlled
electronic voting machines manipulated to assure
enough business-friendly candidates win even when
they're not the choice of the majority of US voters.
Venezuela has real democracy while what's called that
in the US is just a shameless mirage of one - an
illusion the public hasn't caught onto yet. The
Venezuelan people know the difference between that and
the real thing and will fight to keep it. Sadly, most
people in the US are kept uninformed, don't know what
they've lost, and can't even imagine the kind of
country they'd have if they had an enlightened leader
like Hugo Chavez instead of the appalling one they're
stuck with for two more years.

written by P Kauffman, November 01, 2006
written by oldnews, November 01, 2006
written by admin, November 02, 2006
Have I been there? Hell ya'. I lived it.
written by Charly, November 04, 2006

Mister Wong
Digg
Del.icio.us
Slashdot
Furl
Yahoo
Technorati
Newsvine
Googlize this
Blinklist
Facebook
Wikio