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Washington maneuvers toward Venezuelan coup
By Bill Vann
19 December 2002
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With an employer-organized lockout in its third week, the Bush
administration is maneuvering with the Venezuelan right wing in
an attempt to topple the countrys elected president, Hugo
Chavez.
Washington has expressed mounting concern over the political
crisis in Venezuela, which supplies approximately 14 percent of
US oil imports. The shutdown of the countrys state-owned
oil corporation, Petroleos de Venezuela (PDVSA), has reduced production
to a trickle and sent world crude oil prices to over $31 a barrel,
a two-year high.
On December 13 the White House issued a statement effectively
solidarizing itself with the demands advanced by the alliance
of Venezuelan employers, the US-funded trade union bureaucracy
and the political parties of the countrys oligarchy. The
only peaceful and politically viable path to moving out of the
crisis is through the holding of early elections, the statement
said.
Under Venezuelas constitution, Chavez is to remain in
power until the end of 2006. He could be subject to a recall referendumin
August of 2003 at the earliestprovided those seeking to
oust him secured sufficient support for such a vote. For his term
to be cut short, the constitution requires that more people vote
to remove him in such a referendum than the number who voted to
place him in power in the last presidential election.
Washingtons undisguised contempt for such constitutional
considerations is the clearest signal that it is prepared once
again to support a right-wing military coup, as it did last April
when Chavezs opponents succeeded in ousting him for two
days. He was returned to power in the wake of a popular uprising
in the streets of Caracas.
If the shoe were on the other foot, and Venezuelas workers
and poor were clamoring for the removal of an unpopular US-backed
regime through extraordinary elections, there is no doubt that
the Bush administration would be proclaiming the sanctity of constitutional
order and denouncing the use of undemocratic methods.
There are indications of divisions within the Washington establishment
over the reckless policy being pursued in Venezuela. Some elements
fear that by continuing to foment right-wing agitation against
the current government, the Bush administration is plunging the
country into civil war.
This week, White House spokesman Ari Fleischer backtracked
on the administrations previous statement about early elections,
saying that the administration had meant to signal its support
for an early referendum on Chavezs rule. While such a vote
would likewise violate the Venezuelan constitution, the shift
suggested that at least some in the US government could accept
something short of Chavezs immediate overthrow.
For his part, the Venezuelan president has repeatedly promised
Washington that his government would assure normal and even expanded
oil deliveries if a US war against Iraq cut off supplies from
the Middle East. He has denounced the well-paid managers of PDVSA
for organizing the shutdown of the countrys oil facilities,
charging them with sabotage and accusing them of seeking
the state corporations privatization for their own enrichment.
While the Chavez government has sent troops into oil installations
and ordered the seizure of idled tankers, it has pointedly stopped
short of taking over privately owned food producing and distribution
companies that have been shut down by their owners as part of
the anti-government action, drying up vital food supplies.
Chavez has made it clear that his populist appeals to Venezuelas
impoverished masses need not interfere with trade relations with
the US, nor with his governments compliance with the economic
prescriptions of the International Monetary Fund. But right-wing
elements within the Bush administration will not forgive him for
his ties with Cubas Fidel Castro and his earlier denunciation
of the US war in Afghanistan.
These elementsled by Otto Reich in the State Department
and Elliott Abrams in the National Security Councilcollaborated
directly with those who organized the abortive April coup. Veterans
of the Reagan administrations terrorist contra
war against Nicaragua, they are determined to utilize similar
methods to install a more pliant regime in Caracas.
The destabilization efforts against Chavez have won support
from US client regimes in Latin America, as well as from the financial
markets. The Organization of American States, which is supposed
to be mediating the conflict in Venezuela, rejected the Venezuelan
ambassadors call for the body to state its support for his
countrys elected government. Instead, it issued a declaration
denouncing attacks on the countrys right-wing media, which
became the target of mass demonstrations recently because of the
vitriolic anti-Chavez propaganda broadcast by the countrys
privately owned television stations. The OAS also indicated that
it might support the call for early elections if the crisis continued.
Adding insult to injury, Colombias ambassador to Caracas
urged Colombians visiting the country to return home immediately
because of the critical political situation in Venezuela.
This warning came from the representative of a government involved
in a bloody civil war.
Meanwhile, Standard & Poors has downgraded credit
ratings for both the Venezuelan government and the PDVSA, further
deepening the countrys economic crisis.
Within Venezuela, the struggle between Chavez and his opponents
is being waged with an eye on the military. While the chief of
the Venezuelan army voiced support for the government against
the petroleum sabotage, leaders of the opposition issued
calls for the generals to overthrow the government.
The armed forces should step forward in defense of our
people and their freedom, declared Enrique Medina, one of
the dissident officers who have declared themselves in disobedience
against the government. Where are the military commanders,
what are they waiting for, for the country to destroy itself?
added opposition leader Antonio Ledezma.
Carlos Ortega, the head of the Confederation of Venezuelan
Workers corrupt union bureaucracy, which is closely allied
with the American AFL-CIO, appeared to disassociate himself from
direct appeals for a military coup, declaring himself in favor
of the democratic route, while urging the military
not to act against the people.
While maintaining a democratic façade, Ortega
and his allies in the Venezuelan employers federation are
banking on the continued shutdown of the oil industry and highway
blockades to create an atmosphere of chaos, thereby provoking
a coup.
State Department spokesman Richard Boucher implicitly endorsed
right-wing calls from within Venezuela for quick and decisive
action, saying Monday that the situation in Venezuela is
volatile and is deteriorating rapidly. The US government,
he added, believes that a solution must be found as soon
as possible to avoid a greater polarization that could lead to
an eruption of violence.
Overshadowing the events in Venezuela is the impending US war
against Iraq. Washington has declared its grave concern
over the chaotic conflict between Chavez and his opponents in
large part because it requires a reliable supply of Venezuelan
oil in the event that military intervention in the Middle East
disrupts petroleum supplies from that region. Petroleum industry
specialists familiar with the situation warn that the US may be
compelled to postpone its war plans unless it can end the Venezuelan
crisis.
I believe that the US will not take any decision on acting
in Iraq until the situation in Venezuela is resolved, former
Venezuelan energy minister Calderon Berti told the Brazilian daily
Jornal do Brasil Wednesday. Berti, who also served as president
of PDVSA, said it would be too great a risk to launch a war in
the Persian Gulf while Venezuela, the worlds fifth largest
petroleum exporter, was unable to produce.
A major war, he said, could mean the loss of 5.5 million barrels
of petroleum a day on the world market. Venezuela has a daily
production capacity of over 3 million barrels. If both supplies
were cut off, Berti said, oil prices would soar to over $40 a
barrel, placing severe pressure on the US and world economies.
Thus, in preparation for a war against Iraq promoted on the
pretext of removing a dictator, the Bush administration may decide
to oversee a military coup in Venezuela. In both countries, the
key unspoken issue is oil.
See Also:
Venezuela: Is the CIA preparing another
coup?
[11 December 2002]
As Washington eyes Latin
axis of evil
Coup attempts continue in Venezuela
[28 October 2002]
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