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Rumsfelds Latin American tour
Pentagon chief escalates threats against Venezuela
By Bill Van Auken
26 March 2005
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US Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld used his brief three-nation
tour of Latin America this week to step up US threats against
Venezuela and pressure the regions governments into joining
Washingtons campaign to isolate the government of President
Hugo Chavez.
Echoing US rhetoric from the Cold War, Rumsfeld described Venezuelas
agreement to buy military hardware from Russia as a threat to
the hemisphere. Certainly Im concerned, he said,
referring to the arms deal, which involves the purchase of 100,000
AK-47 rifles as well as 10 military helicopters from Moscow.
I cant imagine what is going to happen to 100,000
AK-47s, Rumsfeld said in Brazil Wednesday before meeting
the countrys president, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva. I
cannot imagine why Venezuela needs 100,000 AK-47s.... I cant
imagine that if it did happen, that it would be good for the hemisphere.
The orchestration of propaganda campaigns over arms deals to
justify US military aggression is an old game in Washington. In
1954, the news that the nationalist government of President Jacabo
Arbenz Guzman in Guatemala had purchased small arms from Czechoslovakia
provided the pretext for a CIA-orchestrated coup that reversed
land reform efforts and ushered in more than 30 years of dictatorship
and repression.
Then, the intervention was directed at restoring the United
Fruit Companys monopolization of the countrys most
fertile land and its ability to reap profits without the encumbrance
of labor laws and taxation.
Today, similar considerations of corporate profits and US strategic
interests are involved. The left-nationalist government of Chavez
has become an impediment to the US-backed drive to privatize Venezuelas
considerable oil resources as a step towards their takeover by
Washington and the US-based energy conglomerates.
While Rumsfeld cant imagine why Venezuela
would want to modernize its armed forces, apparently the Venezuelan
government does not suffer from a similar lack of imagination
when it comes to the US military buildup on its borders.
The Bush administration is requesting close to $575 million
in military aid this year for the right-wing government of President
Alvaro Uribe in Colombia. Washington has increased military assistance
to Colombia more than tenfold over the past decade. In the last
six years alone, the US has lavished close to $4 billion in aid
on Colombia, 80 percent of it for the countrys security
forces.
In 2003, the Pentagon doubled the number of Colombian troops
that receive US training to nearly 13,000. Last October, Congress
voted to raise the official cap on the number of US troops deployed
in Colombia from 400 to 800, along with a corresponding hike in
the number of military contractors from 400 to 600. These forces
play a decisive role in Colombian military operations, providing
intelligence, planning and logistical direction, maintaining equipment
and organizing and training a number of new counterinsurgency
battalions.
A focus of these US-backed operations has been the oil-rich
province of Arauca, on Venezuelas border. The area has been
the scene of mass arrests, abductions and killings directed against
suspected guerrilla sympathizers, trade unionists and community
activists, and a wave of state violence that has frequently spilled
over into Venezuelan territory.
In Venezuela we are worried about the elevated military
spending by the United States, which stands around $450 billion,
said the countrys vice president, Jose Vicente Rangel, in
response to Rumsfelds comment in Brazil. What are
they fearing in order to justify such high military spending?
Propaganda war to justify seizing
oil
Rangel characterized the remarks by the Pentagon chief as a
propaganda war that represented a new phase
in [US] imperialist aggression aimed at taking possession
of our energy resources. Venezuela is just one step in their global
ambitions.
Venezuela currently supplies 1.5 million barrels of oil a day
to the US, a quantity that represents 60 percent of the countrys
exports and 15 percent of American foreign oil consumption.
The propaganda war to which Rangel referred was prominently
displayed in a front-page story in the right-wing magazine National
Review that included a cover photograph of Venezuelas
Chavez and Cuban President Fidel Castro and the headline Axis
of Evil. The author was Otto Reich, who until several months
ago was the Bush administrations senior adviser on Latin
America.
The emerging axis of subversion forming between Cuba
and Venezuela must be confronted before it can undermine democracy
in Colombia, Nicaragua, Bolivia or another vulnerable neighbor,
wrote Reich, a veteran propagandist for the dirty wars carried
out by the CIA and the Pentagon in Central America in the 1980s.
CIA Director Porter Goss expressed a similar view in his testimony
earlier this month before the US Senate Armed Services Committee,
where he advocated greater attention to threats in our own
back yard.
Goss pointed out that presidential elections are to be held
in eight South American and Central American countries next year
and warned that destabilization or a backslide away from
democratic principles ... would not be helpful to our interests
and would be probably threatening to our security in the long
run.
Accusing Venezuela of backing anti-government forces in Bolivia
and Colombia, Goss declared, We are talking about meddling
in sovereign affairs of different countries by state actors.
He described Venezuelan President Chavez as someone who is very
clearly causing mischief for us, citing in particular Venezuelas
close relations with Cuba, which it supplies with cheap oil.
The CIA director acknowledged that threats to US interests
in Latin America had been overshadowed by US interventions in
the Middle East under the mantle of the war on terrorism.
As a result, he said, the CIAs own position on the continent
had been weakened. Weve phased out a lot of activities
that we wish we hadnt at this point, he said.
The activities for which his agency is infamous
in the region include organizing violent military coups against
elected governments, assassination attempts against heads of state
and other officials and the organization of illegal terrorist
wars, as in Nicaragua.
Echoing Goss in his testimony before the same committee, US
Southern Command (SOUTHCOM) Commander General Bantz Craddock on
March 15 described the growth of radical groups as
a key threat to US interests and said he was concerned with
Venezuelas influence in the region.
SOUTHCOM supports the joint staff position to maintain
military-to-military contact with the Venezuelan military in support
of long-term interests in Venezuela and the region, said
Craddock. Washington hopes to use such contact to cultivate a
fresh layer of Venezuelan officers willing to participate in a
coup against Chavez. After a failed US-backed coup in April 2002,
the Chavez government dismissed a large number of rightist military
commanders.
The general added, however, I believe we need a broad-based
interagency approach to dealing with Venezuela in order to encourage
functioning democratic institutions. This interagency
approach consists of a protracted destabilization campaign
coupled with preparation for a military coup or even a direct
US military intervention.
Craddock also warned that an increasing presence of the
Peoples Republic of China (PRC) in the region is an emerging
dynamic that must not be ignored. He cited a recent Chinese
report indicating that in 2004 China had plowed nearly $900 million
into Latin America, accounting for close to half the countrys
overseas investment. He also noted increasing cooperation between
the Chinese and Latin American militaries, reflected in 20 visits
to the region by Chinese military officials.
Growing economic interests, presence and influence in
the region are not a threat, said Craddock, but they
are clearly components of a condition we should recognize and
consider carefully as we form our own objectives, policies and
engagement in the region.
US hostility to the Venezuelan government escalated following
Chavezs signing of multiple agreements covering oil exports
to China as well as Chinese infrastructure projects in Venezuela.
While the US campaign to isolate Venezuela was a key focus
of Rumsfelds talks in Argentina and Brazil, leaders of both
countries made public statements affirming their good relations
with the Chavez government and their respect for Venezuelan sovereignty.
Protests against Rumsfeld in Argentina and
Brazil
The US defense secretary was met by large protests in both
countries, where he was denounced as an architect of the Iraq
wara subject that was discreetly avoided in his meetings
with Brazilian and Argentine officials. In Buenos Aires, protesters
blocked a bridge leading into the Argentine capital for two hours.
Rumsfeld arrived in the city just two days before the anniversary
of the 1976 military coup that brought to power a dictatorship
which murdered, tortured and disappeared tens of thousands
of Argentines. Also during that period, Rumsfeld occupied the
top post at the Pentagon and participated in formulating policies
that aided and abetted the police-state repression.
Groups representing relatives of the disappeared and former
political prisoners denounced Rumsfeld for repeating in Iraq the
crimes carried out in Latin America three decades earlier. Some
of them filed a symbolic court suit charging the US defense secretary
with responsibility for torture, executions, cruel, inhuman
and degrading treatment and crimes of war committed by US troops
in the prisons of Guantánamo, Afghanistan and Iraq.
After a one-hour meeting with Rumsfeld, Argentine Defense Minister
Jose Pampuro indicated that the two had discussed the importance
of renewing joint military exercises that were suspended
in 2003. He made it clear, however, that his government was still
unwilling to accept the US demand that ended them: blanket immunity
for any crimes carried out by American troops. Argentine officials
indicated that Washington feared US military officials could be
charged with war crimes before the International Criminal Court
and extradited from Argentina, which is a signatory to the Treaty
of Rome, the document that created the body.
Rumsfeld concluded his four-day tour in Guatemala, the scene
of the classic CIA-organized Latin American coup half a century
ago. There he announced the resumption of US military aid to the
Guatemalan military after a 15-year suspension, releasing some
$3.2 million. Washington imposed a ban on such aid in 1990 amid
revelations of the genocidal violence carried out by the Guatemalan
military. A United Nations-organized commission conservatively
estimated that over 200,000 people were killed in the US-backed
counterinsurgency war.
Earlier this month, the State Department certified Guatemalas
compliance with conditions set by Congress for a resumption of
military aid, including ensuring military respect for civilian
leadership.
Just 10 days before Rumsfelds visit, Guatemalan troops
opened fire with live ammunition on protesting peasants, workers
and teachers opposed to the Central American Free Trade Agreement.
At least one man was shot dead and several others were wounded
by gunfire. Human rights advocates charge that the military has
refused to cooperate in investigations of the mass killings in
which it participated. Terrorist groups apparently linked to the
countrys armed forces have repeatedly targeted those demanding
such an accounting.
See Also:
Mounting provocations against
Venezuela
Washington backs kidnapping of Colombian guerrilla exile in Caracas
[26 January 2005]
Rumsfeld fails
to forge new security pact
US-Latin American tensions over "war on terror"
[23 November 2004]
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