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Fw: VENEZUELA: WASHINGTON UP TO ITS OLD TRICKS
- Subject: Fw: VENEZUELA: WASHINGTON UP TO ITS OLD TRICKS
- From: "Nello Margiotta" <animarg at tin.it>
- Date: Wed, 28 Nov 2001 19:36:00 +0100
Subject: VENEZUELA: WASHINGTON UP TO ITS OLD TRICKS From: ZZZ To: YYY Bcc: Subject: An Alternative Date: Sun, 25 Nov 2001 08:34:56 -0800 Amazingly Hugo Chavez is still alive and in power, despite Washington's extreme displeasure with his land reform policy and friendship with that arch-enemy of U.S. capitalists - Fidel Castro! Below is a mainstream article on his ongoing struggle to institute reform, followed by an excellent, and more meaningful, interpretation of the facts. At a time when the New World Order has descended into chaos and despair, I find it helpful to hear of and support those who are working - with some success, even - to find a way out. And so I begin with the "end" of the below commentary: (W)hat is the Left's answer to "terrorism" -- which is nothing more than a symptom and symbol of the abyss the capitaslist/imperialist system is pushing the world towards, I would say this is it. Fight on the side of Venezuela, on the side of Cuba and Fidel, on the side of the Argentine unionists confronting the austerity plan, on the side of the Palestinians, on the side of the side of the Irish patriots. Right now, social and political forces are in motion in Venezuela. There is a sharpening class polarization and class conflict. The situation is evolving, we can --we should-- make a difference. VENEZUELA: WASHINGTON UP TO ITS OLD TRICKS [Venezuela is experiencing another period of "tension and unrest" amid last week's "coup rumors" -- and the mainstream press is covering all this as if it is "unprecedented" in Hugo Chavez's presidency. This is at least the third time "coup rumors" have circulated, the last time during a 15-nation tour by Chavez a few months ago, which even included a paid advertisement in US newspapers by his opponents (the fingerprints of the CIA, as the terrorism pundits like to say, were all over that one). Last year, Hugo Chavez was extremely cool toward the "Free Trade Area of the Americas" initiative, which was rammed down the throats of hemispheric leaders by the US at the Montreal Summit -- to which only Cuba was not invited. Chavez was also critical of that, and returned from the Summit urging that a popular referendum on the FTAA be held in all Latin American countries. Since then, Venezuela has distanced itself from the US by asking the Pentagon's military advisory mission to move out of its offices into new space (allegedly because the space was needed by the Venezuelan governemnt, but probably for reasons of security); the US State Department has made disparaging remarks about Chavez, his relationship with Fidel Castro, and security and intelligence cooperation between Cuba and Venezuala, echoing the claims of "domestic dissidents" that Chavez was "Cubanizing" Venezuela -- a theme undoubtedly penned in Langley. The US has also recently expressed "disappointment" that Venezuela's President has not climbed on the "War on Terrorism" bandwagon. Although Chavez is continuing to sell oil to the US, and is an important supplier, his latest foreign trip to OPEC nations succeeded in hammering out an agreement to limit production and thus stem the falling price of oil -- even non-OPEC Mexico finally went along, although the US appears to be counting on the cowed and compliant Vladimir Putin to up production and save their gas-guzzling asses. Since his election, Hugo Chavez has been extremely outspoken, and it's not surprising to see "unrest and tension" in Venezuela. What's surprising is that more active attempts to remove him have not yet occurred. Washington seems to be somewhat occupied elsewhere, plotting to subjugate the entire planet, but apparently not everyone in Covert Country is working on Afghanistan or lining up Iraq and North Korea as its latest victims. Expect to see more of this sort of thing, and expect to see more economic problems that will be exploited by the Evil Empire and their paid agents. Expect as well that Venezuelan housewives will start marching, banging pots and pans, since the CIA never knows when to retire a good act. (Whoops -- it seems they hae already begun, according to this IPS story... The CIA's Latin America desk really DOES NOT have many new ideas.) The latest news report from IPS on the "unrest" is below, followed by a broad analysis of the situation from Jose Perez. -- NY Transfer] * Friday November 23 01:16 PM EST (IPS via Yahoo) VENEZUELA: Unrest, Protests Mark Rising Tension By Andrés Cañizález, Inter Press Service CARACAS, Nov 22 (IPS) - A protest demonstration that ended in a pitched battle Thursday spawned a climate of tension in Venezuela that had not been felt since President Hugo Chávez took office, while the business community prepared for an unprecedented freeze on productive activity. The demonstration staged by the opposition Democratic Action (AD) party ended in a brawl with sympathisers of the ruling Fifth Republic Movement (MVR), in a week marked by rumours of a coup and announcements of further protests. Analysts agree that Chávez's "peaceful social revolution" is facing a critical juncture. The president, who was inaugurated in February 1999, is a retired paratrooper who headed a thwarted coup staged by junior officers in February 1992. He eventually became the standard- bearer of those demanding widespread change in a once oil-rich country where a majority of the population of 23 million has fallen into poverty. Chávez's arrival to power brought an end to the political hegemony enjoyed by the social democratic AD, a re-writing of the constitution, and an enormous concentration of power in the hands of the president. Chávez has brought about a radical transformation of the political system. But according to opinion polls, Venezuelans are still awaiting balanced economic policies with an emphasis on social concerns. Downtown Caracas is the usual venue for protest demonstrations, due to the presence there of public offices and the seat of the presidency. "An average of 100 protests a month have been held nationally over the past year. That is only comparable to the period of demonstrations during the second government of Carlos Andrés Pérez," Carlos Correa, general coordinator of the Venezuelan Programme of Education and Action on Human Rights, told IPS. Pérez (1974-79 and 1989-93), who belongs to the AD, was unpopular in his second term due to the economic difficulties plaguing Venezuelans. He stepped down on the decision of the Supreme Court, which later confined him to house arrest on charges of misuse of public funds. Venezuela is today experiencing "tough times. There is a climate of growing social unrest," said journalist Manuel Felipe Sierra. In his view, it is not just a question of "the unrest spawned by a long economic recession, which looks like it will become more severe in the next few months. It is also the result of a more active and militant stance by business associations and civil society groups." The country's main business association, Fedecámaras, announced Monday that it would bring productive activity to a standstill on Dec 10 "to demand a rectification" by the Chávez administration and the creation of "a channel for dialogue." Meanwhile, the new leadership of the Confederation of Venezuelan Workers (CTV) - the main trade union - is preparing a series of protests in regional capitals to demand "policies that create employment and boost salaries." Both Fedecámaras and the CTV, which complain that the president has turned a deaf ear to their grievances, have given assurances that their aim is not to "destabilise the government" with their protests. Chávez also recently suffered a setback in the elections for new CTV leaders. The candidate that the government openly supported, Aristóbulo Iztúriz, was defeated by Carlos Ortega, who the president had publicly accused of forming part of a "trade union mafia." "Chávez's discourse and his confrontation with the traditional political structures have worn thin, and he has been incapable of establishing dialogue with newly emerging social forces," said Sierra. The president held a long meeting Wednesday with the military brass, which has issued a series of statements in favour of the institutional order and implicit expressions of support for Chávez's political programme. "The only coups are in the mind of a tiny group of oddballs wandering around out there," said the inspector-in-chief of the armed forces, General Lucas Rincón. Besides the rumours of a coup, "pot-banging" demonstrations were held this month to protest statements by Chávez, who in turn called on the "revolutionaries" to respond to the "weak" protesters with fireworks. Analysts also say the unrest will be aggravated by the slump in oil prices. Another problem that has spurred controversy over the past year and which appears to be fuelling the clashes with some sectors of the productive apparatus is a new "Land Law" aimed at distributing plots to landless farmers, part of a package of four dozen laws decreed by Chávez under special powers he was granted by parliament. According to the president, the state will only take action in the case of rural property "whose owners fail to show up" in a period of 10 days after they have been called on to claim their land. Chávez clarified that there would be no forced confiscations of property, nor any nationalisation of the rural sector. Pedro Carmona Estanga, president of Fedecámaras, complained that the government had "rammed through" several laws "without consulting anyone," based on his special powers. Ortega, the new head of the CTV, said that under the present circumstances, it is essential for the government to set up "a national panel for dialogue to pull the country out of intensive care." * Analysis: Venezuela: Sharpening Class Polarization and September 11 by Jose G. Perez In the wake of the enactment by presidential decree of a package of laws, including an agrarian reform law and a law increasing petroleum royalties, pro-capitalist opposition forces staged a provocative march in Caracas, Venezuela, on Thursday which ended with street clashes. The capitalist Democratic Action Party staged the provocative march taking advantage of a trip abroad by President Hugo Chávez. Last Thursday, Chávez enacted 49 new economic reform laws under special authority granted to him by the legislature. The most important of these laws is an agrarian reform law that calls for the intervention and expropriation of arable land allowed to lie idle by large landowners, with the land being turned over to landless peasants. Without intimate and detailed knowlege of the Venezuelan countryside, which this writer lacks, it is impossible to say whether this measure could lead to the wide-ranging agrarian reform which virtually all Latin American countries need. Moreover, the most important part of such a law is not the detailed wording of the measure, such as limits on landholding, but how it is implemented. In Cuba, retrospectively, one could find weaknesses in the first Agrarian Reform Law promulgated in May of 1959. Under its provisions, it was still possible for a class of significant landowners who derived their livelihood overwhelmingly from exploiting the labor of others to perdure, and it proved necessary for a second agrarian reform to wipe out this layer of smaller rural exploiters three or four years later. And the change in the law itself was the least of it. It took a long, hard and bitter struggle --the fight against the "bandits" as it is known in Cuban history-- to extirpate exploitation in the countryside, which was the social basis for the counterrevolutionary bands that were active in the early 1960s, especially in the Escambray mountains. Yet without the first agrarian reform law, there could not have been a second one, nor the struggle around it. That's because the 1959 Cuban law struck directly at one of the major types of property of some of the biggest capitalists on the island and some of the biggest foreign interests. Under the leadership of the Rebel Army-staffed National Instute for Agrarian Reform (INRA), it ushered in a wave of escalating class struggles in the countryside through which the worker-peasant class character of the revolution came to the fore. The 1959 Cuban agrarian reform did not go beyond the formal bounds of capitalist property relations. But dismissing it as "bourgeois" --as some ultralefts did at the time-- was of no comfort to the actual capitalists involved in the class struggle the law unleashed, as they saw their property stripped from them by the mobilized power of the working people who acted directly in their own interests with the support of a revolutionary government. In Venezuela, it is way too soon to try to draw a comparison to those events more than 40 years ago. But the outraged howls and screeches of the capitalists, their news media and their parties suggests that they view Chavez's agrarian reform measure much as a vampire might view a wooden stake about to be driven through its heart. Consider the reaction: The union of Venezuelan bosses, Fedecámaras, has called for a 12-hour lockout for December 10. (How succesful it will be is open to question. Already the most outspoken Chávez critics -- the radio and TV station bosses -- have said they can't join the lockout as that would be illegal. And Chávez has ensnared another section of the bosses --especially smaller capitalists, according to press reports-- into a dialogue about the modalities for implementing the laws, dividing what was an initially united opposition.) Another reaction: the front pages of certain dailies became tendentious denunciations of the president. Just one example: the daily "El Universal" Friday a week ago had headlines like: "Fedecámaras wants the National Assembly to ammend the laws;" "'The President of Venezuela should watch what he says,' said U.S. ambassador to the OAS" and "'Chávez has damaged relations with Washington,' says report by the Stratfor agency." Rumors of a coup started to fly, which were, of course, promptly answered by Chávez, who said any attempted coup would be met "with a rifle in my hand." Even the most ill-fitting and worn out hobby horses of the bourgeois press have been trotted out. Pascal Fletcher, who for years specialized in slandering Cuba as Reuter's man in Havana, is now putting this training to good use pontificating from Caracas. "Venezuela's latter-day 'Liberator' loses his shine," says the headline of his latest offering, in which he assures us: "Once hailed, like Bolivar, as the potential 'Liberator' of Venezuela's downtrodden masses, the 47-year-old president is now denounced by his more strident critics as a 'dictator' and accused of everything from insensitivity to insanity." Fletcher seems to not have heard the capitalists' outraged wailing following last week's package of economic laws, and decries Chávez, not for being a revolutionary, but for NOT being revolutionary enough: "But even impartial observers describe his political program as slow-moving and ineptly executed at best, while critics shrilly deride it as a 'Revolution of saliva,' bereft of real action and existing only in Chavez's long, meandering speeches." Tell it to Fedecámaras, Mr. Fletcher. Another old stand-by of bourgeois slanders against revolutionaries has also been pressed into service: that Chávez is an enemy of the freedom of the press. "Preocupan en Venezuela ataques de Chávez a libertad de prensa," says the headline on a November 17 AP dispatch. "Chavez's attacks on press freedom cause worry in Venezuela." With a headline like that, you know what to expect: orders from the presidential advisors forbidding the broadcast of certain interviews, systematic slanting and spinning to have the news media reflect an overwhelmingly pro-government point of view, the jailing without charges of hundreds of people, in short, the kind of thing we're becoming all too used to in the United States under the regime of George II. But what had actually happened in Venezuela? AP says, "Unlike other Venezuelan leaders, President Hugo Chávez has never attempted to control the inputs of dailies and has allowed press criticism, although not without expressing his displeasure." It turns out Chávez's "attacks" have all consisted of criticizing press coverage. Not a single publication or broadcast stations has been shut down; not a single journalist has been killed, arrested or "detained" as we now say ever so euphemistically in the US press; not a single article has been censored; not a single show has been driven off the air (at least that AP is willing to tell us about). So what is Chavez's crime? "His diatribes against the press have alienated prominent journalists and owners of radio and television stations, who say the president is trying to intimidate them." Poor babies! Imagine that! Chávez has the *temerity* to actually express HIS OWN opinion! Even when it does not coincide with those of the gasbags on TV! [This, by the way, is striking confirmation of the Marxist proposition that "Freedom of the press belongs to those who own one." The bourgeoisie insitinctively reacts to those who express views inimical to its own by labeling them as "enemies" of a free press, even when all they have done is to express their own views. Bourgeois freedom of the press is freedom to express pro-capitalist -- and ONLY pro-capitalist -- points of view. But then if you had been paying close attention to our three-letter TV news media of late, you would have known that.] The only case that the article documents in which Chávez threatened to initiate coercive measures against a media outlet was that of Globovisión, which falsely reported that nine taxi drivers has been murdered one night in Caracas, leading to a cab drivers strike. Chávez quite correctly noted that broadcasting such "news" fabricated out of whole cloth with the obvious and foreseeable effect of disrupting the transportation system was an attack on the economy, not an exercise of freedom of the press. He explained that the airwaves belonged to the Venezuelan people, and that Globovision's abuse of the public's trust could result in their license to use those airwaves being withdrawn. However, after Globovisión retracted this false story, Chávez dropped the threats of taking legal action. The article also lies in another way: it fails to note that one extremely popular weekly political radio show was driven off the air by the "Chávez regime." It happened before the most recent presidential elections. That show was "Aló Presidente," Chávez's own weekly call-in show, where people can phone in with everything from criticism of his policy towards Russia to demands that potholes be fixed on their street. The election authorities ruled that Chávez could not continue to host the show because he was a candidate and that would be unfair to other candidates. Chávez disagreed with and criticized the ruling, explaining that he was not just a candidate but also the President, and had an obligation to communicate with and be answerable to the people. But he obeyed the ruling. Then he got re-elected by an even more crushing majority than he had won originally, and the show went back on the air. For some strange reason, all the usual suspects, from the New York Times to the SIP (Interamerican Press Society a.k.a. the CIA public relations office) "forgot" to "condemn" this attack on press freedom. On top of this, we have Thursday's clashes. Based on what can be gleaned from various reports, what actually happened is that Acción Democrática called for a march on the national assembly; a pro-Chávez workers organization staged a counter-mobilization, and this pro-Chávez countermobilization was then attacked by the Caracas police, who used water cannon, rubber bullets, tear gas and shots into the air with presumably live ammunition to disperse the pro-government "turba," or mob, as demonstrations by working people are invariably called by the Latin American "free" press. Eight people were treated for various injuries, none, as far as is known, life-threatening. All told at most a few thousand people were involved. It will seem odd that the police were attacking pro-government demonstrators, but it is a reflection of how the sharpening of the class polarization in Venezuela is playing out in real life. The mayor of Caracas used to be a Chávez supporter but now, like Petkoff and some other petty-bourgeois politicians, he has become a renegade. He is using his position to encourage protests against the "antidemocratic" Chavez government (which, it should be noted, has won about a half dozen national elections in the last three years) and, of course, hizzoner is ALSO trying to deny to working people who support Chávez THEIR democratic right to mobilize against right-wingers who would block the advance of the revolution. [I guess I should make clear here that I'm using the expression "won ... elections" in the archaic sense of actually getting more votes --and, in Chávez's case, a hell of a lot more votes-- than the other candidates/parties/sides in the contest; and not in the modern, antiterrorist sense of "getting half a million less votes than the other guy but having your brother in Florida and your daddy's buddies on the Supreme Court fix it for you."] Whether the confrontations around the agrarian reform and other economic laws will become a turning point in the Bolivarian Revolution is something no one can predict. But the more time goes by, and the more President Chávez sticks to a course of placing the national interests of Venezuela first, doing things like extending a hand of friendship to the Cuban people, helping to lead the fight for oil producing countries getting a fair price for their products and against a U.S.-imposed "free trade" area of the Americas, the more reality will show that it is the working people that he must rely on and that must become the protagonists of the revolution if it is to survive and continue advancing. Chavez's revolution in Venezuela could well become a key turning point in the history of Latin America. For despite all the triumphalism of the last decade since the end of the Cold War, if these ten years have shown anything it is that the current world order is unsustainable; that "neo-liberalism," i.e., capitalism, far from providing a basis for development of the Third World, only leads to ever increasing pauperization and with it a breakdown in social and governmental institutions, as well as despair leading to madness like what we saw on September 11. There are, of course, no guarantees. Nothing is inevitable, not even the survival of our species. No one can vouchsafe the outcome of this battle, or even of the political steadfastness or acuity of a given political leader. But for those that ask, what is the Left's answer to "terrorism" -- which is nothing more than a symptom and symbol of the abyss the capitaslist/imperialist system is pushing the world towards, I would say this is it. Fight on the side of Venezuela, on the side of Cuba and Fidel, on the side of the Argentine unionists confronting the austerity plan, on the side of the Palestinians, on the side of the side of the Irish patriots. Right now, social and political forces are in motion in Venezuela. There is a sharpening class polarization and class conflict. The situation is evolving, we can --we should-- make a difference.
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