By Conn Hallinan
Regardless of the final outcome of the recent military
coup and counter-coup in Venezuela, two things are
clear: Venezuela is not just another banana-oil
republic; and the United States has, once again,
deeply damaged itself in Latin America.
In the hours following the April 11 arrest of
President Hugo Chavez, the Bush administration
signaled that it was firmly behind the takeover. "We
wish to express our solidarity with the Venezuelan
people and look forward to working with all democratic
forces in Venezuela to insure the full expression of
democratic rights," State Department spokesperson
Phillip Reeker told the press.
When, two days later, a tidal wave of Chavez
supporters--spearheaded by poor slum dwellers and
backed by key military officers--returned the
president to office, the White House warned that
Chavez had better correct his ways and govern "in a
fully democratic manner."
The April 11 coup sent a collective chill down the
backs of countries from Mexico to Argentina, a number
of which endured U.S.-supported military dictatorships
in the '60s and '70s. While Americans tend to have
short memories about things like the 1973 U.S.-backed
coup in Chile, no one in Latin America can afford such
forgetfulness. And, during their two heady days in
power, Venezuela's coup makers followed a grimly
familiar course: suspending the constitution;
dissolving the legislature, Supreme Court, election
commission, and other democratic institutions; and
beginning a round-up of Chavez officials and
supporters.
U.S. endorsement of the coup quickly isolated
Washington in the region. Latin leaders condemned "the
constitutional interruption" and made it clear they
would not recognize any government installed by the
military, thus adhering to the Organization of
American States' charter, requiring members not to
recognize any government that comes to power via a
coup.
For months, a Venezuelan coup had seemed almost
inevitable. Media images were of a pro-Cuban
"strongman" whose undemocratic and authoritarian rule
had brought the country to the edge of chaos, and who
had finally gunned down peaceful demonstrators. But
image and reality, as in the novels of Gabriel Garcia
Marquez, are fluid concepts in Latin America.
President Hugo Chavez, overwhelmingly elected three
years ago, took on one of the most entrenched
oligarchies in Latin America--and made some mistakes
in the process.
Part of his problem is the reality of Venezuela: an
oil-rich nation where 80% of the people are officially
designated "poor," where 2% of country controls 60% of
the land, and where virtually none of the $30 billion
in annual oil revenues trickles down to the vast
majority of the population. Changing those
demographics would be daunting under any
circumstances.
On occasion, Chavez' photo ops with Castro and Ghadafi
and his long-winded rhetoric got him in trouble. His
reform promises sometimes outran what he could
deliver, and cabinet turnover was constant, making
policy implementation difficult. Former Chavez
supporters joined the oligarchies, the church, and the
old guard of the trade unions in opposition.
At the same time, Chavez added one million children to
the nation's schools. He increased economic growth by
4 percent. Infant mortality and unemployment dropped,
and literacy and minimum wages increased. He also
rewrote agreements with Phillips Petroleum and
Exxon/Mobil to give Venezuela a bigger slice of its
oil revenues, and appointed new directors to the
state-owned oil company to keep prices in line with
the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Companies.
Venezuela has long been a "ratebuster," pumping more
oil and selling it for less that OPEC did, thus
denying the country the income from higher prices. Of
all his accomplishments, this may have been the fatal
one. Mess with big oil under the Bush Doctrine at your
own peril.
A lot remains unclear. The circumstances surrounding
the shooting of demonstrators last week are murky at
best. It appears, for instance, that more Chavez
supporters might have been shot than anti-Chavez
demonstrators. But what most Latin Americans will see
in all this is the hand of Washington, and it is hard
to argue with them.
Last November, the National Security Agency, the
Pentagon, and the State Department held a two-day
meeting on Venezuela. Soon afterwards the
administration began accusing Chavez of supporting
"terrorism" in Colombia, Bolivia, and Ecuador. Being
accused by Washington of supporting terrorism is a
pretty scary business these days. It certainly gave a
green light to elements in the military and the
opposition to foment the coup. According to the
Washington Post, dissident leaders were repeatedly
received at the U.S. Embassy, where they sought
support for toppling Chavez. If most Latin Americans
see a link between the November meeting and the White
House's endorsement of the takeover, one can hardly
blame them.
While Washington's meddling fell short of gunboat
diplomacy, the signs of interference remain all too
clear. For now, democratic institutions have been
returned to Venezuela and Chavez has taken the high
road, offering conciliation and dialogue with his
opponents. The Bush administration should reciprocate.
(Conn Hallinan is an expert with Foreign Policy In
Focus (online at www.fpif.org) and a journalism
lecturer and provost at the University of California,
Santa Cruz.)
From Foreign Policy in Focus
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Terbitan : 30 April 2002
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