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Venezuela: Is the CIA preparing another coup?

by wsws
With a “strike” organized by Venezuela’s employers now entering its second week, there is every indication that the South American country is being subjected to a classic destabilization campaign organized in collaboration with US intelligence.

Venezuela: Is the CIA preparing another coup?

By Bill Vann
11 December 2002

With a “strike” organized by Venezuela’s employers now entering its second week, there is every indication that the South American country is being subjected to a classic destabilization campaign organized in collaboration with US intelligence.

Having failed to topple Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez in a US-backed coup last April, Venezuela’s ruling circles, working in conjunction with Washington, are attempting to force him to resign or provoke a new military seizure of power.

The threat that Washington will intervene directly in Venezuela—a strategic source of imported petroleum for the American market—cannot be ruled out.

The “strike”—in reality an employers’ lockout—began on December 2. It is the joint creation of FEDECAMARAS—Venezuela’s big business association—and the CTV, or Confederation of Venezuelan Workers, a corrupt labor bureaucracy that is closely tied to the AFL-CIO in the US. The CTV is also a recipient of substantial funding from the National Endowment for Democracy, a US agency created to funnel funds to foreign organizations that had previously been financed directly by the Central Intelligence Agency.

The joint big business-CTV action has had its most visible effect on the wealthier neighborhoods and downtown shopping districts of Caracas, where well-heeled demonstrators—backed by thugs on motorcycles—have forced stores to close. In the working class areas and the impoverished shantytowns in the hills surrounding the capital, there has been little impact on daily activity.

Hundreds of thousands of demonstrators poured into the capital from these neighborhoods on Saturday in a demonstration “for democracy and in defense of the constitution” called by supporters of the government, a mobilization far larger than anything the organizers of the FEDECAMARAS-CTV action have been able to mount.

In a county in which 80 percent of the 26 million inhabitants live in poverty, it is hardly surprising that a “strike” organized by and for a wealthy oligarchy has failed to mobilize the masses. To make up for what it lacks in popular support, those leading the attempt to bring down Chavez have turned to terrorist violence, economic sabotage and a barrage of media propaganda that amounts to a psychological warfare campaign against the population.

Last Friday night, as the leaders of the protest were debating whether they could continue their action, shots rang out in a plaza in the wealthy Altamira section of Caracas. The square has been the scene since October of a farcical demonstration by a group of military officers against Chavez. Most were implicated in last April’s aborted coup and have since been relieved of their commands. Working out of a luxury hotel nearby, the generals, admirals and colonels had designated the plaza as “liberated territory.”

A number of supporters of the anti-Chavez demonstrations were in the plaza when the shooting began, and at least three lay dead and over a score wounded when it was over.

No sooner had the smoke cleared, than General Enrique Medina Gomez, one of the dissident officers, took to the airwaves to blame Chavez for the bloodshed and call for the military to overthrow him “like it did on April 11,” when the Venezuelan president was held incommunicado for two days and a civilian-military junta was formed. That coup quickly collapsed in the face of mass protests and dissension within the military.

Meanwhile, the country’s main television channels—whose owners are all aligned with the anti-Chavez forces—began broadcasting scenes of the carnage in the plaza over and over again.

In the aftermath of the shootings, however, it was revealed that the principal suspect, captured at the scene, was Portuguese national Joao Gouveia. Appearing to be mentally unbalanced, he said he had arrived from Lisbon the day before and had carried out the attack with the aim of retaliating at one of the television networks for persecuting him.

A Congressman and journalist who supports the Chavez government claimed, however, that Gouveia was feigning his mental problems and had confessed to carrying out the attack after being contracted for money by General Medina Gomez. Meanwhile, there were press reports in Venezuela that another suspected gunman filmed at the scene had been seen earlier the same day with the mayor of Caracas, a leading figure in the anti-Chavez movement.

This strange assault follows the pattern set last April, in which 18 people were killed and 30 wounded when unknown gunmen fired on an anti-government demonstration. The bloodshed provided the pretext for military coup leaders to lead an assault on the government palace, arrest Chavez and announce the formation of a provisional junta. On that occasion, the rebel generals taped a recording—hours before the shooting—declaring themselves against the government and blaming the government for a number of deaths at the demonstration. Several of those arrested for the shootings were released almost immediately by the short-lived junta.

Meanwhile, the strike’s effect has been greatly amplified by the actions of management of the state-owned oil corporation, PDVSA. It was Chavez’s attempt to reorganize this institution—long used as a cash cow by the wealthy supporters of Venezuela’s old ruling parties, Copei and Acción Democrática—that provoked last year’s coup attempt. He subsequently reached an accommodation with these managers, even agreeing to provide them with hefty salary increases.

Ships’ officers on oil tankers and private companies that operate oil trucks have been recruited to the anti-Chavez plot in a bid to paralyze the country’s oil industry and thereby shut down its entire economy. Venezuela, the fifth-largest petroleum exporter, is dependent on oil exports for 80 percent of its foreign earnings. It supplies 13 percent of the crude oil imported by the US. The US consumes 70 percent of the 2.5 million barrels of oil Venezuela produces daily.

“Petroleum export activity has been paralyzed; the activity of the ports has been paralyzed; the activity of the refineries is beginning to be paralyzed and of course the activity of production as well,” said Ali Rodriguez, president of the PDVSA, on Monday.

“We are threatened with a national disaster; no worker who loves his company or his country will permit this to continue,” he said. He warned that unless PDVSA could resume the normal distribution of oil, it would be unable to meet payrolls and payments to suppliers and would be liable to massive fines for failing to meet delivery contracts. Rodriguez is the only one of the eight PDVSA directors who did not resign in protest against Chavez.

While refineries are reportedly full to capacity, they are unable to distribute the oil because of the transportation stoppage. As a result, gas stations have begun closing down and at least one major airline canceled scores of flights because of concerns over a lack of fuel. Some foreign carriers were also reportedly stopping flights to Caracas, supposedly out of concern that their aircraft could be stranded there.

In response, Chavez ordered the military to take control of refineries, oil distribution centers and those oil tankers that had halted operations.

In a further attempt to undermine Venezuela’s already depressed economy, banks announced a one-day shutdown Monday and indicated that they would maintain reduced hours and services indefinitely.

The atmosphere of provocations and employer-organized economic sabotage recalls the CIA campaign to destabilize the Popular Unity government of Chile’s President Salvador Allende in 1973. It was subsequently revealed that US intelligence, working through both business associations and corrupt right-wing unions, funded a truckers’ strike that paralyzed the country. The economic dislocation set the stage for the September 11, 1973 military coup led by General Augusto Pinochet that led to a bloodbath of the Chilean working class and 15 years of dictatorship.

There can be little doubt that Washington is deeply involved in instigating the disruptions in Venezuela. Before it launches a war against Iraq, the Bush administration will most certainly assure itself a secure supply of Venezuelan oil. In the long term, the US ruling elite, together with the Venezuelan oligarchs, look to a substantial profit windfall through the privatization of the state-owned oil company.

Since last April, Chavez has sought to accommodate himself to Washington, toning down his nationalist rhetoric and even making a public declaration that Venezuela would remain a “reliable” oil supplier to the US market in the event that an invasion of Iraq disrupted supplies from elsewhere.

Even though the Venezuelan government has largely abided by the economic prescriptions of the International Monetary Fund, the Bush administration is determined to oust Chavez, whose condemnations of US bombings in Afghanistan and friendly ties to Castro’s Cuba provoked Washington’s ire. Like the Venezuelan ruling class, the US administration sees Chavez’s limited reforms and populist appeals to the country’s impoverished masses as an intolerable threat to wealth and privilege.

Following the ouster of Chavez last April, US officials welcomed the coup. It was revealed at the time that senior Bush administration aides, including Assistant Secretary of State Otto Reich and White House advisor Elliott Abrams—both key players in the Reagan administration’s covert network for supporting the contra terrorist war on Nicaragua in the 1980s—had met repeatedly in Washington with the coup’s organizers.

Loyally echoing the position of the administration in Washington, the mass media in the US has deliberately distorted the nature of the events in Venezuela. The New York Times refers to it, for example, as a “national walkout,” when in reality relatively few Venezuelan workers have joined the anti-government actions, while most have been locked out by their employers. In some instances, workers have occupied shutdown plants in protest.

Similarly, the confrontation is presented as one between a democratic opposition demanding that Chavez submit to a national referendum on his presidency, and an authoritarian regime that is determined to prevent such a vote.

Thus, the Times writes that the opposition’s aim is “to avoid having to wait until the next presidential election in 2006” to resolve the crisis.

In reality, Venezuela’s constitution, approved by popular vote in 1999, provides for just such a referendum midway through the presidential term, which will be in August 2003. The political representatives of the Venezuelan oligarchy, however, are demanding that Chavez submit to an extra-constitutional vote on February 2.

Their unwillingness to wait seven months is bound up with concerns over pending legislation on land reform and the reorganization of the PDVSA, as well as fears within the Venezuelan “democratic” opposition that it cannot achieve the number of votes needed to oust Chavez in any case. (The constitution requires that a referendum get the support of a greater percentage of the electorate than what was won by the president in the previous election, in Chavez’s case, 57 percent.)

In Venezuela, outrage over the local media’s role as a propaganda arm for those seeking to topple the Chavez government led to mass demonstrations outside of television stations Monday night, with thousands of protesters chanting “Coup-mongers, tell the truth!” The five privately owned television networks have openly promoted anti-government actions, while broadcasting false stories to undermine the government. In Maracay, demonstrators occupied the station.

The protests were met with an angry condemnation from Organization of American States Secretary General César Gaviria, who condemned them as “intimidating actions” and demanded that the government “take action” to defend “freedom of the press and of expression.”

The comments exposed the bias of Gaviria, a former Colombian president, who is supposed to be mediating a settlement between Chavez and his opponents. Like the US State Department, he has increasingly indicated his support for the early elections demanded by the country’s oligarchy.

Chavez has himself indicated a willingness to negotiate on this demand. The opposition, however, is now seeking to use the economic disruption to press for his immediate resignation, while insisting that it will not accept his vice president, José Vicente Rangel, even as a temporary successor.

See Also:
As Washington eyes Latin “axis of evil”
Coup attempts continue in Venezuela

[28 October 2002]
The AFL-CIO’s role in the Venezuelan coup
[3 May 2002]
US debacle in Venezuela: Bush administration backtracks on coup
[18 April 2002]
What the New York Times “overlooked” in the Venezuelan events
[18 April 2002]
Chavez back...for now
Abortive Venezuelan coup was made in the USA

[15 April 2002]

Add Your Comments

Comments (Hide Comments)
by repost
CARACAS, Venezuela (Reuters) - Strike-breaking workers loaded Venezuelan oil tankers on Wednesday, as the 10-day stoppage which has blocked oil exports to pressure leftist President Hugo Chavez to quit sprang a leak.

The government said the Marshall Chuikov sailed for the United States with 350,000 barrels of crude oil, and another three tankers carrying a total 1.35 million barrels were loading at other ports, breaking the anti-Chavez strikers' stranglehold on the world's fifth-largest oil exporter.

http://reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=worldNews&storyID=1891062
by mike
This is no labor strike, but an act of capital sabotage. Calling it a strike, as the media does, is to legitimize terrorism.

So there. All Republicans and other objective counter-revolutionaries (which includes all Marxist-Leninists), please report immediately to the nearest anarchist collective so you can learn how to contribute to the building of a better society. Refreshments will be served. By you---to the working people whose labor power you've been stealing for all these years.

Whew. Getting ahead of myself here. Back to my cell at the Trent Lott Detention Center!
by this thing here
this was originally posted to the DC-IMC newswire. very interesting background on a constitutional / no confidence vote type way in which Chavez could be removed from power, and why those against Chavez want to remove him NOW with force, rather than wait...

http://dc.indymedia.org/front.php3?article_id=41895&group=webcast

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Why Are the Coup Plotters So Impatient?

…And How Venezuela Can Defeat Them Legally

By Heinz Dieterich Steffan
Rebelión
http://NarcoNews.com

The constitutional government of Hugo Chávez faces its fourth assault in
eight months. The April 11th coup d’etat launched a chain of mob acts that
were repeated under the banner of “civic” or “labor strikes,” all of them
programmed with high levels of physical violence and media manipulation.

This high pro-coup intensity against Venezuelan democracy enters a new
paradox. The Bolivarian Constitution of 1999, born from the breast of a
Constituent Assembly and approved by referendum of the citizens is, without
a doubt, the most democratic in Latin America. As such, it provides for
removal of elected public officials. Its Article 72 stipulates that “all
posts and magistrates that are popularly elected are revocable,” as of
halfway though the term for which they are elected.

Applying this Article to President Chávez, the possibility of removing him
by recall referendum opens up in August 2003, under the terms of the Magna
Carta. That is to say, there is an institutional path to change leadership –
that, according to opposition members is the goal of their street actions –
whose utilization would protect the life of citizens, strengthen the
democratic government and civic exercise of power and improve the national
economic situation.

President Chávez has publicly affirmed that he will submit himself to this
constitutinoal instrument and the international mediators of the conflict,
like César Gaviria, secretary general of the Organization of American States
(OAS), have insisted that the adequate mechanism to resolve the country’s
problems is the institutional path. However, the “strikers” dismiss the
constitution and the hemispheric political institution, insisting on an
extra-constitutional solution and on street violence.

The question that this situation raises is the following: Why don’t the
“strikers” wait eight months to reach their goal through peaceful and
institutional routes? What is the urgency that makes them act desperately
fomenting chaos, ungovernable situations and military coup instead of
working toward August?

The reasons for this behavior are obvious and can be summed up by three:
Since the April 11th coup d’etat, which was their maximum point of power,
the conspirators have been weakened in two key ways. A. They have lost
internal unity and fight among themselves for power, and, more importantly,
B. They have lost a fundamental part of their social base in the middle
classes. During the 24 hours they were in power, during the April 11th coup
d’etat, it became clear that the middle classes had been used as cannon
fodder in a transnational dictatorial project. And the previous mob actions
via “civic strikes” only deepened the erosion of the pro-coup clique’s
legitimacy, supported from foreign lands by Otto “Third” Reich and recycled
Spanish Franco fascism.

The second reason for the pro-coup haste is the entrance in vigor of various
important laws that come into effect on January 1, 2003, that touch vital
interests of the economic elite: Among them, the Land Law that affects not
just the large plantation owners in the country but also real estate
speculators and vacant lots in urban zones. The Hydrocarbon law is even more
important because it will permit the dismantling of the meta-State of the
petroleum business PdVSA, the corrupt oil group that controls the economic
life of the country and that is an integral part of the New World Energy
Order of George Bush.

Today, only 20 percent of the income of this mega-company goes to the State.
Eighty percent goes to “operating costs” that enrich secret accounts of the
beneficiaries of this economic cancer. The power of this petroleum
“steal-ocracy” has become propped up progressively during recent decades. In
1974, the company delivered 80 percent of its income to the State and kept
20 percent (“operating costs”). In 1990, the ratio tied at 50 to 50 percent
and in 1998 it reached the ratio of 80 to 20 percent. It’s logical that they
are going to fight to the death – of the nation – to defend “their” black
gold.

The third reason the pro-coup forces are in a hurry is found in their doubts
about being able to win a recall referendum. Article 72 places three
conditions to revoke the term of the president. 1. A number of no less than
20 percent of the voters signing petitions is necessary to call the
referendum. 2. The voter turnout must be 25 percent or more. 3. The number
of voters who vote for the recall have to be equal or more than the number
of voters who elected the official. Since Chávez was elected with 57 percent
of the vote, the “strikers” will have to meet or supercede this percentage
in the August referendum.

There is an aggravating situation for the pro-coup forces. During the period
for which the official is elected “there can not be more than one recall
referendum on his term” according to the Magna Carta. Thus, an eventual
failure of the referendum will use up all institutional possibilities of
overthrowing the Bolivarian government.

In the current phase of the conflict, the clique that runs PdVSA and the
mass media in Venezuela are two fronts of the internal battles where the
destiny of the Boliviarian experiment is being decided. Having lost their
pro-coup nucleus in the Armed Forces and part of their social base in the
middle class, the conspirators have made the decisive battle of this mob
action that they call “an active strike with an ingredient of gasoline.”
That is to say: Control of the petroleum steal-ocracy.

To defeat the attempt at strangulation by energy by the subversives opens
the door to the firing of the directorship of PdVSA and the recuperation of
the company for the nation. This will be the means of triumph or failure by
the government. All compromise with the conspirators on this point will
maintain the economic-union center of the counter-revolution alive and
weaken the popular process.

To defeat the conspiracy through legal, but firm, opportune and audacious
measures would reduce the internal hydra to just one head: the media
octopus. The politics of this octopus is explained by multiple economic and
political interests of wide influence, among which the quartet of (former
president) Carlos Andrés Pérez, Gustavo Cisneros (of Venevision TV), Jesús
Polanco (of the daily El País in Spain) and (Spanish politician) Felipe
González. That will be the theme of another analysis.


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by Manuel
Actually, if you want the truth, Chavez is a bloodthirsty tyrant who has relied upon violence to achieve his ends. To call him, "democratically elected" is like saying Hilter and Saddam were democratically elected.
by ............
Hitler WAS democratically elected, fool!

God some people are dumb
by Baphomet
The CIA, Otto Reich, Negroponte, et al are absolutely pulling the strings here. I'm sure we'll learn the details 30 years from now, as usual.

Chavez aint so bad. If he was a US puppet he would have gunned down thousands of protesters by now, jailed and disappeared the leaders, and there would definitely NOT be a mass media controlled by the opposition. Give me a break. The US controlled thugs that ruled Venezuela prior to Chavez massacred thousands of protesters. They also created the 80% poverty rate. Leave Chavez alone. Let him implement his programs. Leave Venezuela alone. Let them govern themselves as they see fit.

The fucking arrogance of it all never ceases to amaze.
by Manuel
if you bothered to read my post, dumbfuck, you would UNDERSTAND that I DID state Hitler and Saddam were democraticly elected, although they were bloodthirsty killers like Chavez.
What a fucking moron ............
by ............
Generally, people who resort to schoolyard insults are just a bunch of lame, sorry-sounding excuses for a human.
by Ulrike
Saying that Hitler was elected doesn't quite portray the whole story. After WWI, Germany had a parliamentary system of government, and like many current parliamentary governments, there was both a chancellor and a president. Rather than a two party system, there were several parties, and voters could vote for a party, and then a candidate within a party. Hitler's party won something like 35% of the vote because votes were split among many parties, but the nat'l socialists had the most votes so Hitler became Chancellor. The position of president was above that of a chancellor, and that was occupied by Hindenburg.
So what happened later on in 1933? The Reichstag fire. The nazis set the Reichstag on fire *one week* before the next round of elections were going to occur, and then blamed the communists and destroyed all evidence to the contrary. The ensuing panic allowed Hitler to win this election and to declare the equivalent of a state of martial law and suspend individual rights, and declare himself dictator - which basically meant that the Chancellor had the power to enact laws without consulting congress, and Hindenburg was out of the picture. So, while normally there would be periodic elections, there were no elections after this point, and voters couldn't recall him after this initial period when people really thought that communists were trying to take over so they permitted Hitler to get his foot in the door.
Lots and lots of people were really brainwashed though. There was no outside media, and people had to have travel papers to move around the country, but when people just listened to the state run media that kept saying that victory was around the corner, and kids kept going to Hitler Youth camps and so forth, lots of germans were totally shocked in 1945 when they lost because they weren't even hearing negative war news at that point. It also depended on where youwere in the country.
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