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Politics : The Donkey's Inn -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Mephisto who wrote (3659)4/16/2002 1:27:06 PM
From: Mephisto  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 15516
 
Losing Latin America

The New York Times
April 16, 2002



By PAUL KRUGMAN


Many people, myself
included, would agree that
Hugo Chávez is not the president
Venezuela needs. He happens,
however, to be the president
Venezuela elected - freely, fairly
and constitutionally. That's why
all the democratic nations of the
Western Hemisphere, however
much they may dislike Mr.
Chávez, denounced last week's
attempted coup against him.

All the democratic nations, that
is, except one.


Here's how the BBC put it: "Far
from condemning the ouster of a
democratically elected president,
U.S. officials blamed the crisis on
Mr. Chávez himself," and they were "clearly pleased with
the result" - even though the new interim government
proceeded to abolish the legislature, the judiciary and the
Constitution. They were presumably less pleased when
the coup attempt collapsed. The BBC again: "President
Chávez's comeback has . . . left Washington looking rather
stupid." The national security adviser, Condoleezza RICE,
didn't help that impression when, incredibly, she
cautioned the restored president to "respect constitutional
processes."


Surely the worst thing about this episode is the betrayal
of our democratic principles; "of the people, by the people,
for the people" isn't supposed to be followed by the words
"as long as it suits U.S. interests."

But even viewed as realpolitik, our benign attitude toward
Venezuela's coup was remarkably foolish.

It is very much in our interest that Latin America break
out of its traditional political cycle, in which crude
populism alternated with military dictatorship. Everything
that matters to the U.S. - trade, security, drugs, you
name it - will be better if we have stable neighbors.

But how can such stability be achieved? In the 1990's
there seemed, finally, to be a formula; call it the new
world order. Economic reform would end the temptations
of populism; political reform would end the risk of
dictatorship. And in the 1990's, on their own initiative but
with encouragement from the United States, most Latin
American nations did indeed embark on a dramatic
process of reform both economic and political.

The actual results have been mixed. On the economic
side, where hopes were initially highest, things have not
gone too well. There are no economic miracles in Latin
America, and there have been some notable disasters,
Argentina's crisis being the latest. The best you can say is
that some of the disaster victims, notably Mexico, seem to
have recovered their balance (with a lot of help, one must
say, from the Clinton administration) and moved onto a
path of steady, but modest, economic growth.

Yet economic disasters have not destabilized the region.
Mexico's crisis in 1995, Brazil's crisis in 1999, even
Argentina's current crisis did not deliver those countries
into the hands either of radicals or of strongmen. The
reason is that the political side has gone better than
anyone might have expected. Latin America has become a
region of democracies - and these democracies seem
remarkably robust.

So while the U.S. may have hoped for a new Latin stability
based on vibrant prosperity, what it actually got was
stability despite economic woes, thanks to democracy.
Things could be a lot worse.

Which brings us to Venezuela. Mr. Chávez is a populist in
the traditional mold, and his policies have been
incompetent and erratic. Yet he was fairly elected, in a
region that has come to understand the importance of
democratic legitimacy. What did the United States hope to
gain from his overthrow? True, he has spouted a lot of
anti-American rhetoric, and been a nuisance to our
diplomacy. But he is not a serious threat.

Yet there we were, reminding everyone of the bad old days
when any would-be right-wing dictator could count on
U.S. backing.

As it happens, we aligned ourselves with a peculiarly
incompetent set of plotters. Mr. Chávez has alienated a
broad spectrum of his people; the demonstrations that led
to his brief overthrow began with a general strike by the
country's unions. But the short-lived coup-installed
government included representatives of big business and
the wealthy - full stop. No wonder the coup collapsed.


But even if the coup had succeeded, our behavior would
have been very stupid. We had a good thing going - a new
hemispheric atmosphere of trust, based on shared
democratic values. How could we so casually throw it
away?

nytimes.com

Copyright 2002 The New York Times Company



To: Mephisto who wrote (3659)4/16/2002 5:06:09 PM
From: TigerPaw  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 15516
 
I've been in class learning address translation configuration for HyperTransport to PCI bridges. I have to keep my fingers in my ears so all the new information doesn't fall out. I'll check in later when I get home.
TP



To: Mephisto who wrote (3659)4/17/2002 1:30:23 AM
From: Mephisto  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 15516
 
Bush's Betrayal of Democracy
The Washington Post

By Arturo Valenzuela
Tuesday, April 16, 2002; Page
A19

Had the armed forces and
its allies succeeded in
forcing Venezuela's
democratically elected
president and legislature
out of office this past week,
Latin America would have
experienced its first outright military coup in 26 years,
with the notable exception of the overthrow of Haiti's
first-ever elected president in 1991. The collapse of
democracy in Venezuela would have exacerbated the sharp
social tensions in a bitterly divided country that is the
United States' third-largest source of imported oil. It also
would have seriously undermined hemispheric efforts
championed by three previous American presidents to
strengthen democracy and the rule of law and put an end
to military in politics.
A successful coup in Venezuela was
averted when it became clear that President Hugo Chavez
retained considerable support in the country and the
military belatedly realized that the provisional government
it had installed severely overreached in a misguided
attempt to dismantle the elected legislature and dismiss
the supreme court.

Unfortunately, the Bush administration did not seem to
understand what was at stake in Venezuela. Deviating
sharply from the policies of its predecessors, and confusing
the understandable dislike of a particular leader and his
policies with the importance of supporting democracy, it
publicly countenanced the military action. The
administration was visibly out of step with other
hemispheric leaders who condemned the military coup.
It
also stood in sharp contrast to the policies of the first
President Bush, who vigorously opposed the overthrow of
the leftist, anti-American Aristide in Haiti, sending an
unmistakable signal of the U.S. commitment to upholding
democracy in the post-Cold War era. As a result, the
United States now risks losing much of the considerable
moral and political leadership it had rightly won over the
last decade as the nations of the Americas sought to
establish the fundamental principle that the problems of
democracy are solved in democracy, not through resorting
to unconstitutional means.

Rather than categorically condemn the military coup in
Venezuela, official White House and Department of State
statements appeared to justify military intervention by
arguing that people were killed in anti-Chavez
demonstrations, that the president had ordered the closing
of television broadcasts, and had been acting in an
increasingly authoritarian manner. Nor did the
administration's spokesmen encourage the armed forces to
avoid a disruption of the constitutional order or call for the
restoration of Venezuela's elected authorities. Instead,
they accepted at face value Chavez's purported resignation
and did not question the legitimacy of the ad hoc
"provisional government" blessed by the high command.
Nor did the United States unequivocally call for the
convening of an immediate meeting of hemispheric foreign
ministers to address the crisis, as has been done
repeatedly in the past under the provisions that mandate
the Organization of American States to come to the
defense of democracy. The silence of President Bush
regarding events in Venezuela was particularly jarring.


There is no doubt that Chavez's actions and rhetoric have
contributed to aggravating the severe crisis of Venezuelan
democracy. He is a demagogue, an instinctive
authoritarian who has consistently squandered his chance
to regenerate Venezuelan politics and address the nation's
economic problems. He has also gratuitously antagonized
the United States and his neighbors through his
anachronistic embrace of the Colombian guerrillas,
Saddam Hussein and Fidel Castro. But whether we like it
or not, Chavez is also a democratically elected leader who
governed with an elected legislature and, for all of his
antics, generally abided by the strictures of the
institutional order. If he violated his oath of office or the
law of the land, the proper course is impeachment, not a
military coup. If he did resign his office, it should have
been up to the legislature, not an unrepresentative body
appointed by the high command, to determine his
successor.

A chastened Mr. Chavez has so far given positive signs that
he wishes to avoid retribution and build bridges to other
sectors of society. The Bush administration has
admonished him to mend his ways and seek to abide by
the rule of law, an exhortation that unfortunately has less
credibility after it failed to call for upholding those same
principles last week. The administration should also resist
further temptations to demonize the mercurial Mr. Chavez
and look for ways to work with the other countries of the
hemisphere to support a constructive dialogue between his
government and the opposition.

Finally, it is time for the U.S. government to move beyond
the rhetoric of making democracy, trade and security its
top priorities in the hemisphere by addressing the severe
problems of a region where democracy is in genuine peril.
In a world fraught with uncertainties and risks, legitimate
and stable democracies in our hemisphere are
fundamental to the national interest of the United States.
It should not take our hemispheric neighbors to remind us
of that fact.

The writer directs the Center for Latin American Studies in
the Georgetown School of Foreign Service. He was special
assistant to the president and senior director for Western
Hemisphere affairs in the second Clinton administration.


© 2002 The Washington Post Company



To: Mephisto who wrote (3659)4/17/2002 1:35:47 AM
From: Mephisto  Respond to of 15516
 
US 'gave the nod' to Venezuelan coup


Julian Borger in Washington and Alex Bellos, South
America correspondent
Wednesday April 17, 2002
The Guardian

The Bush administration was under intense scrutiny yesterday
for its role in last weekend's abortive coup in Venezuela, after
admitting that US officials had held a series of meetings in
recent months with Venezuelan military officers and opposition
activists.


The White House yesterday confirmed that a few weeks before
the coup attempt, administration officials met Pedro Carmona,
the business leader who took over the interim government after
President Hugo Chavez was arrested on Friday. But the White
House press secretary, Ari Fleischer, denied that the US had
offered any support for a putsch.

The US defence department also confirmed that the Venezuelan
army's chief of staff, General Lucas Romero Rincon, visited the
Pentagon in December and met the assistant secretary of
defence for western hemispheric affairs, Roger Pardo-Maurer.

The Pentagon said: "We made it very, very clear that the United
States' intent was to support democracy and human rights, and
that we would in no way support any coups or unconstitutional
activity."

However, it was not made clear why the talks broached the
subject of a coup, four months before the event. Mr Fleischer
said the subject had been brought up at meetings with
Venezuelan opposition leaders because US diplomats in
Caracas had "for the past several months" been picking up coup
rumours. "In the conversations they had they explicitly told
opposition leaders the United States would not support a coup,"
he added.

However, a defence department official quoted by the New York
Times yesterday said: "We were not discouraging people."

"We were sending informal, subtle signals that we don't like this
guy. We didn't say, 'No, don't you dare' and we weren't
advocates saying, 'Here's some arms; we'll help you overthrow
this guy.'"

Mr Chavez yesterday hinted at the possibility of US involvement
in the coup attempt, noting that only days before he was ousted,
dozens of Venezuelan military personnel working in the
country's Washington, Bogota and Brasilia embassies returned
to Caracas with no explanation. The implication was that these
were military staff sympathetic to the opposition whom he had
sent abroad when he became president in 1999.


Mr Chavez had earlier said he would investigate the presence of
what he said was an American plane on the island prison where
he was detained by the Venezuelan military
. Mr Fleischer said
yesterday he did not know whether Washington had provided a
plane to fly the Venezuelan president into exile. He thought that
"the transportation was arranged after his resignation through
the Venezuelan military".

A Latin American diplomat in Washington said that when Mr
Carmona and other opposition leaders came to the US they met
Otto Reich, the assistant secretary of state for western
hemisphere affairs.

As the crisis deepened, Mr Reich set the tone of US policy.
According to one diplomat, Mr Reich told ambassadors on
Friday that although the US did not support a coup, President
Chavez had been the first to "disrupt Venezuela's constitutional
order".

The same message was echoed on Saturday by the US
ambassador to the Organisation of American States (OAS),
Roger Noriega, at an emergency meeting in Washington.

One OAS diplomat said: "We were in that room for 14 hours,
and for most of that 14 hours, Noriega was pushing the line that
it was Chavez that had created the problem."

The OAS denounced the coup attempt, as did all Venezuela's
neighbours. Washington, however, acknowledged the new
government. "A transitional civilian government has been
installed," Mr Fleischer said on Saturday. "This government has
promised early elections."

Some of the key participants in US meetings with Venezuelan
figures in the run-up to the coup were veterans of REAGAN-era
"dirty tricks" operations. Mr Pardo-Maurer served as the chief of
staff to the Nicaraguan contras' representative in Washington
between 1986 and 1989.

Mr Reich was the head of the office of public diplomacy in the
state department, which was later found to have been involved in
covert pro-contra propaganda.


guardian.co.uk



To: Mephisto who wrote (3659)4/18/2002 7:34:20 AM
From: Dorine Essey  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 15516
 
VENEZUELA: DEMOCRACY IS SUBVERSIVE
By Manuel Alberto Ramy
Mar@ip.etecsa.cu

It's too early yet to make a complete assessment of what happened in Venezuela in the days between last April 11 and 14, but some essential aspects can be examined. One of them is the wordplay in order to alter reality. Just remember the headlines in the media to witness an exercise in idiomatic virtuality. An example: "Hugo Chávez resigns" (El Nuevo Herald's online edition, April13, 2002), a headline that practically was the same in the rest of the media. This virtual news was indispensable, in Venezuela and abroad, in order to change reality and allow an immediate consolidation of the "transition" team.

Swiftness is vital in any military coup, but even more in this case, due to its lack of support and effective control of military command and units with real power. All of this was in evidence a few hours later. Also very important was the need to imprint right away in the public's mind a very weak argumentation: the President had resigned. In that manner the legal proceedings were played down. Remember that the Venezuelan private media had hammered the public with news about popular protests, strikes of private entrepreneurs, resignations of some military officers, etc., trying to paint the picture of a state of ungovernability and of a power vacuum. The result of this barrage on the conscience, and consequently on the attitudes of the common citizen would be: "There's an unbearable situation, the military speak to the President. He understands and resigns. Nothing to do but stay home."

In truth it was a coup with a touch of audacity, but very much of the top ranks --a few generals in a country of too many stars--, an assault of Panzer media. It lacked an Al Capone in uniform, or an up to date postmodern version of Curzio Malaparte's old Technique of the Coup d'Etat. And it also lacked the main part: the people for the key moment of consolidation.

On the other hand, the urgency to change reality with virtual headlines also had the intention of avoiding discreet consequences of an international character. (I stress "discreet consequences", and not many at that.) They had to show a fait accompli to the gentlemen presidents of the Group of Rio, who were meeting in Costa Rica, so that they overlooked the strict sanctions foreseen in the Democratic Charter of the Organization of American States (OAS) in case of a military coup in a member country. The regional organization could later send a mission that would make certain recommendations, which translated to plain language would be to hold elections and leave Chávez out of the picture.

One fact is undeniable: what happened in Venezuela was a military coup with a civilian cover that included apparently aseptic characters, acceptable to the standing global establishment. No political parties in the main roles, only that part of the civil society that stars in the media --and usually controls it. That is, the adequate and presentable characters, a small part of society, not all of it, not even the majority.

With this scenario there was an attempt in Venezuela --who beat Argentina by a nose-- to implant the new democratic model that in the not so distant future could reign in Latin America. It isn't a throwback to the classic military dictatorship up front, a coup-leader-turned-president, but a new makeup of the essentials: the alliance of economic power with the armed forces in order to have the control of an explosive environment such as the ones in the region. The Venezuelan cosmetic surgery included President Chavez's "resignation", in order to whitewash the military coup. That is the reason for the headlines and the wording of the news.

But the fact is that Chávez did not "fall" --another headline-- nor did he quit. There is ample evidence of it, what most of the media --in Venezuela and abroad-- ignored or hid until the counter-coup achieved victory.

In an interview with Cuban television --April 12-- María Gabriela Chávez, the President's eldest daughter, said that her father had told her "at no moment at all did he resign". Ms Chavez was able to talk on the telephone with her father on that day, and he asked her to transmit the following message to everyone: "I am a jailed president."

I believed in her declaration, but some could think that daughterly love is biased. Julio Montes is no son of Chávez, but he is the Venezuelan Ambassador in Havana. Montes is an exceptional witness, for he was at the Miraflores Palace (the presidential residence) with Chávez until the latter's arrest. "They demanded of him," said Montes to Cuban TV in a telephone interview, "his resignation or his immolation". He did not resign and the military took him away. Another one also present on that critical moment was Aristóbulo Isturiz, Minister of Higher Education, who declared to Cuban TV that Chávez told the military that imprisoned him that he "would never sign the resignation."

But, sure, "Cuban TV is Castro, and we know he is a close friend of the resigning president", or words to that effect could have been said by editors, a rationalization so that they could ignore these and other information. London's BBC, who certainly is neither Castroite nor a Chavez follower, showed an alleged letter of renunciation by the Venezuelan president, but unsigned.

If the above were not enough, Isaías Rodríguez, the Chávez administration's Attorney General --at the moment sacked by the Junta-- declared to Venezuelan TV that the President was in custody, but that "he hadn't signed his resignation". He was cut off from the air.

Obviously --and this is the strongest argument--, if a document of resignation signed by Chávez would have been available to the junta, a facsimile would have been published all over the world. That signature would have been evidence in favor of the thesis of the "transition", not of a coup, and would have covered up other wrongdoings.

But let's skip all that has been said for the sake of argument. Suppose that Chávez did resign, that it wasn't a coup, but that the president gave up his post. According to the Constitution, approved by a national referendum won by Chávez's political alliance, the procedure in such cases is for the Vice-president to be sworn in as President. But first Congress should convene and confirm the former president's resignation. Nothing of the sort happened. But if the constitutional procedure seems too favorable to Chávez, the previous 1961 Constitution had similar mechanisms.

Well, let's not ask for the impossible, for neither of the two existed: the aseptic president of the coup's junta, Mr. Pedro Carmona, with the flourish of a pen dissolved Congress, abolished the Constitution, sacked the Supreme Court, the Cabinet, the Attorney General, the Defender of the People and invalidated 49 approved bills --among them one limiting foreign investments in oil. He also dismantled every organ that directly or indirectly came from democratic elections overseen by international observers.

Why this havoc on legality? Because it was a coup, the restoration of an ancien régime, and the strategy demanded to suspend every legal hold that would allow the return of Chávez or his substitution by the Vice-President.

In the face of all those measures that sweep away every legitimate institution, President Bush declared that "now the situation will be one of tranquility and democracy," according to White House spokesman Ari Fleischer.

Does President Bush ignore that Chávez has won office twice in internationally overseen elections? Or has he learned through experience of a superior form, a more democratic way of becoming president of a country? Has he choked on another pretzel? Is this the preamble to a new concept of democracy? Or perhaps, as many think, has he been polishing the pipeline? (Allow me to remind you that the president of the junta, Mr. Carmona, owns VENOCO, a Venezuelan petrochemical company. It seems oil pipelines turn democracy on and off.)

In tune with the White House the media also spoke of a "democratic transition" government. The editor's virtuality disqualified the ousted government as a democracy, although it had submitted the presidency twice to the will of the voters. The junta's regime was "a government of the people, by the people and for the people", in spite that it violated every rule of the book that had been approved in free elections. And the president was the illegal one, although he also became the first political prisoner of his country in the last three years.

But the real history was different. In the scant 47 hours that the junta lasted, the people began to take to the streets and demonstrate in front of Fort Tiuna in Caracas, where the leaders of the coup were, as well as in front of Miraflores Palace. Many governors did not accept the coup and military units demanded respect for the legal institutions. If the president had resigned, they insisted on seeing the evidence, and then Constitutional replacement should take place. The counter-coup of legality was underwayl.

Several are the lessons that should be learned from the Venezuelan experience, and we might write about them shortly. One of them is essential: the people of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela has shown its preference for institutionalized democracy. The problem is that in that case, for some people, it's subversive.

##########

Manuel Alberto Ramy is the Radio Progreso Alternativa and Progreso Weekly correspondent in Havana, as well as from Spain's El Economista.


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