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


To: Mephisto who wrote (3699)4/29/2002 1:05:54 AM
From: Mephisto  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 15516
 
Bush's Bay of Piglets

If the US was the villain in the Venezuelan coup, Latin
America's much-derided leaders were the heroes

Duncan Campbell
Wednesday April 24, 2002
The Guardian

Viva democracia! said the slogan scrawled on the bus offloading
passengers near the presidential palace in Miraflores in Caracas
this week. And so far democracy seems to be surviving in
Venezuela, if only barely. The overthrow of the radical Hugo
Chavez in a military coup on April 11 followed by Chavez's return
to power within 48 hours was spectacular even by Latin
American standards.

President Bush said after Chavez's return that he hoped he had
"learned the lesson", but the main lessons need to be learned
further north in Washington itself. The precise part played by the
US in the coup remains unclear. What is known is that in
January Mr Bush appointed, against the advice of the senate
foreign relations committee, a man with a shabby record of
covert meddling in Latin American politics: OTTO REICH. Reich, a
Cuban-American who was once the US ambassador to
Venezuela, is now the assistant secretary at the state
department for the western hemisphere and as such calls the
shots for the US - almost literally - in Latin America.


In the Pentagon, the man with responsibility for Latin America is
Rogelio Pardo-Maurer, who was the aide to the head of the
Contras when they were waging their US-backed war against the
elected leftwing Sandinista government in Nicaragua. Two of the
Venezuelan military who supported the coup, General Efrain
Vasquez and General Eddie Ramirez Poveda, are graduates of
the US Army School of the Americas in Georgia, where many
members of the Latin Ameri can military have been trained in
how to deal with troublesome lefties.


The tycoon who led the media onslaught that preceded the coup
and whose television station announced it, Cuban-American
Gustavo Cisneros, is an old fishing pal of Bush senior.

While the US may not have been involved in the final timetable
for the coup, it knew that one was imminent and clearly gave it a
green light. While the world's attention was on the Middle East,
the coup was greeted with speedy acceptance by the White
House. One wonders if a Zapatista force had overthrown the
elected Mexican President Fox whether Mr Bush would have
responded by saying that he hoped Mr Fox had "learned his
lesson".

It was President Fox and the often derided Latin American
heads of state who behaved like statesmen. They have little love
for Chavez or his policies, but they recognise a military takeover
when they see one. Fox swiftly condemned it and said he would
not recognise an unelected government. The secretary general
of the Organisation of American States, the Colombian Cesar
Gaviria, did the same.


This prompt action, combined with the angry pro-Chavez crowds
on the street and the ill-advised dissolution of the national
assembly and the supreme court by the newly installed
president-for-a-day Pedro Carmona, changed wavering minds in
the military. Chavez was returned to the palace. Only then,
having realised their diplomatic gaffe, did the White House alter
its stance. The lessons are plain. The leaders in Latin America
know only too well what can happen if coups in democracies are
allowed to succeed.

Bush was warned that by allowing this old discredited crew back
into power he would be undermining the delicate relations
between the US and her southern neighbours. He ignored that
advice under heavy pressure from the powerful Cuban lobby in
Florida, where his brother, Jeb, is running for re-election this
year.


By doing so, he created an atmosphere whereby plotters must
think they have carte blanche from the White House. As
Democrat Senator Christopher Dodd said drily this week, those
responsible for Latin America within the administration need
more "adult supervision". Even the deputy secretary of state,
Richard Armitage, who wrote to the Guardian in defence of
Reich last year, admitted that the "formulation of the US
statement wasn't what it should have been". This has been
President Bush's Bay of Piglets.


It would be wrong to suggest that the coup was all got up by the
United States. Chavez, who himself tried to seize power in a
coup in 1992, has made many mistakes and many enemies.
But he still enjoys a hard core of support of at least a third of the
country, in particular the dispossessed who voted for him. He
appears now to be trying, maybe too late, to repair some broken
bridges.

On May Day, Chavez faces another test when a rally organised
by the country's largest confederation of workers will be held in
the capital. The good news is that the Latin American nations
upheld the democratic position and recognised that it is still a
chilling sight to see on television a bunch of burly men in uniform
talking a little too closely into the microphones and announcing
to the people that their president has "resigned".

Viva democracia! has to be more than a slogan on a bus.
Perhaps a translation should be sent to the Latin American
section of the US state department for them to stick above their
desks: "It's the democracy, stupid!"

d.campbell@guardian.co.uk

guardian.co.uk