Bush Administration Tries to Hide Role in Venezuela Coup
By Mark Weisbrot
This article was published in the following news outlets:
Knight-Ridder/Tribune Information Services - August 5, 2002
Clarion Publications - October 24, 2002
Dodge City Daily Globe - October 24, 2002
Day (New London, CT) -
August 9, 2002
Treasury
Secretary Paul H. O'Neill's trip to Brazil, Argentina, and Uruguay has brought
some needed attention to the financial and economic crises there. But there is
one country where the US is playing an enormous—and thoroughly
destructive—role that has been left out of the picture: Venezuela.
Last
April the Bush Administration sent a powerful message not only to Venezuelans
but to all of our Southern neighbors: if we don't like the presidents you elect,
we will use our muscle to get rid of them. By any means necessary. That is what
was understood when the Administration endorsed the attempted military coup on
April 11 against the elected president of Venezuela. (The White House later
justified its response by saying it thought that President Hugo Chavez had
"resigned;" but nobody south of the Rio Grande was fooled).
Now
we will see whether the Democratic-led US Senate will object to this 1950s-style
foreign policy.
On
May 3, Senator Christopher J. Dodd of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee
requested an investigation from the US State Department, to find out what it did
wrong in Venezuela. What he got was a complete whitewash—which was turned over
to the Senate last week.
The
State's Department's supposedly independent Office of the Inspector General
didn't even interview a single Venezuelan, but relied on US embassy officials
and others who had a direct career interest in covering up what happened. This
is comparable to investigating Enron by talking to Ken Lay and Andrew Fastow.
Significant
parts of the report remain classified—most tellingly, a section entitled
"Miscellaneous Issues Raised by the News Media in Venezuela or the United
States." Just what issues raised by the Venezuelan and U.S. news media are
our State Department trying to keep away from the public discussion?
Of
course they can't hide what the press has already printed. The Washington
Post and New York Times cited numerous meetings between top US
officials and the people who led the military coup on April 11. The European
press was even more explicit about these meetings: “The
coup was discussed in some detail, right down to its timing and chances of
success, which were deemed to be excellent,” reported the Observer
of London, citing sources at the Organization of the American States.
There
were dozens of such leads in the press that the State Department could have
investigated. But they chose not to do so; or if they did, they have apparently
withheld the results from the public.
Some
of the report's admissions are even more damning than the omissions. Listing the
reasons for US hostility to President Chavez, the report notes "his
involvement in the affairs of the Venezuelan oil company, and the potential
impact of that on oil prices." There you have it: the number one reason for
the US State Department supporting a military coup against a democratically
elected president. He had the nerve to get involved in deciding how much oil
Venezuela should produce, instead of leaving these decisions to Washington! And
people wonder why anti-US sentiment is rising in Latin America.
Even
more importantly, the report admits that US officials did little or nothing to
warn the coup leaders that the United States would impose sanctions on a
government that was installed by military force. This means that all the
admonishments from the US embassy about not supporting a coup—while Washington
was funneling millions of dollars to pro-coup organizations—were a mere
formality. The real message was a big green light.
The anti-democratic Venezuelan
opposition will continue to understand that message, until there is an explicit
statement from the Bush Administration that a coup would result in a cut-off of
economic and diplomatic relations with the United States.
The
Senate should demand exactly such a statement, and conduct a real investigation
in place of the State Department's cover-up. Anything less would tell the world
that our Congress—not just the Bush Administration—has little respect for
democracy in Latin America.
Mark Weisbrot is Co-Director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research in Washington, DC.
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