|
Capitalist Drive to Oust Chávez Regime Gains Momentum by Róger Calero from The Militant, U.S. socialist newsweekly, 11 March 2002 read at original site
The fourth high-ranking military officer in Venezuela in less than a month
has
called for the resignation of President Hugo Chávez as part of an
open and
escalating drive by the capitalist rulers toward carrying out a coup
against the
government.
"I add myself to this protest, and alert all the state institutions and
powers to
assume their corresponding responsibilities," said Air Force general
Román
Gómez at a news conference on February 25. "President
Chávez, for the
good of the country and for the love of the armed forces, resign
peacefully and take
responsibility for your failure." The general warned that unless officials
in the
government who are involved in crimes are brought to justice, "the people
and the
armed forces will have to do it themselves."
Gómez, who had been the director of air transportation in the
Infrastructure Ministry, said he was quitting his post because he was
unhappy with
the Chávez government. He later admitted that he had been charged
with an
"administrative irregularity."
The previous week, Army general Guaicaipuro Lameda, head of the
state-owned oil
company, announced his retirement from the military, saying he wanted to
be free to
criticize the government. A February 25 Reuters dispatch reported that "30
senior
executives of state oil giant PDVSA accused the administration of trying
to run
PDVSA as a political fiefdom instead of as a commercial company."
Paul Masco, an executive at Solomon Smith Barney, said, "Wall Street wants
to see
him [Chávez] tone down his rhetoric, stop behaving like an
autocrat, and
start behaving like a president of a democratically elected government."
Gómez's challenge to the government came as officials of the
Venezuelan
Workers Federation (CTV) were organizing rolling work stoppages and
marches leading
up to a February 27 march in the capital. Although CTV leaders say the
action will
oppose government legislation and austerity measures, the union is working
hand-in-hand with Fedecámaras, the bosses' federation. CTV leaders
supported
a reactionary strike called by Fedecámaras last December, which
demanded
Chávez's resignation. Officials of the CTV have aligned the union
with the
Democratic Action Party, a capitalist outfit that is in the opposition.
Union officials say they will also organize a 24-hour strike on March 18
if the
government fails to respond to the demands of the February 27 action. The
CTV
officialdom is also aiding the capitalists' campaign by calling for a
nationwide
referendum to decide whether Chávez should resign.
Seeking to bolster the turnout at the February 27 action,
Fedecámaras
encouraged workers to attend by giving them paid time off to join the
antigovernment
protest.
Chávez, a former lieutenant colonel in the army and a mestizo, led
an
abortive coup in 1992. He was elected president in 1998 with 57 percent of
the vote,
becoming the first person in 40 years to win the nation's highest office
outside of
the dominant capitalist parties. Some 80 percent of the population of
Venezuela is
mestizo, black, or Indian, but the parties of the wealthy capitalist and
landowners
are dominated by whites.
Repression by earlier regime
The election took place after a decade of brutal austerity measures
carried
out by the social democratic administration of Carlos Andrés
Pérez,
during which subsidies for food, electricity, water, and public
transportation were
slashed. The regime sold off state-owned factories, and the official
unemployment
rate shot up to 30 percent. In 1989, tens of thousands of working people
took to the
streets in eight major cities to denounce the government's policies. The
regime
unleashed army and police units who killed between 400 and several
thousand people.
In the first half of 1992 at least 1,400 antigovernment protests were
organized.
In this context, the coup attempt by Chávez, which was suppressed
by the
government, won the backing of many working people. For weeks after his
arrest and
imprisonment, working people organized protests demanding the release of
the
officers.
In the 1998 presidential election, Chávez ran a radical, bourgeois
nationalist campaign. His election rhetoric was marked by anti-corruption
slogans;
identification with Simón Bolivar, a Venezuelan national hero and
main
commander in Latin America's war of independence in the early 19th
century; calls
for "rigorous fiscal discipline" in the national budget; opposition to
selling off
the state oil company; and presentation of himself as a strong figure able
to
represent the Venezuelan nation as a whole.
There has been growing condemnation of the government for its economic and
political relations with revolutionary Cuba and for stances on
international
questions that sometimes rub Washington up the wrong way. These have
included a trip
to Iraq in 2000 and less than full backing for U.S. imperialism's war
against
Afghanistan.
Capitalists' reactionary campaign
The capitalist class went into high gear recently when the president
introduced legislation that would bring about a measure of land reform,
opening some
land up to peasants, and increase royalties paid by private-sector oil
companies.
They have seized on opinion polls showing declining support for
Chávez to
help bolster their reactionary campaign.
Those seeking to oust the Chávez government have also been aided by
the
impact of the world economic crisis and the sharp drop in national income
from
exports of crude oil. For several years the Chávez government had
been able
to use growing revenues from oil sales to shore up the national budget and
bring
about economic growth.
Venezuela is the world's fourth largest oil exporter, and the third
largest
exporter to the U.S. market in Latin America. Chávez played a key
role in
organizing the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries to cut back
oil
production in 1999 in order to raise prices. But with the slowdown in the
world
capitalist economy and declining oil prices on the world market, there is
growing
capital flight from Venezuela. The government was recently forced to
devalue the
national currency. The capitalist rulers have sought to undermine popular
support
for the government by blaming Chávez for this crisis.
Not a pushover
Despite these developments, the reactionary coup plans are likely to meet
resistance from sections of the military and working people. In response
to the four
officers' calls for Chávez to step down, the military high command
has
reiterated the armed forces' support. Army Chief Gen. Lucas Rincón
warned
that a military coup would bring "regrettable and serious consequences
that nobody
wants."
Chávez presents his government as a "friend of the poor" and has
promised
that social services would not be affected by budget cuts, even as the
11.5 percent
devaluation has cut into working people's standard of living.
In recent appearances, Chávez has appealed for "national
unity," and for
all Venezuelans to work for progress and peace in the country. "I send a
message
from my heart to all sectors of Venezuelan society," he said during a
weekly news
program. "From the upper, middle, and lower class, this government belongs
to all
Venezuelans," he added.
Thousands of protesters, both supporting and opposing the government, are
participating in actions in the streets. An anti-government demonstration
February
21 outside the national university campus turned violent when a
countermobilization
of Chávez's supporters attempted to prevent the march from leaving
the
campus. Several people were injured.
Government offensive in Colombia
In neighboring Colombia, President Andrés Pastrana ordered a major
military offensive against the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia
(FARC) after
breaking off negotiations February 20.
Colombian Air Force planes began bombing rebel camps, airstrips, and other
facilities as some 12,000 troops supported by tanks moved to occupy a zone
that had
been under FARC's control since 1998. The area had been ceded by the
government as
part of a negotiations process.
Colombian Air Force chief General Héctor Velasco said at a press
conference that some 200 sorties had been carried out against FARC
positions. The
International Red Cross and the United Nations special envoy to Colombia
reported
civilian casualties in the area and a massive displacement of residents
trying to
escape the bombings.
The Bush Administration declared support for Pastrana's decision, and
quickly
offered to provide military intelligence and other aid to combat the
guerrilla army
requested by the Colombian government. The intelligence includes aerial
surveillance
and satellite photographs of FARC camps that would allow the military to
keep track
of the rebels' movements.
Under the guise of fighting drug trafficking, the United States has
provided
Colombia with $1.3 billion in military aid and training. The Bush
administration is
currently seeking approval for an additional $98 million in equipment and
training
of an army brigade to protect an Occidental Petroleum oil pipeline and
other
infrastructure from guerrilla attacks. ____________
See also "The
Scent of Another Coup"
_____________
For a 12-issue subscription to the print edition of The Militant, send
US$10 to 14 Charles Lane, New York, NY 10014. Visit the website
for information on international rates.
_____________
home
|
subscribe
|
talk
|
help-about
|
back issues
|
resources
|