-Caveat Lector-

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/chi-0204170404apr17.story

Bush's Response to Coup Criticized

Latin Americans Say U.S. Ignored Democratic Ideals
By Hugh Dellios, William Neikirk and John Diamond
April 17, 2002

MEXICO CITY -- As the White House denied Tuesday that it encouraged the
plotters of the failed coup in Venezuela, the Bush administration's refusal
to condemn the short-lived ouster of President Hugo Chavez has raised doubts
about the U.S. commitment to democracy.

Across Latin America, critics charged that the Bush administration ignored
its own frequent declarations in support of democracy and hemispheric unity
when it appeared to embrace the coup against Chavez, a renegade former
paratrooper who frequently has thumbed his nose at U.S. interests.

The failed coup came seven months after the U.S. endorsed a groundbreaking
charter in support of democracy with 34 Latin American nations. But when the
other countries condemned the coup and threatened to invoke charter
sanctions against the coup plotters last week, the Bush administration
instead blamed the democratically elected Chavez for provoking his own
ouster.

Latin American leaders and analysts warned that the U.S. stance could harm
Washington's credibility in the region and send the wrong signal to other
military commanders in a hemisphere where shaky democracy has begun to take
root after decades of brutal army dictatorships.

In a region with bitter memories of U.S. political and military
intervention, the Bush administration's stance left many Latin Americans
convinced that the U.S. played an active role in the coup or at least sent
subtle signs of encouragement.

"Some people are talking about this [U.S.] faux pas in Venezuela as a sort
of Bay of Pigs without weapons," said Luis Guillermo Solis, a political
analyst at the University of Costa Rica in San Jose. "It's not necessarily a
question of hypocrisy, but a question of consistency, and there's not been a
lot of consistency."

Latin American response swift
In contrast to the U.S. stance, a summit of Latin American leaders meeting
in Costa Rica last week condemned the coup in strong terms. While not known
for quick and decisive collective actions, this time the leaders cited the
new democratic charter and threatened to break relations with the new regime
in Venezuela.

Mexican Foreign Minister Jorge Castaneda, in an interview Tuesday, would not
comment directly on the U.S. handling of the Venezuela crisis. But he said
the Latin American nations took such a strong stance because of the
potential long-term ramifications of allowing the coup to succeed.

"We think that was the proper stance," Castaneda said. Latin America has "to
address the long term and the whole region more than the short term and the
immediate term and the specific case of Venezuela, and we wanted to have a
very principled stance . . .

"The defense of democratic rule is a much more important issue in a region
that has not necessarily enjoyed long periods of democratic rule and where
it is less well-rooted than it should be."

U.S. denies encouragement
In Washington, Bush administration officials confirmed that they met with
Venezuelans considering the overthrow of Chavez as far back as December. But
they vigorously denied they had encouraged anyone to proceed.

"We explicitly told opposition leaders that the United States would not
support a coup," White House spokesman Ari Fleischer said. "Our message has
been consistent. The political situation in Venezuela is one for the
Venezuelans to resolve peacefully, democratically and constitutionally."

U.S. officials said that among those making pleas for U.S. help were
businessman Pedro Carmona, who was briefly declared president during the
coup and is now under house arrest, and Gen. Lucas Romero Rincon, chief of
the Venezuelan armed forces.

A State Department spokeswoman said Romero met with Roger Pardo-Maurer, a
U.S. deputy assistant defense secretary, in December.

"We had somebody from our policy shop who met recently with the [Venezuelan]
chief of staff, who made it very, very clear that the U.S. intent was to
support democracy, human rights, that we in no way would support any coups
or unconstitutional activity," Pentagon spokeswoman Victoria Clarke said.

The Pentagon did not make clear precisely why a senior defense official
would discuss the possibility of a coup with a Venezuelan military officer.

At the White House, Fleischer said Venezuela had been rife with coup rumors
for months. "The [U.S.] diplomats had their ear to the ground, and there was
talk," Fleischer said.

Meanwhile, a State Department official told The New York Times that Otto
Reich, assistant secretary for Western Hemisphere affairs, phoned Carmona
the day he took over, pleading with him not to dissolve the National
Assembly on the grounds it would provoke an outcry.

Administration officials cited the call as evidence they had sought to
uphold democratic processes in Venezuela, but the disclosure raised
questions as to whether Reich or other officials were stage-managing
Carmona's takeover. Administration officials denied this.

Chavez agrees with U.S. denial
In Caracas, Chavez appeared to support the U.S. denials, saying Monday that
the "root" of the coup was "here," in Venezuela. He also spoke well of the
U.S., saluting it with "love and affection."

U.S. officials were busy trying to mend fences Tuesday with their Latin
American counterparts. Phil Reeker, a State Department spokesman, praised an
emergency mission of the secretary general of the Organization of American
States, Cesar Gaviria, to Venezuela to investigate what happened.

Reeker called for Venezuela to return quickly to "full democracy." However,
the Bush administration still refused to welcome Chavez's return to power.

In Washington, Democratic leaders and Latin American experts also criticized
the Bush administration's response to the coup, saying that it suggested a
selective U.S. commitment to democracy.

"I'm very concerned about what message it sends about our support for
democracy," said Senate Majority leader Tom Daschle (D-S.D.). "We've got to
be supportive of democratic principles even when [other nations] choose to
elect people we do not like."

Arturo Valenzuela, director of the Center for Latin American Studies at
Georgetown University and a former Clinton administration official, said the
Bush administration did not appear to understand what was at stake in
Venezuela.

"The U.S. 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," Valenzuela told Reuters.

U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell was in Lima, Peru, on Sept. 11 when the
34 Latin American nations signed the Inter-American Democratic Charter
laying out steps for punishing any attacks on the democratic process in the
hemisphere. Powell quickly departed after the terrorist attacks.

Since then, the Bush administration has lauded the charter frequently, often
when criticizing Cuba for remaining outside the democratic sphere. President
Bush cited the charter as recently as last Friday, at the White House's
annual Pan-American Day proclamation.

The charter stiffened a 1991 resolution signed in Chile. That version had
been vigorously invoked by former President Bush and President Clinton when
regimes were threatened in Peru, Paraguay, Guatemala and Ecuador over the
last decade.

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