Venezuela and Argentina:  A Tale of Two Coups

by Greg Palast
New Internationalist Magazine - July 2002

The big business-led coup in Venezuela failed, where international finance's coup in 
Argentina has succeeded. Greg Palast gives us the inside track on two very different 
power-grabs. 

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Blondes in revolt 


On May Day, starting out from the Hilton Hotel, 200,000 blondes marched East through 
Caracas' shopping corridor along Casanova Avenue. At the same time, half a million 
brunettes converged on them from the West. It would all seem like a comic shampoo 
commercial if 16 people hadn't been shot dead two weeks earlier when the two groups 
crossed paths. 

The May Day brunettes support Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez. They funnelled down 
from the ranchos, the pustules of crude red-brick bungalows, stacked one on the other, 
that erupt on the steep, unstable hillsides surrounding this city of five million. The 
bricks in some ranchos are new, a recent improvement in these fetid, impromptu slums 
where many previously sheltered behind cardboard walls. 'Chávez gives them bricks and 
milk,' a local TV reporter told me, 'and so they vote for him.' 

Chávez is dark and round as a cola nut. Like his followers, Chávez is an 'Indian'. But 
the blondes, the 'Spanish', are the owners of Venezuela. A  group near me on the 
blonde march screamed 'Out! Out!' in English,  demanding the removal of the President. 
One edible-oils executive, in high  heels, designer glasses and push-up bra had turned 
out, she said: 'To fight for democracy.' She added: 'We'll try to do it 
institutionally,' a phrase that meant nothing to me until a banker in pale pink 
lipstick explained  that to remove Chávez, 'we can't wait until the next election'. 

The anti-Chavistas don't equate democracy with voting. With 80 per cent of Venezuela's 
population at or below the poverty level, elections are not attractive to the 
protesting financiers. Chávez had won the election in  1998 with a crushing 58 per 
cent of the popular vote and that was unlikely  to change except at gunpoint. 

And so on 12 April the business leadership of Venezuela, backed by a few 'Spanish' 
generals, turned their guns on the Presidential Palace and  kidnapped Chávez. Pedro 
Carmona, the chief of Fedecamaras, the nation's confederation of business and 
industry, declared himself President. This  coup, one might say, was the ultimate in 
corporate lobbying. Within hours, he set about voiding the 49 Chávez laws that had so 
annoyed the captains of industry, executives of the foreign oil companies and 
latifundistas, the big plantation owners. 


The banker's embrace
 

Carmona had dressed himself in impressive ribbons and braids for the inauguration. In 
the Miraflores ballroom, filled with the Venezuelan élite, Ignazio Salvatierra, 
president of the Banker's Association, signed his name to Carmona's self-election with 
a grand flourish. The two hugged emotionally as the audience applauded.

Carmona then decreed the dissolution of his nation's congress and supreme court while 
the business peopled clapped and chanted, 'Democracia!  Democracia!' I later learned 
the Cardinal of Caracas had led Carmona into the Presidential Palace, a final 
Genet-esque touch to this delusional drama.  This fantasy would evaporate ?by the 
crowing of the cock,? as Chávez told me in his poetic way.

Chávez minister Miguel Bustamante-Madriz, who had escaped the coup, led 60,000 
brunettes down from Barrio Petare to Miraflores. As thousands marched against the 
coup, Caracas television stations, owned by media barons who supported (and possibly 
planned the coup) played soap operas.  The station owned hoped their lack of coverage 
would keep the Chavista crowd from swelling; but it doubled and doubled and doubled.  
On l3 April, they were ready to die for Chávez. 

They did not have to.  Carmona, fresh from his fantasy inaugural, received a call from 
the head of  a pro-Chávez paratroop regiment stationed in Maracay, outside the 
capital.  To avoid bloodshed, Chávez had agreed to his own 'arrest' and removal by the 
putschists, but did not mention to the plotters that several hundred loyal troops had 
entered secret corridors under the Palace. Carmona,  surrounded, could choose his 
method of death: bullets from the inside, rockets from above, or dismemberment by the 
encircling 'bricks and milk' crowd. Carmona took off his costume ribbons and 
surrendered. 


Taking on the oil giants 


I interviewed Carmona while I leaned out the fourth floor window of an  apartment in 
La Alombra, a high-rise building complex. I spoke my pidgin Spanish across to his 
balcony on the building a few yards away. The one-time petrochemical mogul was under 
house arrest - the lucky bastard. If  he had attempted to overthrow the President of 
Kazakhstan (or for that matter, the President of the US), he would by now have a 
bullet in his skull. Chávez, in a gracious if strained nod to the ultimate authority 
of the privileged, simply confined Carmona to his expensive flat. 

In response to my question about who gave him authority to name himself president, 
coup leader Carmona responded, 'Civil society'. To him this meant the bankers, the oil 
company chiefs and others who signed his proclamation. 
 
Most telling were Chávez's laws to which Carmona and coup leaders objected.  The prime 
evil was the Ley De Tierras, the new land law which promised to give unused land to 
the landless, in particular, properties held out of production by the big plantation 
owners for more than two years. But Chávez's tenure would not have been threatened had 
he not also taken on the international petroleum giants. Chávez's crimes against the 
oil industry's interests included passing a law that doubled the royalty taxes  paid 
by ExxonMobil and other oil operators from about 16 per cent to roughly 30 per cent on 
new finds. He had also moved to take control of the state oil company PDVSA - 
nominally owned by the government, but in fact in thrall to the foreign operators.

Chávez had almost single-handedly rebuilt the Organization of Petroleum Exporting 
Countries (OPEC) by committing Venezuela to adhere to its OPEC sales quotas, causing 
world oil prices to double to over $20 per barrel. It was this oil money which paid 
for the 'bricks and milk' programme and put  Chávez head to head against ExxonMobil, 
the number-one extractor of Venezuelan oil. 

This was no minor matter to the US. As OPEC's general secretary Alí Rodriguéz says: 
'The dependence of the US on oil is increasing progressively. Venezuela is one of the 
most important suppliers of the US, and the stability of Venezuela is very important 
for [them].' It was the South American nation that broke the back of the 1973 Arab oil 
embargo by increasing output from its vast reserves way beyond its OPEC quota. Indeed, 
I learned from Alí Rodriguéz that the 12 April coup against Chávez was triggered by US 
fears of a renewed Arab oil embargo. Iraq and Libya were trying to organize OPEC to 
stop exporting oil to the US to protest American support of Israel. US access to 
Venezuela's oil suddenly became urgent.

In an interview Chávez told me: 'I have the written proof, I have the time of the 
entries and exits of the two military officers from the United  States into the 
headquarters of the coup plotters - I have their names, who  they met with, what they 
said on video and still photographs.' He  elaborated: 'I have in my hands a radar 
image of a military vessel that came into Venezuelan waters on 13 April. I have radar 
images of a helicopter that takes off from that ship and flies over Venezuela and of 
other planes that violated Venezuelan air space.' 

With such powerful enemies, it seems unlikely that attempts to remove Chávez will stop 
there. 


Exception to the New Order


While the immediate cause of America's panicked need to remove Chávez was a looming 
oil embargo, the Bush administration's grievances go much deeper.  Miguel 
Bustamante-Madriz, a member of Chávez's cabinet, paints a bigger conflict with the 
global corporate agenda: 'America can't let us stay in power. We are the exception to 
the new globalization order. If we succeed, we are an example to all the Americas.' 

Despite the European and American media's hoo-ha over how Chávez has 'ruined' 
Venezuela's economy, in fact last year its Gross Domestic Product grew by 2.8 per 
cent. And it wasn't all due to improvements in oil-prices; excluding crude oil, 
economic activity jumped by about 4 per cent. Compare the 'ruined' Venezuelan economy 
to Argentina's. That 'poster boy' of  neoliberalism ended last year in a depression 
which has since turned into an economic death spiral. 
 
Chávez is an old-style social democratic reformer: land to the landless, increasing 
investment in housing and infrastructure, control over commodity export prices. But 
with Marx discredited as the philosophy of the 'losers' of the Cold War, 'Chavismo' is 
as radical as it gets. His redistributionist reformism offers an operating, credible 
alternative to the corporate-friendly free-market prescriptions of the kind currently 
being handed to Argentina by the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund (IMF). 

Since 1980, the World Bank and IMF have peddled a four-part free-market agenda: free 
trade, 'flexible' labour laws, privatization and reduced government budgets and 
regulation.  Chávez rejects it all outright, beginning with the phoney 'free' trade  
agenda under the terms of the World Trade Organization (WTO) and the North  American 
Free Trade Agreement (which the US would expand to South America under the aegis of 
the Free Trade Area of the Americas). Trade under these  terms is anything but free to 
the peoples of the Southern Hemisphere. Instead he calls for a change in the 
North-South terms of trade, increasing the value of commodities exported to Europe and 
America. Chávez's longer-term policies of rebuilding OPEC and higher tariffs on oil 
must be seen in the context of smashing imbalanced trade relations epitomized by the 
WTO. 

World Bank and WTO rules have also forced nations such as Argentina to sell off their 
state-owned and locally owned banks and insurance companies to foreign financial 
giants such as America's Citibank and Spain's Banco Santander. These swiftly vacuumed 
up the country's hard currency reserves, setting the stage for the national bankruptcy 
at the first hint of speculator-driven currency panics.


The anti-Argentina 


Argentina accepted the World Bank's four-step economic medicine with fatal glee. Not 
that it had much choice. I have obtained the secret June 2001 'Country Assistance 
Strategy' progress report of the World Bank, ordering  Argentina to pull out of its 
economic depression by increasing 'labour  force flexibility'. This meant cutting 
works programmes, smashing union rules and slicing real wages. Contrast that with 
Chávez's first act after defeating the coup: announcing a 20-per- cent increase in the 
minimum wage. Chávez's protection of the economy by increasing the purchasing power of 
the lower-paid workers, rather than cutting wages, is anathema to the globalizers.

His Venezuela is the anti-Argentina, taking a path exactly opposite to the guidance 
given, and ultimately imposed, on Argentina by the World Bank and IMF. 

For example, in the June 2001 document, World Bank President James Wolfensohn 
expressed particular pride that Argentina's Government had made 'a $3 billion cut in 
primary expenditures'. Slicing government spending in the midst of a recession is 
economic suicide, killing demand when it's most  needed. Who could have pushed the 
banks to demand such a berserk programme?  The answer is hinted at in the document. 
That $3 billion cut will 'accommodat[e] the increase in interest obligations' to pay 
off those foreign banks - Citibank, Chase Manhattan Bank, Bank of America, Credit 
Suisse, and Lloyds Bank - who, having bled the nation of capital, lent Argentina back 
its own money at rates that can only be called usury. Foreign banks working with the 
IMF had demanded that Argentina pay a whopping 16-per-cent risk premium above US 
Treasury lending rates. 

Chávez would take Venezuela in the opposite direction. His plan is to pull out of a 
downturn threatened by a corporate embargo of investment in his nation by taxing the 
oil companies and spending - the 'Bricks and Milk' solution, old-style Keynesianism. 

And while Chávez moved to renationalize oil and rejects the sale of water systems, 
Argentina sold off everything including the kitchen-sink tap. The  World Bank beams: 
'Almost all major utilities have been privatized.' That includes the sale of water 
systems to Enron of Texas and Vivendi of Paris, companies which immediately fired 
workers en masse, let the pipe systems fall apart and raised prices as much as 400 per 
cent. Wolfensohn, for some reason, is surprised to note that after these 
privatizations, the poor lack access to clean water. 


Coup Nouvelle 


George W Bush is an oil man; he owned oil companies, now it looks like they own him.

Certainly the Keystone Kops-style plot against Chávez by Venezuela's 
military-industrial complex served Big Oil's interests. But that's an old-style 
shoot'em-up coup, likely to fail. The coup d'etats of the 21st century will follow the 
Argentine model, in which the international banks  seize the financial lifeblood of a 
nation, making the official presidential title-holder merely inconsequential except as 
a factotum of the corporate agenda. 

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Palast's latest book is, "THE BEST DEMOCRACY MONEY CAN BUY:  An Investigative Reporter 
Exposes the Truth about Globalization, Corporate Cons and High Finance Fraudsters."  
At www.GregPalast.com you can read and subscribe to Palast's London Observer and 
Guardian columns and view his reports for BBC Television's Newsnight, including his 
interview with President Hugo Chavez.

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