Go home, gringo
Bolivia and Venezuela's expulsion of their US ambassadors exposes yet another 
faultline in north American foreign policy
 


 

Richard Gott 
guardian.co.uk, 
Friday September 12 2008 17:03 BST 
 

On the 35th anniversary of the military overthrow of Salvador Allende in Chile 
on September 11, 1973, which had the overt support of the United States, the 
presidents of Bolivia and Venezuela have asked the US ambassadors accredited to 
their countries to leave. 
They both believe they are facing the possibility of an imminent coup d'etat in 
which they accuse the Americans of being involved. A third country, Paraguay, 
announced 10 days ago that it had detected a conspiracy involving military 
officers and opposition politicians. Latin America now faces its most serious 
crisis since the re-introduction of democratic practice at the end of the last 
century.
 
Brazil and Argentina have both denounced the violent activities of opposition 
groups in Bolivia that have led to the closure of the natural gas pipelines to 
their countries, while President Hugo Chávez of Venezuela has warned that a 
coup against Evo Morales of Bolivia would be seen as a "green light" for an 
armed insurgency in that country.
Giving details of a planned coup in his own country, in which retired military 
officers and opposition figures were involved, Chávez announced the expulsion 
of the US ambassador, Patrick Duddy, and the withdrawal of his own ambassador 
from Washington. Any aggression against Venezuela, Chávez said, would involve a 
halt in the supply of Venezuelan oil to the United States.
 
Chávez's decision came one day after President Morales had thrown out the US 
ambassador in La Paz, Philip Goldberg, who has been frequently accused by the 
Bolivian government of plotting with the separatist politicians in the eastern 
province of Santa Cruz. 
The situation in Bolivia is immediately more dramatic than in Venezuela, 
although both countries are facing important electoral battles at the end of 
the year. 
 
Evo Morales, an indigenous politician from the Andes in the west of the 
country, has organised a referendum on a new constitution to which the 
rightwing (and white racist) politicians in the eastern lowlands are bitterly 
opposed. The atmosphere of violence has now broken into the open, with endless 
political demonstrations and several deaths, the seizure of provincial 
airports, and sabotage of the oil and gas installations on which the country's 
economy depends. Morales has accused the regional governors of the five eastern 
regions of creating the conditions for a coup.
 
Chávez originally announced his decision to expel the US ambassador from 
Caracas as an act of solidarity with Morales – "so that Bolivia is not alone". 
But it was soon clear that he had his own possible coup d'etat to deal with. A 
tape recording of phone conversations between retired military officers, some 
of whom were involved in the failed coup of April 2002, was broadcast on 
Venezuelan television on Wednesday night, revealing plans to seize the 
Miraflores presidential palace and to capture or shoot down the presidential 
plane. 
 
The suggestion that there were plans to assassinate the president brought large 
crowds down from the shanty towns on Thursday night to demonstrate their 
solidarity with Chávez. Several of the alleged conspirators have been detained. 
Venezuela, like Bolivia, has an uncertain pre-election climate, since there 
will be regional and municipal elections in November that will be viewed as a 
judgment on the popularity of the president. 
 
The possible coup in Paraguay appears less serious, since it only appeared to 
involve preliminary discussions between retired General Lino Oviedo, an old 
hand at failed coups, and a serving officer. Yet since the government of the 
left-wing former bishop, Fernando Lugo, has only been in power since August, 
tales of a possible coup have reverberated through the continent. Brazil 
declared pointedly that it would not tolerate a coup in Bolivia "or in any 
other Latin American country". 
 
The US is, of course, preoccupied with Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan, but 
whichever presidential candidate takes over in January will also find Latin 
America at the top of his in-tray.
 
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2008/sep/12/bolivia.venezuela

 
 


      

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