Bush 2 mission accomplished in Haiti .... onward to Venezuela?

  http://www.vheadline.com/readnews.asp?id=16312

  Photographer and multimedia developer Kurt Nimmo writes:  Venezuelan 
President Hugo Chavez Frias, in no uncertain terms, has warned the Bushites he 
will use the oil weapon against the United States if Bush attacks Venezuela, 
America's fourth-largest oil exporter. "If Mr. Bush is possessed with the 
madness of trying to blockade Venezuela, or worse for them, to invade Venezuela 
in response to the desperate song of his lackeys ... sadly not a drop of 
petroleum will come to them from Venezuela," Hugo Chavez recently told 
supporters, according to AFP/Reuters.

  Is Chavez paranoid?

  Hardly.

  Recall the CIA attempted coup against him in 2002.

  How do we know the CIA engineered the failed coup?
  "Same way we know that the sun will rise tomorrow morning," writes Bill Blum, 
former US State Department employee. "That's what it's always done and there's 
no reason to think that tomorrow morning will be any different."

    a.. The problem is, for the Bush 2 administration, Chavez is not part of 
the neoliberal New World Global plan. "I consider myself a humanist, and a 
humanist has to be anti-neoliberal," Chavez has said.
  Moreover, Chavez considers himself a Bolivariano -- that is to say he takes 
inspiration from the Carta de Jamaica and the Discurso de Angostura, texts 
written by Simon Bolivar, called El Liberator because he kicked the Spaniards 
out of Bolivia, Panama, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, and Venezuela. In addition to 
fighting against foreign invasion and economic domination, Bolivar's 
philosophy, as practiced by Chavez, translates into land redistribution for the 
poor and an increase of oil income for the government.

  In other words, less money for Bush's Big Oil buddies and more for the people 
of Venezuela.

  It doesn't help that Chavez also sells oil to Cuba, visited Saddam Hussein, 
and sacked the upper management of Petroleos de Venezuela (PDVSA), the nation's 
oil company, infamous for its corruption. But what really rankles Bush and Big 
Oil is the fact their CIA-engineered coup d'etat on April 12, 2002 did not 
stick.

    a.. Unlike the seemingly effortless removal of Jean-Bertrand Aristide in 
Haiti, getting rid of Chavez will not be easy.
  In the short time Chavez was held at a prison on the Caribbean island of La 
Orchila after the CIA-sponsored coup in April, 2002, Fedecamaras business 
lackey and oil executive Pedro Carmona Estanga dissolved the National Assembly 
(AN), voided the 1999 Constitution introduced under Chavez (and approved by 
popular vote in a national referendum), fired Supreme Court justices, repealed 
laws that gave the government control of the economy, and handed control of 
PDVSA over to General Guaicaipuro Lameda, an active military officer.

    a.. As Philip Reeker, US State Department spokesman, said at the time, "We 
want to see a return to democracy" in Venezuela.
  For Bush 2, the US State Department, and the CIA, voiding constitutions 
approved by popular vote is the only "democracy" the third world should expect. 
As a prime example of Bush's grotesque version of democracy, look no further 
than Iraq where an American proconsul and a gaggle of handpicked lackeys rule 
and popular elections become more and more remote by the day.

    No doubt the Americans would feel more at home with another Perez Jimenez, 
the brutal army captain, virulent anti-communist, and self-appointed dictator 
of Venezuela who did such an effective job eliminating progressive reforms that 
Eisenhower gave him the Legion of Merit.

  "The anti-Chavistas don't equate democracy with voting," writes Greg Palast, 
who interviewed Chavez in 2002. "With 80% of Venezuela's population at or below 
the poverty level, elections are not attractive to the protesting financiers. 
Chavez had won the election in 1998 with a crushing 58% of the popular vote and 
that was unlikely to change except at gunpoint." Bush, the IMF, and Venezuela's 
ruling elite are nostalgic for the days when the notorious embezzler of public 
funds, Carlos Andres Perez (CAP), and Accion Democratica (AD) ruled. In 1989, 
Perez sent the military to slaughter 1,000 workers and poor people from the 
cerros, or shantytowns, for the audacity of protesting against an IMF austerity 
plan.


  Following the slaughter, IMF Managing Director Michael Camdessus wrote to 
Perez and said he was "profoundly moved" by the loss of life but said the IMF 
was convinced "that the economic policies were well-conceived." No word if 
Camdessus was "profoundly moved" by the further impoverishment of pensioners 
and the poor for the sake of US creditors holding Venezuela's debt.

  Chavez blamed the CIA for the failed coup, and for good reason: Charles S. 
Shapiro, the US ambassador in Caracas and former Deputy Chief of Mission at the 
US embassy in Chile at the time of the CIA-sponsored coup against Salvador 
Allende, admitted that military training camps for Venezuelan opposition forces 
are currently being run in Florida. For some reason the Ministry of Homeland 
Security does not seem to mind.

  If it walks and talks like the CIA, good chance it is the CIA.

  "On January 29, 2003, The US daily, the Wall Street Journal, published an 
editorial revealing the existence of terrorist training camps in Florida," 
writes CasaVenezuela editor Dozthor Zurlent. "Rodolfo Frometa, a Cuban, and 
former Army Captain Luis Eduardo Garcia, a Venezuelan, are named in the article 
as the leaders of the paramilitary coalition formed by the 'F-4 Commandos' and 
'The Venezuelan Patriotic Junta.' Garcia, a former Captain, was one of the 
leaders of the defeated coup against democratically elected president Hugo 
Chavez Frias in Venezuela in April 2002."

    a.. Florida is where the CIA's Task Force WH-4, Branch 4 of the Western 
Hemisphere Division, set up training camps for the failed Bay of Pigs covert 
operation against Cuba.
  According to Shapiro, plotting the overthrow of Venezuela's 
democratically-elected government "is not necessarily a crime," especially when 
that country has a whole lot of mighty fine sweet crude and a leader with funny 
ideas about empowering poor negro y indio folk.

  Bush 2 and the bankers have a little problem.
  Globalization is taking heat all over Central and South America, from Bolivia 
to Chiapas. Opposition to the FTAA ... a sort of NAFTA on steroids ... is 
nearly universal. In October, Bolivians brought down neoliberal President 
Gonzalo Sanchez de Lozada. "All governments in Latin America, even those most 
solicitous of the United States, know they are negotiating the FTAA with a 
loaded and angry popular movement cocked at their political heads," writes 
David Moberg for In These Times.

  For the Bushites, though, "loaded and angry" popular movements are not the 
problem; under brutal enough conditions, those movements can be stifled.

  The problem is Hugo Chavez...

  They blame him not only for the fall of Gonzalo Sanchez de Lozada, but also 
for funding Colombia's FARC and ELN. Moreover, they say Chavez is conspiring 
with Fidel Castro and offering sanctuary for "European leftists, retired East 
European intelligence officers and activists from countries on the US list of 
state sponsors of terrorism," as the AP hysterically reported in January. The 
Bush 2 Ministry of Disinformation, US News & World Report division, would have 
us believe "Middle Eastern terrorist groups" are operating "support cells" in 
Venezuela and elsewhere in the Andean region.

    a.. As investigative journalist Jeremy Bigwood discovered through an FIOA 
request, the National Endowment for Democracy (NED) .... a well-documented CIA 
front ... has backed anti-Chavez projects and recall referendums in Venezuela.
  The documents Bigwood made public reveal ties between the US embassy in 
Caracas and Chavez' opposition, that is to say the ruling elite and business 
interests pushing Washington's neoliberal agenda. Add to this the CIA-esque 
training camps in Florida run by Rodolfo Frometa and Captain Luis Eduardo 
Garcia, and it becomes obvious what the game plan is ... ousting the 
democratically-elected leader of Venezuela and installing an obsequious lackey, 
such as Carlos Andres Perez, a true-blue servant for neoliberalism and the Wall 
Street loan sharks.

  No wonder Chavez called Bush a "PENDEJO."

  Kurt Nimmo is a photographer and multimedia developer in Las Cruces, New 
Mexico, and is a contributor to Cockburn and St. Clair's, The Politics of 
Anti-Semitism. A collection of his essays for CounterPunch, Another Day in the 
Empire, is now available from Dandelion Books.  He can be reached at: [EMAIL 
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