Hugo Chavez and His Bolivarian Revolution
News: A veteran Latin America correspondent on the past, present, and possible future of Venezuela's president.
October 4, 2005
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What to make of Hugo Chavez? By the lights of the Bush administration, the President of Venezuela is an anti-American rabble rouser, a devoted friend to the loathed Fidel Castro, a rogue state unto himself, given to playing politics with Venezuela's oil industry, which supplies about 15 percent of the U.S.'s crude. To his increasingly frustrated political opponents in Venezuela, Chavez, a former army colonel, is a leftist demagogue who stirred up a wave of class and racial resentments and rode it to the presidency, and who, in office, has dealt himself new powers at every chance, on his way to becoming an out-and-out caudillo. And to a certain school of international opinion, exemplified by The Economist magazine, Chavez is an wacky utopian who sooner or later will run the Venezuelan economy into the ground.
True, Chavez is, for a world leader, refreshingly free with his opinions of the Bush administration. (And often, as at the United Nations last month, entertainingly so.) He makes a show of railing against US "imperialism," cheerfully baits and ridicules George W. Bush, and matter-of-factly denounces the U.S. as a "terrorist state." Most days, it seems, he surfaces somewhere in the media alleging dark White House plots against his life. (Pace Pat Robertson, this seems farfetched.) And he's quite convinced that the Bush administration backed, or at least countenanced, a coup attempt against him in 2002 (which seems quite plausible). Also true, his governing style is frankly populist, and he routinely excoriates Venezuela's elite class, which dominates the political opposition and which, until the rise of Chavez, dominated the country's politics. Certain of his reform laws—in particular one regulating the media and another reshuffling the judiciary—have drawn protests from international rights groups. And yes, there's the matter of la lista, the list of signatures submitted in 2004 to demand a referendum on Chavez's recall, which, so signatories claim, now functions as a black list, deployed by the Chavez government to deny them jobs and services.
Then again, there's no gainsaying the fact that Chavez first won office, in 1998, in a fair election with 56 percent of the vote, or that since then he has prevailed in several electoral tests—not to mention a general strike and a coup attempt—growing steadily in popularity each time. Nor is there any denying that he has brought into the democratic process, for the first time, large numbers of Venezuela's poor, most of whom live in the ranchos, or shanty towns, that ring the cities. (As for his alleged class baiting, in a country where the poor account for about 80 percent of the population and where income inequality is extreme and glaring, democratic politics can’t help but involve issues of class—and race: Venezuela's poor are disproportionately black and indigenous.) Through a string of "missions" the Chavez government has brought healthcare and education to many of the ranchos and rural areas, which before now have seen little of either. The missions are financed by proceeds from Venezuela's oil industry, control of which Chavez seized after the 2002 (another sore point for opponents), and which, against expectation, is humming along quite nicely. (Also worth noting: for all that he fulminates against "neo-liberalist" free trade, and for all that he has expanded the role of the state in Venezuela's economy, Chavez's economic policy is fairly eclectic: he's pushed hard to have Venezuela admitted to Mercosur, the South American free trade bloc, and he's an energetic courtier of foreign investment.)
That Chavez is genuinely popular in Venezuela, and increasingly throughout Latin America, is cause for neither surprise nor alarm, according to Richard Gott, whose book, Hugo Chavez and the Bolivarian Revolution (Verso), recently updated and reissued, is the first account in English to place Chavez in historical and intellectual perspective. In Gott’s sympathetic account, Chavez is a magnetic personality of the Clintonian type, “a genuinely original figure in Latin America,” a radical left-wing nationalist, to be sure, but a pragmatic improviser, and certainly no dogmatic socialist. Chavez’s program for Venezuela remains somewhat vague, even to the man himself, but his concern for the country’s poor and marginalized is, in Gott's view, sincere and his vocation is essentially democratic.
Gott, who has been reporting on Latin America for four decades, is a former correspondent and features editor for the London Guardian. He’s the author of Guerrilla Movements in Latin America and Cuba: A New History, among other books. He talked to Mother Jones recently by phone from his home in London.
Mother Jones: Does Chavez really think the U.S. is out to have him killed?
Richard Gott: You have to understand the fear that sweeps Latin America whenever a progressive government comes to power. Chavez has to take the possibility of assassination very seriously. He has now expressed his great solidarity with the Cuban revolution and gone so far as to say that if the United States were to invade Cuba then Venezuela would be at Cuba's side. Even so, to my mind, the idea that the United States is planning to do assassinate him seems highly improbable. But I think for Chavez it's a very real possibility.
MJ: Still, there's clearly no love lost between Chavez and the United States government. Why does Chavez delight in provoking the Americans?
RG: Well, I think he gets out of it a lot of popularity at home. People in the United States tend not to appreciate how extremely disliked they are in much of the world and particularly in Latin America, for old-fashioned historical reasons. The United States has intervened all over Latin America for more than 100 years. They're still in Cuba at the base in Guantanamo, since 1898. So there's this tremendous legacy of hostility that's absolutely open to any progressive regime to exploit.
MJ:And Pat Robertson's recent comments—that the US should go ahead and take him out—presumably played into that hostility.
RG: Yes, it's obviously very convenient when the United States lives up to its stereotype as a Big Brother that's prone to intervene at any given moment. But when Chavez started six or seven years ago he didn't have this fearsome anti-American rhetoric that he has today. He unleashes it today because he has good reason to believe the Americans knew about the coup in 2002 and didn't do anything to warn him, or prevent it. So he gets a lot of mileage out of pushing a strongly anti-American line, and specifically an anti-Bush, anti-neoconservative line. But gets on well with Jimmy Carter and with Clinton—you know, with less extreme figures.
MJ: A big irritant for the United States, of course, is Chavez's closeness to Fidel Castro. What should we make of that relationship?
RG: One tends to forget in the United States or in Europe how popular and significant Castro is for Latin America. He remains this extraordinary bulwark against the United States, and he's regarded as the great Latin American figure of the 20th century. And Chavez belongs to a strand in Venezuelan life, and Latin American life, essentially of nationalism, and socialism, and support for the Cuban revolution, and he's never made any secret of that. But of course he has no plans to emulate the particular Soviet form of the Cuban economy, or the particular form of Cuba's political arrangements, which owe a lot to the fact that it's under an embargo and in a sort of state of war. But he does appreciate Castro's advice; they talk on the phone every night. They're very, very close.
MJ: And the Cuban-exile lobby doesn't take well to that ...
RG: No. Anyone who is friendly to Cuba becomes an enemy of the Miami-Cuban mafia, and that's what's wagging the American policy towards Latin America. Chavez, who has teamed up with Castro on many many things, is implicitly just another enemy. But when you look at it—has Chavez expropriated American companies? No. Has he affected American business interests? No, he hasn't. There's still McDonald's in Caracas, and you can still be an American businessman in Venezuela.
MJ: But it's not just the Miami Cubans who dislike Chavez. The English-language media is pretty hostile towards him.
RG: Yes, that's true. For example, the correspondents for the Economist and the Financial Times in Caracas during the Chavez era—it's been the same guys throughout--are essentially disillusioned leftists of yesteryear who've moved over to the right. They've accepted the arguments of the opposition and have been endlessly critical of Chavez since the beginning, but always adopting the latest opposition line. And the opposition, which is essentially the Venezuelan elite, is now saying Chavez is moving to the left and he's going to show his true socialist colors. Okay, it's true that Chavez, for the first time this year, has used the word "socialism"—he talks about a "21st Century Socialism"—but he's given absolutely no indication that he wants to emulate Soviet socialism, Cuban socialism, or indeed the sort of state capitalism that existed in Europe for much of the late 20th century.
MJ: Do you have a sense—for that matter, does he have a sense—of what he means by "21st century socialism"?
RG: No, I don't think he does. He is keen on buzzwords like "participation," he talks a lot about "participatory democracy," but he hasn't really fleshed out these ideas. He likes the idea that workers' representatives should be on the boards of companies, which is quite an old-fashioned and interesting idea. But he's not particularly interested in trade unions themselves becoming a significant force. He's a very unusual leftist in the sense that he's not much interested in trade unions or political parties.
MJ: Early on in the book you call him a "genuinely original figure" in Latin America. In what sense is he that?
RG: He certainly comes from an unusual background. It's unusual to have a progressive military figure, although there have been half a dozen or so figures in the 20th century—[Omar] Torrijos, in Panama, for example—who emerged from the military and established progressive military regimes. What I find interesting about him is his open-mindedness and his willingness to experiment. He arrived on the scene without any dogmatic ideas. One of his principal heroes is Simon Rodriguez, this extraordinary 19th century figure who was Simon Bolivar's tutor. He had this wonderful slogan that Latin America had to be "original." He had a debate with Bolivar, who was a child of the European Enlightenment, influenced by the French Revolution, and who wanted to import a lot of those ideas into Latin America. Simon Rodriguez said, No, we can't import them wholesale into Latin America; we have to think of original ways of dealing with the problems of our continent on our own. I think Chavez has taken that to heart. He's always casting around for ideas. He's one of the most open-minded Latin American leaders I've ever come across. Whenever you see him he says, "What's new? What's happening? What books should I be reading?"
MJ: And yet he very deliberately styles himself as an heir to Simon Bolivar, the great 19th century hero of Latin American independence. In what sense are Chavez and his project for Venezuela "Bolivarian"?
RG: I think he still recognizes the significance of the ideas of Bolivar. He's more interested in culture than in economics. All leftist revolutions in the past have been based on an economic restructuring of society. Chavez isn't so fascinated by that, but he is fascinated by the need for Latin America to reestablish its cultural identity outside of American cultural imperialism—everybody watching American TV and American movies. He's saying No, we should be thinking about Latin America and thinking about our own culture. He's set up a television channel called Vive, which is devoted to bringing aspects of Venezuelan culture to the screen. He has also promoted the television station Telesur, the idea being to have a Latin American perspective on the news, and he's made a deal with Iran whereby Venezuelans are learning from the Iranians how to make cartoon films, in order to escape from the American idea that everything has to be Walt Disney.

i was wondering if you had any luck contacting the Bolivarian revolutionary himself??
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Revelation 16:12
And the angel of the USA poured out his nation's anger
upon the great crowds of Muslims of the Euphrates,
and its people were fed up, that the
financial way might be prepared
for the military leaders from Japan.
Revelation 17:15 water = people.
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Daniel 11:15 “ And the king of the north Americans President Bush will come and throw up a siege rampart and actually capture Caracuss with military domination.
And as for the military arms of the south Americans, they will not stand,
neither the people of his picked ones; and there will be no power to keep standing. 16
And the one coming against Hugo Chavez will do according to his will, and there will
be no one standing before President Bush. And President Bush will stand in
the idea of the ten commandments of God, and there will be weapons in
his hand. 17 And President Bush will set his face to come with the forcefulness of
his entire USA kingdom business, and there will be equitable oil [terms] with him;
and President Bush will act effectively. And as regards the daughter of warrant
officer kind, it will be granted to Hugo Chavez to bring his wife to ruin. And
Mrs. Chavez will not stand, and she will not continue to be Hugo Chavez
wife. 18 And President Bush will turn his face back to the Texas
coastlands and will actually capture many votes. And Fidel Castro will have to make the reproach from President Bush stop for Castro, [so that] President
Bushes reproach will not be. President Bush will make the reproach turn
back upon that Castro. 19 And Castro will turn his face back to the oil fortresses
of his [own] Cuba, and Fidel Castro will certainly stumble and fall, and Fidel will
not be found.
20 “ And there must stand up in Fidel Castro's position Raul Castro one who is causing an exactor to pass through the splendid kingdom business of Cuba, and
in a few days Raul will be broken, but not in anger nor in warfare.
21 “ And there must stand up in his Raul Castro's position one who is to be despised Hugo Chavez, and Cubans will certainly not set upon Hugo the dignity of Cuba; and Hugo will actually come in during vacation and take hold of Cuba by means of smoothness.
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Revelation 16
And I heard a loud voice out of the sanctuary say to the seven angels of the seven nations: “Go and pour out the seven nations anger of God into the earth.”
2 And Pakistan went off and poured out his nation into the earth. And a hurtful and malignant radiation cancer ulcer came to be upon the men that had the anger of Disney's Hollywood and that were paying attention to its tough guy image.
3 And India poured out his nation into the women. And vagina's became blood as of a dead man no oxygen, and every living soul died, [yes,] the things in the women's vagina's.
4 And China poured out his nation into the groups of people and the tongues of the people. And they became dead. 5 And I heard the angel over the people say: “You, the One who is and who was, the loyal One, are righteous, because you have rendered these decisions, 6 because they poured out the blood of holy ones and of prophets, and you have given them blood as of a dead man no oxygen to drink carbonated soda's root cause for diabetes. They deserve it.” 7 And I heard the altar say: “Yes, Jehovah God, the Almighty, true and righteous are your judicial decisions.”
8 And Russia poured out his nation upon the sun Chernobyl; and to [the sun] it was granted to scorch the men with sun burn. 9 And the men were scorched with great heat, but they blasphemed the name of God, who has the authority over these plagues, and they did not repent so as to give glory to him.
10 And Great Britain poured out his nation upon the Empire States Building of Disney's Hollywood. And its business became depressing, and they began to chew on their educators for [their] pain, 11 but they blasphemed the God of heaven for their pains and for their ulcers, and they did not repent of their works.
12 And the USA poured out his angry nation upon the great crowds of Muslims of the Euphrates, and its people was fed up, that the financial way might be prepared for the military leaders from Japan.
13 And I saw three unclean inspired expressions [that looked] like tongues come out of the mouth of the television and out of the mouth of Disney's Hollywood and out of the mouth of the false religions. 14 They are, in fact, expressions inspired by demons and perform telegnosis, and they go forth to the husbands of the entire inhabited earth, to gather families together to the war of the great day of God the Almighty. 17 And the Japanese poured out his nation upon the airways.
80% poor, says the article. I'm going to look for more of those numbers. The number of cooperatives has increased astronomically, from just under 1,000 to over 70,000, as I recall reading at Venezuelanalysis.com. There are issues to be handled, but I think RG's attitude is the one for constructive reform: there will be a lot more motivated people in the near future.