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COMMENTARY
New Castro with big money
by Arnaud de Borchgrave
UPI editor at large
Tuesday, August 30, 2005
At 79, Fidel Castro has outlasted 10 U.S.
presidents, outfoxed 15 directors of Central Intelligence, defeated a
U.S.-organized invasion by Cuban exiles, survived eight U.S. assassination
attempts, the Cuban missile crisis, a 45-year-long U.S. embargo and the
collapse of the Soviet Union, which abruptly ended an annual subsidy of $4
billion, and found a worthy successor. He is
Castro with money. Big money. Where Castro may be flagging, Venezuela's Hugo
Chavez is a Latin American firebrand who is now in total control of the
world's fifth-largest oil producer. The
United States gets 15 percent of its oil from Venezuela and Chavez is now
threatening to bypass major oil companies and sell it directly to U.S.
consumers.
With oil at $60 a barrel, Venezuela's daily
output of 2.6 million barrels brings in $156 million every 24 hours.
Chavez's opponents all seemed to have
sustained charisma bypasses. He has charisma to spare and millions to give
away to the poor. His first state visit as
president was to China where he embarrassed his hosts by praising Mao Zedong.
His best new friends included Libya's Moammar Gadhafi, Saddam Hussein, Iran's
theocrats and North Korea's hermit communist monarch.
He has also given privileged sanctuaries to the Marxist Revolutionary Armed
Forces of Colombia's drug-dealing guerrillas.
More importantly, he has a huge following
among countless millions of poor Latinos. He is Robin Hood in Che Guevara
clothing, robbing from the rich to give to the poor, including free hospitals
staffed by 17,000 Cuban doctors and dentists.
The mentoring was entirely done by Castro.
They see each other frequently. This week Chavez returned from four days in
Cuba with Castro who is also a frequent traveler to Caracas. This time the odd
couple did a joint 6-hour broadcast in which they said the real global
troublemakers were, of course, U.S. imperialists.
Chavez is not a social democrat, but a Marxist believer, unencumbered by
fealty to the klutzy Soviet leaders of yesteryear, and therefore more
attractive to working classes that he constantly agitates against the "rancid
oligarchy." He easily (58 percent to 42 percent) beat a recall vote in
mid-August, certified by former President Carter as fair.
While the United States has been fighting
wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, two-thirds of Latin American governments have
taken a left turn. Chavez has staged a mock
trial of President Bush and refers to him as an imperialist "Mr. Danger."
Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld is Mr. Danger 2. Rumsfeld earned his ranking
as he makes quick trips to various central and South American capitals in an
attempt to stiffen the linguini spines that continue to give Chavez the
benefit of the doubt. The European Union has
mandated the Spanish government to deal with Chavez because of Spain's
historic ties with Latin America. And Madrid's socialist government reports
back to the Eurocrats in Brussels that all is well and that the Bush
administration is, like in Iraq, exaggerating the danger of a 21st century
Castro. Rumsfeld has urged Brazilian
president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva and others to open their eyes and see
Chavez and his brand of internationalism as a danger for all moderate
governments. But Lula has got his own problems with the largest corruption
scandal in the country's history and his own Workers' Party about to turn
further left. The new Secretary General of
the Organization of American States, Chile's Jose Miguel Insulza, complains to
his colleagues about "constant U.S. carping on Venezuela."
So far, the only serious thing the Bush administration has done vis-à-vis
Chavez was to cancel the visas of ranking Venezuelan military officers
involved in the cocaine-smuggling business.
Defending the officers and vowing retaliation against the United States is
Venezuelan Vice President Jose Vicente Rangel, the same statesman who, on
visiting France, met with an authentic terrorist, Venezuelan-born Carlos the
Jackal, aka Ilich Ramirez Sanchez, called him a "caballero," and pronounced
him not guilty unless he was convicted in a "Venezuelan court of law."
In Venezuela, land is being expropriated from wealthy landlords, including
foreign-owned farms, with no compensation, and turned over to machete-wielding
peasants who perform victory jigs for foreign television crews.
Chavez has the combustible materials to fire
up a revolution. Five percent of the population owns 80 percent of the land
and 75 percent of the people live below the poverty line; 40 percent in
"critical poverty." Caracas, surrounded by
slums that cling like barnacles to the high ground, suffered 28,000 homicides
in the past five years with only 7 percent that went to trial.
A U.S. diplomat who served in Havana and was later ambassador to Paraguay
seems to reflect State Department thinking when he says, "Everyone knows there
are Cubans and Venezuelans and Venezuelan oil-generated cash in Bolivia,
Paraguay and other places. And there is also Hezbollah and Hamas fundraising
and money laundering in these same countries to support those same
organizations in the Middle East."
Trouble is, Mr. Ambassador, everyone does
not know all this. The United States, after all, traditionally cannot focus on
more than one, maximum two, foreign policy crises at a time.
Conservative TV evangelist and former presidential candidate Pat Robertson
caused an uproar on his daily television "700 Club" when he suggested Bush
order the assassination of Chavez - which he said would be more cost efficient
than fighting another $200 billion war. Neither option comes to grips with
reality. Chavez dead or alive, the United
States still has a huge image problem in Latin America. The freshly minted
undersecretary of state for Public Diplomacy, Karen Hughes, has the most
challenging assignment in the Bush administration. She should also urge her
close friend, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, to replace Rumsfeld on
point in Latin America.
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