Lagniappe
Larry
Birns: Venezuela and Chavez
Hugo
Chávez cannot be faulted
on his democratic lapses, because there have been few of these.
This is why he has proven to be such a frustrating adversary
to Washington policy makers in that he hasn't thrown many home-run
pitches to State Department batters - that is, there are no political
prisoners, no firing squads, and no arbitrary arrests that are
familiar to many U.S. allies around the world. While Chávez
has been maddeningly lean on substance when it comes to irritating
U.S. interests, he has been very generous in creating situations
where he easily can be made to appear to be erratic, presumptive,
violating the rules of protocol's niceties and good behavior,
and incapable of respecting the canons of diplomacy.
It
is there to be seen that Hugo Chávez is doing some
of the most innovative thinking in all of Latin America. At the
very time that the U.S. is at its nadir in terms of regional
relevance, such transformative ideas as the Venezuelan leader's
various social missions, or the use of some of the state oil
company PDUSA's profits from record oil sales being diverted
to social spending on the poor, or his use of petrodollars to
speed to poor neighborhoods in the U.S., as well as poor countries
throughout the world, various grants and concessions on oil prices,
and his notion that Latin America has reached the point where
it should decide whether the time has come for it to declare
autonomy from the U.S., are examples of true generosity and self-enlightenment
policy. With all of these good works operating on his behalf,
why does he have grounds to be demeaned, discounted, and dismissed
by lesser figures than himself, like when Spain's King Carlos
shouted at Chávez the other day "why don't you shut
up", after he had repeated his accusations against extreme
rightwing former Spanish Prime Minister José María
Aznar as being a "Fascist?"
Without
question, Hugo Chávez has turned out to be a
public relations disaster and a person who feasts on confrontation
and diatribes. Yet his derelictions are clearly more bark than
bite, and his ordinary transactions are filled with good will
and cheer. He is a million light years away from being a Pinochet,
nor is Venezuela anything near to being akin to what Argentina
was under military rule during the 'Dirty War'.
But
Chávez eclipses his own notable contributions to
improving the region's agenda and wounds his own hemispheric
standing by the rants, reversions to childish imbecilities, and
petty insults against his opponents, even though there is more
fact than fiction in his claims: the Brazilian Senate is a "bunch
of parrots", President Bush may be a "donkey" when
it comes to honoring the American people's right to reliable
information, and Aznar is, of course, a "Fascist",
but you don't necessarily have to give wings to these birds.
The December referendum will far from inalterably change Venezuela,
nor will the 69 articles do much damage to the country's democratic
fabric, except, arguably, for the provision relating to an emergency
suspension of habeas corpus. Elements of the opposition have
called for a delay in holding the referendum in order to give
the nation an adequate amount of time to debate the issue. Since
this is not merely a matter of timing, but also a question of
how best to provide legitimacy to the process and slow one's
respect for democratic rights, why not commit a gesture of goodwill
and show that you are not the Borstal boy that your detractors
claim you to be? Delay the referendum until the beginning of
next year - no one will be hurt by this and the cause of reconciliation
just might be helped.
Larry
Birns is the director of the Council on Hemispheric Affairs,
a liberal, not-for-profit organization monitoring human rights
and political developments in Latin America.
Petroleumworld not necessarily share these views.
Editor's
note: This commentary was originally published
by Reuters, on 11/19/2007. Petroleumworld reprint this
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Petroleumworld
News 11/20/07
Copyright© 2007
Larry
Birns. All rights reserved.
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