Lagniappe
James
M. Roberts :Citgo and Joseph P.
Kennedy: Hugo Chavez’s
Agents of Influence
By now practically everyone in the Midwest and Northeast has
seen the TV ads. A series of heart-rending scenes show low-income
American families gratefully receiving discounted home heating
oil as a gift "from Citgo and the people of Venezuela." The
gift-giving intermediary? Former Rep. Joseph P. Kennedy II, founding
chairman of Citizens Energy Corp.
The
favorable media exposure that Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez
is buying for Kennedy would be worth millions if he runs
again for public office. His uncle, Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (D-Mass.),
has been in the U.S. Senate since 1962. Chavez is also using
the ads as part of his public relations campaign to influence
the American people to look more favorably upon Venezuela and
the oil and power his regime controls.
Citgo
is owned by Petróleos de Venezuela, S.A. (PDVSA),
the state-owned oil company controlled by Chavez. Any reasonable
observer would have to conclude that the "JOE-4-OIL" advertisements
and discounted heating oil program are very political.
In
one ad, Kennedy accuses the U.S. government of cutting the
federal
budget for heating oil assistance while a picture of
the White House floats in the background. The placement of the
ads also appears politically motivated. How else to explain,
for example, why the ads are running on "Meet the Press
With Tim Russert" and "FOX News Sunday with Chris Wallace," shows
for savvy political insiders that presumably have few viewers
that qualify for heating oil assistance?
Foreign agents are required to register under the U.S. Foreign
Agents Registration Act (FARA). There are criminal penalties
for non-compliance with FARA, but they have rarely been imposed.
It is interesting, however, that one of the few prosecutions
occurred recently, and it involves Chavez.
In December 2007 a Uruguayan and three Venezuelan nationals
were charged by federal prosecutors in Miami as being unregistered
foreign agents. They were implicated in another Chavez influence-buying
scheme uncovered when $800,000 in cash from PDVSA stuffed into
a suitcase at a Buenos Aires airport spilled out in August 2007
during the presidential election campaign in Argentina.
Chavez
boasts of his hatred of the United States. At the United Nations
he
called President Bush "the devil." He funds
efforts throughout Latin America whose sole aim is to weaken
U.S. power and influence in the region, while he simultaneously
works hand-in-glove with Iran and our other enemies and competitors.
The "JOE-4-OIL" ads
skip over the prominent role Chavez has played to intimidate
OPEC to reduce oil production to raise
prices, an act that hurts the poor first and foremost.
The
poor in the United States are well-off by Venezuelan standards.
Robert Rector of The Heritage Foundation noted in a recent
report
that "97 percent of poor [U.S.] households have a color
television."
By
comparison, the large numbers of people living in poverty and
extreme poverty
in Venezuela ought to be an embarrassment
for Citgo and Kennedy. After Chavez’s eight years in office
and the receipt of more than $600 billion in oil revenues, Venezuelans
at all income levels are no better off.
Crime,
corruption, inflation and food scarcities are rampant. The
average per
capita income in Venezuela is less than one-sixth
of America’s and millions of Venezuela’s extremely
poor earn less than $1 a day.
So
the 112 million gallons of heating oil Citgo is selling at
a 40 percent
discount to relatively wealthy Americans under the
Citgo/Kennedy program means that Chavez is denying the poor in
Venezuela $150 million in lost Citgo revenue — all of it
spent to purchase political influence for Chavez and Kennedy.
It’s a disgrace that Chavez is using the resources of
the Venezuelan people in a shameless self-promotion campaign
that has not been disclosed publicly. The American people, not
Joe Kennedy, should decide based on an examination of the facts
whether "the people of Venezuela" actually want to
provide the discounted home heating oil or whether (as is more
likely) they were not even consulted about it.
The
American people must understand that, while a handful may reap
some benefit, ultimately our nation could pay a very high
price for this heating oil due to the growing security threat
from the wealthy Chavez regime, which is being empowered by influential
friends in the United States.
James
M. Roberts is the Research Fellow for Economic Freedom and
Growth in the Center for International Trade and Economics
(CITE) at The Heritage Foundation (heritage.org). Petroleumworld
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Petroleumworld
News 01/23/08
Copyright© 2008
James
M. Roberts.
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