Lagniappe
Diego
Arria: Hold
Chavez accountable
for fueling narco-terrorism

Venezuelan
President Hugo Chavez (R) and senior rebel commander Ivan Marquez
of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC)
walk at Miraflores Palace in Caracas November 8, 2007.
Hugo Chavez's regime in Venezuela has not impressed many observers for using
its power wisely or coherently. But the world must now admit, somewhat belatedly,
that Chavez is at least coherent in his relationship with and approach to two
of South America's most brutal narco-terrorist groups, the FARC and ELN.
Eight years ago, Chavez, to the alarm of the neighboring Colombian government,
announced that Venezuela would be officially neutral in Colombia's decades-long
struggle against these two Marxist guerrilla armies - groups that have devastated
the Colombian economy and targeted innocent civilians through countless killings
and kidnappings.
Last week, that "neutrality" gave way to something even more troubling
and sinister. Chavez's minister of interior, Capt. Rodriguez Chacin, uttered
these expressions of solidarity with the guerrillas after they finally freed
two women held hostage in the jungle for more than five years: "On behalf
of President Chavez, we are very attentive to your fight. Preserve your spirits,
preserve your forces, and you can count with us. Comrades, be safe."
Such a message, broadcast on the Venezuela-funded Telesur network, was not
exactly earth-shattering - for years the growing coziness between the Chavez
government and Colombia's guerrilla groups has been clear to many who follow
South American politics - but this finally removes any remaining reasonable
doubt.
Indeed, to confirm that Rodriguez Chacin's praise was not an aberration, the
next day, Chavez himself came out of the closet and addressed Venezuela's National
Assembly, solemnly declaring his government's political and ideological alliance
with the FARC and ELN: "We respect them. They have a Bolivarian project" -
meaning, a grand socialist agenda like his own.
At that statement, the Assembly - which his supporters totally dominate - stood
up in rapturous applause.
Citizens of the United States - many of whom call for energy independence to
extricate the country from the dangerous politics of the Middle East - must
wake up to the threat this presents. A South American government awash in petrodollars
has confessed its direct support for and solidarity with the two biggest terrorist
organizations in the region.
Chavez's admission should have serious consequences, beginning in Colombia
- but not ending there. Now that Chavez has made clear he is effectively in
command of two armies - his own Venezuelan force and the combined FARC-ELN
guerrilla forces - he must be held accountable accordingly.
The international community should make clear to Chavez that the 700-plus hostages
held by the FARC are now his moral responsibility. He has proven that he can
liberate them by freeing two; now he must wield similar power with respect
to the rest. The Inter-American Commission on Human Rights has implored the
FARC to "proceed with their immediate and unconditional release";
Chavez must wield his substantial power over them to make this happen.
FARC and the ELN are not often on the front pages of American newspapers. But
let there be no mistake that they are terrorist groups of the highest - or
perhaps the better word is lowest - order. Chavez is not a mediator, but an
accomplice. The FARC and Chavez are not humanitarians, but political grandstanders
and hostage traffickers.
This is a perverse new dimension of terrorism. These groups force child soldiers
to kill friends and relatives to harden their spirits, while training them
not to cry. (This is not hyperbole; it is established in a September 2003 report
by Human Rights Watch.) They kidnap women and children. They kill innocent
civilians by the thousands. And they are fueled by the trade in deadly narcotics
that continue to wreak havoc on neighborhoods across America.
We must not stand by while such enemies of peace and humanity are rewarded
by a head of state whose values are in open conflict with basic human rights
and decency.
Diego
Arria is a former representative of Venezuela at the United
Nations, recently
served as special adviser to the UN's secretary general.
Petroleumworld does not necessarily
share these views.
Editor's
note: This commentary was originally published by New
York Daily News,
on Sunday Jan. 20th . Petroleumworld reprint this article in
the interest of our readers.
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Petroleumworld
News 02/04/08
Copyright© 2008 Diego
Arria .
All rights reserved.
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