Lagniappe
Gustavo
Coronel: To the James Baker III
Institute for Public policy, Rice University
April
12, 2008
To the James Baker III Institute for Public policy,
Rice University.
Attention: Program Coordinator.
Dear Sir or Madam:
I
have seen in your website the notice of an event on “Governance
of Oil in Venezuela” to be held by invitation only. I can
not attend since I do not live in the Houston area but I wonder
what are the requisites to be invited to this type of events,
where, presumably, you would be trying to find the truth about
the topic under consideration and should welcome people holding
different perspectives on the subject.
Looking at the explanatory summary that accompanies the description
of the event, ready to be distributed to all media, I sense an
explanation for the “invitation only”, since whoever
put this summary together is definitely playing with loaded dice.
In other words, the event seems to be designed only to preach
to the converted and to be one more official event organized
by the Venezuelan Embassy in Washington DC, as part of his annual
propaganda campaign. Why would I suspect this? Let us see what
your summary (see below, your program) says:
“Venezuela is undergoing a process of dramatic political
and economic change of sufficient magnitude to merit the overused
term “revolutionary”.
To describe the Venezuelan process, as a political and economic “revolution” could
be acceptable only as a major caricature of what “revolution” should
mean, a radical change in the foundations of social life and
in the philosophy of government.
This is not what Chavez has
been doing. He has installed in Venezuela a government of gangsters,
mostly for the political and economic benefit of the 200 or so
members of the gang. Today Venezuela is in political, economic
and social ruin, as evidenced by all major indices in the hands
of independent analysts: inflation, crime rate, unemployment,
social inequality, corruption in government, free market practices,
competitiveness, foreign investment, country risk. To call this “dramatic”and
a “revolution” is very black humor. An institution
carrying the name of James Baker would deserve better than this
travesty.
“Focused
on both Venezuela domestic and international policy”.
The author of this summary is probably thinking of Chavez’s
alignment with the Colombian narcoterrorists or with Iran’s
Ahmadinejad or with Hezbollah. He is also probably thinking of
the five Chavez ambassadors who were expelled from Latin American
countries for their open intervention in the political processes
of those countries, or in the handouts of Venezuelan oil to Castro,
Morales, Ortega, Kennedy III, the Farabundo Marti Front in El
Salvador and other parasites of our Venezuelan people. This could
be called foreign policy, yes, but a tragic and corrupt one.
NO POLICY, on the other hand, is what characterizes the domestic
policy of the Chavez’s regime. There is no governance in
Venezuela. No country that has had a president like Hugo Chavez
and vice-presidents like Isaias Rodriguez and Adina Bastidas
(one of your speakers) can be expected to have governance or
a coherent set of domestic policies.
“Venezuela’s vision is one of social justice that
is oriented toward the provision of basic human needs to all
its citizens and of political empowerment for the country’ s
hitherto forgotten lower social classes”.
I have no doubt that the author of this paragraph is in Chavez’s
payroll but I am appalled that a major institution located at
a prestigious university would accept it at face value, to be
used as factual information for an official event of the institution.
Are you familiar, Sir or Madam, with the situation of the Venezuelan
population? : The crime rate, the absence of the rule of law,
the rampant corruption of Chavez, his family and his immediate
collaborators (corruption defined both as stealing public funds
and as the use/abuse of the public goods/ assets for personal
use), the odious social exclusion of large sectors of the population
that differ from Chavez’s obsolete political ideas, the
nepotism, the use of public funds for handouts to foreign governments
and individuals, the lack of structural programs to solve poverty?
These and many other characteristics of the Chavez’s regime
are the precise opposite of what this paragraph states.
“For the Venezuelan government, promoting social and revolutionary
reforms while maintaining the advancement of the country’s
oil industry remains a major challenge…”
Again, this paragraph assumes as a given that there have been
social and revolutionary reforms in a country that, frankly,
has only been subjected to the madness of the inept. Do you know
Sir, or Madam, that Chavez has received about $600 billion during
his almost 10 years in total power and that the country has virtually
nothing positive to show for it? Have you been in Venezuela?
Have you seen the state of infrastructure, the situation of schools
and hospitals? Have you heard our “president” speak?
Do you know that excessive numbres of our children die at birth
in Chavez’s hospitals? That street beggars are routinely
assassinated?
That the former Attorney General is a crook, just
to mention one single example of the deplorable moral qualities
of the Chavez’s gang? That abandoned children in the streets
of our cities are in the thousands? That commercial papers sold
by the regime are fueling the greatest corruption in the history
of our country? That the proposed primary school curriculum is
designed for political indoctrination of our children? That Chavez
just gave Danny Glover $30 million of our money to “make
a film” and has given Castro about $2 billion per year
in subsidies for the last five years? That, four months later,
the Electoral Council still refuses to make public the final
tally of the referendum lot by Chavez in December 2007? That
Chavez has said that if the opposition defeats him in the regional
elections of October of this year “there will be war”?
That the laptops of the Colombian narcoterrorist leader recently
killed contains numerous references to Chavez’s alignment
with, and support of FARC? I could go on and on, but these examples
will suffice to illustrate my point.
What the paragraph calls “empowerment of the poor” is
only a criminal policy of handouts that keep the Venezuelan poor
acting like beggars, instead of acting like proud independent
citizens, capable of being self-starters. Chavez throws fish
around but is no teaching Venezuelans how to fish. This, Sir
or Madam, is the opposite of social justice.
The reference contained in the summary about “the oil industry
being maintained moving forward” will sound clearly fraudulent
to any one who knows what has been going on within PDVSA: six
presidents and boards in ten years, the loss of some 800,000
barrels per day of production capacity; the lack of maintenance
and investment; the violation of contractual obligations and
commitments; the corruption within the highest management levels;
the politicization of the company; its conversion into a food
importing and distributing outfit; its loss of international
prestige and credibility; its financial disarray, its bureaucratic
adiposity; its utilization as a political tool, all of these
and more items indicate an almost total collapse of the Venezuelan
oil industry.
“The Baker Institute is convening a major conference…”
Dear Sir or Madam: a major conference cannot be convoked under
such biased preliminary assumptions. It should be properly
convoked only by inviting people having different perspectives.
For example, I fail to see the presence of speakers from the
previous PDVSA, someone like Alberto Quiros, Luis Giusti, Pedro
Burelli, Ramon Espinasa, only to name just a few who could
give the attendees a more balanced (and a more professional)
picture of the Venezuelan energy situation than some of the
chavista speakers. The presence of prestigious members of academia
such as Terry Karl and David Mares is welcome, although none
of them, as far as I know, have studied Venezuela in detail
during the last months or, even, years. Let us hope that they
take upon themselves to present the other side of the sugar
coated fairy tale that will, no doubt be presented by Ambassador
Alvarez and his entourage.
As being planned, I believe your event will be somewhat incestuous.
Of course, incest is OK only as long as you keep it in the family.
Annex: Your program.


The New Governance of Oil in
The Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela:
Implications for the Venezuelan Energy Sector
and its Export Role in the Western
Hemisphere
A symposium with the James A. Baker III Institute for Public Policy
and
the Government of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela
May 15, 2008
8:30am-3:30pm
Doré Commons
Baker Hall, Rice University
(map)
This event will be WebCast.
This event is by invitation only.
About the Symposium
Venezuela is undergoing a process of dramatic
political and economic change of sufficient magnitude to merit
the overused
term “revolutionary.” This
revolutionary process is multidimensional (political, economic,
social, ideological) and is focused on both Venezuelan domestic
and international policy. That process has attracted much international
attention, both favorable and unfavorable. Yet the Venezuelan
experiment is not well understood. Venezuela’s vision
is one of social justice that is oriented toward the provision
of basic human needs to all its citizens and of political empowerment
for the country’s hitherto forgotten lower social classes.
But this revolutionary process has come at certain social and
economic costs, and its future will depend on the balancing
of many influences — both domestic and international.
For the Venezuelan government, promoting social and revolutionary
reforms while maintaining the advancement of the country’s
oil industry remains a major challenge — one that many
oil-producing nations have faced over the decades. The Baker
Institute is convening a major conference to enhance understanding
of Venezuela’s changing landscape and the implications
for the Venezuelan energy sector.
Symposium Working Agenda
8:30 am
Welcome Remarks
Amy Myers Jaffe, Wallace S. Wilson Fellow in Energy Studies,
Baker Institute
Opening Addresses
“ Venezuela's Vision for
the Future and International Relations”
H.E. Bernardo Alvarez Herrera
Ambassador of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela to the United
States
“ Understanding
the Bolivarian Revolution and Its Impact on Venezuela 's Oil
Sector”
H.E. Bernard Mommer
Deputy Minister of Hydrocarbons, Venezuela, and Director, Petróleos
de Venezuela S.A. (PDVSA)
9:30 am
Panel 1: Reality and Potentialities of the Venezuelan Energy
Industry
Amy Myers Jaffe (Moderator), Wallace S. Wilson Fellow in Energy
Studies, Baker Institute
• Antonio Vicentelli, President, Venezuela Petroleum Chamber
• Kenneth
B. Medlock, III, Ph.D., Research Fellow in Energy
Studies, Baker Institute
• Further panel participants TBD
10:30 am
Discussion Period
10:45 am
Coffee Break
11:00 am
Panel 2: Venezuela, Oil and Regional Politics
Ronald Soligo, Ph.D. (Moderator), Professor of Economics, Rice
University
• Adina Bastida, Venezuelan Representative to the Inter-American
Development Bank
• David Mares, Ph.D., Professor of Political Science, University
of California at San Diego
•
Andrés Serbín, President, Coordinadora
Regional de Investigaciones Económicas y
Sociales ( CRIES)
12:00pm Lunch
Keynote Address
Alejandro Granado, Chairman of the Board of Directors, President
and CEO, CITGO Petroleum Corporation
1:30 pm
Venezuelan and U.S. Relations
TBD
2:30 pm
Panel 3: Domestic Goals & the Energy Sector:
Social Welfare, Industry Reform and Production Goals
• David Mares, Ph.D., Professor
of Political Science, University of California, San Diego & Nelson
Altamirano, Ph.D., Instructor, National University, San
Diego
• Francisco Monaldi, Coordinator, International Center for Energy
Studies, IESA
• Terry Karl, Ph.D., William and Gretchen Kimball University Fellow
and Professor of Political Science, Stanford University
Closing Remarks
Amy Myers Jaffe, Wallace S. Wilson Fellow in Energy Studies,
Baker Institute
Return to Events Menu
Please contact the Program Coordinator for
questions,
problems or comments
about this web site
James A. Baker Institute III Institute for Public Policy
Gustavo
Coronel is a 28 years oil industry veteran, a member
of the first board of directors (1975-1979) of Petroleos de Venezuela
(PDVSA), author of several books. At the present Coronel is Petroleumworld
associate editor and advisor on the opinion and editorial content
of the site. Petroleumworld does not necessarily share these
views.
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