Hugo Chavez

Hugo Chavez

Ah yes, the plight of a web site editor who was planning on filling

this space with world opinion on our presidential election. Alas,

while the editor can”t miss a deadline the election is yet to be

decided, thus, opinion is worthless, if not nonexistent. So it”s

time to fill a few paragraphs with talk of the South American

continent”s biggest dirtball, Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez.

For those of you who aren”t regular readers of my “Week in

Review” column, Chavez is a frequent visitor. But I haven”t filed

a “Hott Spotts” on the little dictator so here goes.

Hugo Chavez is the swaggering, demagogic champion of the poor

and working-class majority of Venezuela. 46 years of age, he

was a former army paratroop colonel who served a jail term for

attempting a military coup back in 1992. Elected president in

December 1998 with 58% of the vote, he has been consolidating

his power ever since, to the point where he can now be called a

dictator, albeit a rather benevolent one thus far. But the decade is

young.

And Chavez could be around a lot longer than a decade. You

see, once Hugo won the ”98 election, he set a series of elections

which began to rid him of his political enemies. And the poor of

Venezuela granted Chavez his longed for new constitution which

allowed him to immediately run for a new 6-year term as

president this past summer, while the same document now allows

him to run for a second term should he so choose. The old two-

party system in Venezuela has been swept away.

Chavez initially ran on a platform of sweeping away corruption

and instituting a series of economic reforms. In his first 15

months in power, he hasn”t accomplished either.

Venezuela is a country of 23 million with immense potential due

to the fact that it is sitting on the greatest petroleum reserves

outside the Middle East. But it is also a nation that has suffered

for decades with massive corruption and, as is always the case in

these situations, it is the poor who suffer.

But you would think that if you had a ton of oil and were the

largest supplier to the U.S., you would be rolling in riches. After

all, with the tripling of oil prices in the last two years, Venezuela”s

oil revenues will exceed $21 billion this year.

When Chavez came into office, he promptly did the right thing

and sacked hundreds of allegedly corrupt judges…only to replace

them with his own equally corrupt cronies. And it was also at this

time that the independent Congress was stripped of its powers as

the Constitution was rewritten.

On his election night in ”98, Chavez proclaimed, “Don”t be afraid

anymore! We must put fear aside and salvage the Venezuelan

economy.” But then Chavez commenced with the anti-business

rhetoric and voila! Over $8 billion in capital has fled to overseas

banks and the economy as a whole shrank 7% in 1999. Couple

this with the devastating floods and mudslides of last December

and you have a desperate country, even with all of that oil.

Chavez has been using some of the crude windfall for subsidizing

food and petrol, public works, as well as free medical care. He

has even proposed the manufacturing of the “People”s car,” which

would actually encourage greater oil consumption. The president

is also afraid to relax the subsidies on goods like oil because he

wouldn”t know how to handle a rebellious populous.

One political scientist on the scene lays much of the blame for

Venezuela”s poor economic performance on crude.

“Oil is a sickness,” he says. “It”s easy to produce…and it always

sells. As a result, it has asphyxiated the rest of the economy and

led the majority of Venezuelans to believe that if they are not rich,

it is because someone has stolen what belongs to them.”

It would be one thing if Chavez were just the ruler of a little

banana republic. It”s another, however, when he wields the oil

card and at the same time is desirous of becoming the next

Castro, a leader of the developing world.

Hugo Chavez has long admired Fidel and recently hosted the

Cuban leader for 5 days. The two share a mutual admiration

society. And Chavez has also expressed admiration for China.

He claims that both Cuba and China “have good things” and that

the two have produced social benefits. In China this year, Chavez

said, “We invite China to keep its flag flying, because this world

cannot be run by a universal police force that seeks to control

everything.” An obvious shot at the U.S., one of many he has

fired off.

And at the OPEC summit he hosted in September, Chavez

proclaimed, “We have to do far more to promote and to work for

the reunification of Asian peoples.” Bizarre, but par for the

course.

Chavez has been skillful in his whole relationship with OPEC,

maneuvering his own oil minister to be the president of the cartel,

while he has wracked up the frequent flyer miles visiting all of the

member states, including becoming the first head of state to visit

Baghdad and Saddam Hussein since the Gulf War.

And as if that weren”t enough to worry the U.S., Chavez is very

chummy with Colombia”s guerrilla forces, an item I have written

of often in other columns.

Latin American analyst Michael Shifter writes of El Presidente,

“Venezuela is just too small for him. He fancies himself as a

regional and hemispheric leader, wants to play a major role on the

global stage, and is testing the limits of how far he can go in terms

of pushing his ideas and showing off his posture in global

politics.”

Hugo Chavez is testing America”s patience. My guess is that

some time next year, it runs out.

[Sources: Larry Rohter / New York Times; various wire service

reports; your editor”s own knowledge of the topic.]

Brian Trumbore