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Is Hugo Chavez a Threat to Stability? No.
I have been asked to comment on the question of "whether President Hugo Chavez of Venezuela poses a threat to regional stability and how his critics, including the Bush administration, should respond." This is an easy one.
One may agree or disagree with any of President Chavez's policies or statements, but the idea of him or his government posing a threat to regional stability is ridiculous. In fact, a far more reasonable argument can be made that his government has contributed to stabilizing the region.
It has done so by using its $50 billion dollars of foreign exchange reserves to act as a lender of last resort, and provide other forms of financial aid to countries throughout the region. This is what the International Monetary Fund was alleged to have done in the past but almost never did. It is especially important now that Latin America is going through a major historical transition, where governments of the left now preside over about half of the population of the region.
Latin America is emerging from a long period of failed economic reform policies, known as "neoliberalism" there, which resulted in the worst economic growth performance in more than 100 years. From 1980-2000, regional GDP (gross domestic product) per capita grew by just 9 percent, and another 4 percent for 2000-2005. By comparison, it grew by 82 percent in just the two decades from 1960-1980. As a result of the unprecedented growth failure of the last 25 years, voters have demanded change in a number of countries, including Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Ecuador, Nicaragua, and Uruguay.
Venezuela has loaned more than $3 billion to Argentina, and has loaned or committed hundreds of millions of dollars to Bolivia, Ecuador, Nicaragua, and other countries. It also provides subsidized credit for oil to the countries of the Caribbean, through its PetroCaribe program, and provided many other forms of aid to neighboring countries. These resources are provided without policy conditions attached - unlike most other multilateral (IMF, World Bank, Inter-American Development Bank) and bilateral aid. By providing these resources, Venezuela is helping other countries to bring their policies more in line with what voters have demanded, and greatly reducing the threat of economic crises in the process of doing so.
For example, before the Nicaraguan elections last November, US government officials made many threats to the voters of that country that if they elected Daniel Ortega, they would suffer greatly from cutoffs of loans, aid, and even the remittances that many Nicaraguans depend upon from their relatives in the United States. None of these threats have been carried out. This is partly because Washington knows it would be useless and counterproductive to do so, since Nicaragua would simply replace US-controlled funding sources with more borrowing from Venezuela. The same is true for Bolivia, which has vastly increased its hydrocarbon revenues, and is in a stronger bargaining position knowing that it has an international lender that will not try to interfere with its domestic political agenda. The new progressive president of Ecuador, who faces a number of important political battles to deliver on his promises of governmental reform, pro-poor and pro-development policies, is also strengthened by having Venezuela as a lender. When the Argentine government decided to say goodbye to the IMF in January of 2006 by paying off their remaining $9.9 billion in debt, Venezuela's loan of $2.5 billion helped that government to avoid pushing its reserves down to dangerously low levels.
In all of these cases and more, Venezuela's financial support is helping other governments to deliver on their promises to their own voters, thereby contributing not only to stability but to the strengthening of democracy in the region. Washington-sponsored aid, by contrast, has often had the opposite effect - provoking "IMF riots," and sometimes economic crises (e.g. the 1998-2002 Argentine depression), by trying to impose policies that were deeply unpopular and, as we now know, economically flawed.
No other government in the region accepts the Bush Administration's charge that Chavez is a threat to regional stability - not even President lvaro Uribe of Colombia, which shares a 1300 mile conflict-ridden border with Venezuela. When Uribe met with members of the US Congress last year, he refused to criticize Chá¶¥z- reportedly even in private. The vast majority of Latin American governments also supported Venezuela's bid for the UN Security Council last year, even after he called President Bush "the Devil" at the UN, and despite all the pressure that the United States - whose economy is 67 times the size of Venezuela's - brought to bear on them.
What should the Bush Administration do about the non-threat from Venezuela? It could start by acknowledging that it was wrong to support the April 2002 coup that overthrew Chavez. The US Congress should have a real investigation of this involvement, as it did for the US-sponsored coup against the democratic government of Chile in 1973, which yielded volumes of information. The documents that we have so far on the Venezuelan coup from the State Department and the CIA show that the Bush Administration paid some of the leaders of the coup, had advance knowledge of it, and tried to help it succeed by lying about the events as they transpired. The administration also tacitly supported a devastating oil strike that tried to topple the government in 2002-2003, and funded opposition groups through the 2004 failed recall attempt and beyond. In fact, the US Agency for International Development, which is not supposed to be a clandestine organization, continues to pour millions of dollars into Venezuela, Bolivia, and other countries for activities and recipients that it will not divulge. This, too, needs to be made public.
Mark Weisbrot is Co-Director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research, in Washington, DC.
This column was published by International Affairs Forum on April 2, 2007.

18 Comments so far
Show All"What should the Bush Administration do about the non-threat from Venezuela? It could start by acknowledging that it was wrong to support the April 2002 coup that overthrew Chavez."
are you KIDDING me?
Bush doesn't apologize for ANYTHING! He is the Decider amd no apologies are necessary according to him. He is the worst person who could possible be in charge of any country (along with the devil Cheney.)
The only thing Chavez threatens is the dictatorship of US interests in Venezueala and it's neighbors.
The US prefers right wing dictators to freely elected heads of state in Latin America.
It's possible Chavez is the most important politician to emerge in the Western Hemisphere in the past half century (and he's even entertaining). I hope the CIA, etc. leave him alone.
Chavez is the example that US corporate capitalism without conscience fears, because his policies ACTUALLY improve the lives of working class people while benefiting the larger economy of the nation. He does not pit one against the other; he simply spreads the fruit around more equitably. As the US watches wealth aggregate upwards, more people realize this is not the work of invisible market forces, but DC lobbyists who own politicians who in turn set policy that's favorable to the monied interests. It's another inconvenient truth that all boats really can rise, if leaders gave a damn about their full constituencies. THAT'S what makes Chavez such a threat!
I have been following the talk (pro and con) about Hugo Chavez. Yes, he could be a bit more diplomatic, but diplomacy is a two way street. At any rate, he has been helping those in need of help. Whether or not he's ignoring other important mattes in his country – like the infrastructure – I don't have any reliable information to have an opinion on this.
What is undeniable is that he has been elected six (?) times in fair and open elections. The only people I hear complaining are the elite of Venezuela. Everyone else seems to be quite happy with him. Perhaps the one good thing about the USA being involved over their heads in Iraq and Iran is that this has given the countries in South America time to go about making real improvements for the majority of the people. What's so terrible about this? We could use some of the same thinking here in our own country.
The media is again failing to do their job by reporting the truth about Hugo Chavez. Rather than tell the truth, they are once again spouting the dialogue coming out of the White House.
Chavez is an inspiration to tens of millions of people on the planet. He is almost unparalleled in his ability to lead from a progressive economic foundation.
He is one of the great leaders alive today on Earth.
Weisbrot, great article and analysis.
"No other government in the region accepts the Bush Administration's charge that Chavez is a threat to regional stability - not even President lvaro Uribe of Colombia, which shares a 1300 mile conflict-ridden border with Venezuela."
Without sounding like I'm defending Bush, it is both Republicans and Democrats who are singing the same tune of Chavez being a threat to regional stabillity. It seems that while both parties are willing to support the exploitation of other countrie's natural resources, we will continue to hear the U.S. chorus perform its pro-corporate (protectionist) opera buffa while they condemn leaders like Chavez who are trying to build a more equitable democracy in his country.
Viva Chavez!
Go Gail! Viva Chavez!
By the way...Where is Haiti's fairly elected President Aristeed (sp)? Last time I heard he was on a plane with then Sec'y of State Colin Powell on his way to Africa. Trying to overthrow an elected president in Venezuela. And we're fighting for what in Iraq? Democracy? Fair elections? Am I wrong, or is there something wrong with this picture?
And who can forget last winter when Chavez shipped heating oil to the needy on our own west coast of America?
Gotta love it when if a guy kinda looks a little deranged at the UN (the sulfer smell thing), and then turns around and helps people in America that Shrub wouldn't.
The only things Chavez threatens are U.S. hegemony, dominace,and exploitation.
Chavez is cool. Really enjoyed watching him at the UN, holding up Chomskys' book and the many things he said. It's so refreshing to know there is still some progress being made in South America after the many centuries of looting by the wealthy.
Chavez is doing more for the USA than we realize. By making people's lives better in the South, he is addressing the direct cause of illegal immigration. I hope that Lou and his followers realize that and give Chavez the credit he deserves.
Yeah, I love the way Lou Dobbs "populists" rightly rant about corporate America threatening the "American middle class" and then turn around and condemn Chavez and endorse US intervention in Latin America. After all, that's "our" regional sphere of influence so we are "entitled" to dominate them. After all, they are "leftists" who stand for what? Oh yeah, opposition to capitalism, which is what? oh yeah, the ideological rationale for corporate profiteering. Oh yeah, that part.
It's a real shame that they can't quite connect the dots and include the impoverished in this country, as well as the victims of US brutality and wholesale death that we have visited upon Central and Latin America, largely as a result of protecting corporate interests.
Chavez is everything Bush hates in a foreign leader...
Elected...
Intelligent...
Dedicated to helping the poor, not just of his nation, but others...
Apparently not corruptable by multi-national corporations...
Not beholding to the wealthy of the nation...
Popular with his people...
Popular with other leaders in the world...
He has a sense of humor...
Bush spews lots of empty talk about spreading democracy, but when it comes right down to it, some of his favorite people seem to be dictators and monarchs. Musharef, who overthrew an elected government for example.
As usual though, the Press gets sucked right in to the administration line that Chavez is dangerous... it appears that what makes Chavez dangerous is that world leaders like and trust him FAR MORE than Bush.
America had better start LISTENING to the rest of the world instead of just trying to control it for our own profit motives.
We need Chavez here to rally the real Democratic party. Chavez is the Ghandi of Democratic, individual sovereignty, an idea repugnant to the military and corporate oligarchs, destroyers of agrarian connections to earth and sky.
The battle cry:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I-NRriHlLUk
Best Wishes and Hope
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tk1vEuhBuEU
When it is competitively priced l buy Citgo. Google "Citgo" sometime and see what other projects they are involved in.
I think maybe the Bush White House hates Venezuela for it's freedom.