Defeat for reaction in Venezuela
"Any premature military intervention", argued
the April edition of Socialism Today, "runs the risk of provoking a
backlash and could even trigger a civil war". In a follow-up article, TONY
SAUNOIS reports on the recent failed coup.
CELEBRATIONS BY THE ruling elite in Venezuela and the White
House on Saturday 14 April were premature. Within hours of the removal of
president Hugo Chávez Frias by a military coup, the newly-installed president,
Pedro Carmona Estanga, was himself arrested. The radical populist Chávez was
swept back to power by a mass movement of the poor who marched from the barrios
- shantytowns - to the presidential palace. They were joined by key sections of
the armed forces rank and file, especially the 42nd Paratroop Brigade - Chávez’s
former regiment – and others who remained loyal to him.
This is an important setback for the ruling classes of
Venezuela and the US who conspired to overthrow Chávez. Imperialism fears that
he represents the beginning of a new radical populist movement in Latin America
which, under the pressure of mass movements, will threaten their interests.
George W Bush and the White House leaders regard the reformist domestic policy
implemented by Chávez and his sympathy for the FARC guerrillas in Colombia and
Fidel Castro in Cuba as obstacles to US policy in the region. Moreover,
Venezuela, as the fourth-largest international oil producer and supplier to the
USA, is crucial given the volatile situation in the Middle East.
The defeat of the attempted coup and the uprising in
Argentina in December 2001/January 2002 demonstrate that the awesome power of US
imperialism has its limits. The ruling class can be stopped in its tracks by a
mass mobilisation.
It is essential, however, that the Venezuelan working class
and oppressed peoples seize the initiative and take steps to overthrow
capitalism and establish a democratic workers’ government with a revolutionary
socialist programme. If this is not achieved the wounded beast of US imperialism
and the ruling class of Venezuela will prepare to strike again.
Chávez declared in December 2001 that he "would not be
toppled like Chilean president Salvador Allende", whose Socialist Party-led
government was overthrown by a bloody CIA-backed coup on 11 September 1973.
Chávez does not regard himself as a socialist and, although speaking out for
the poor, limits himself to fighting for some vague ‘Bolivarian revolution’.
Under Allende’s Popular Unity government the majority of the working class
actively supported the idea of socialism as an alternative system. The
revolutionary pressure from workers and young people compelled Allende to go
much further than Chávez, nationalising up to 40% of the economy including
powerful US-owned multinationals.
Because of the changed international situation following the
collapse of the Stalinist regimes in the former USSR and Eastern Europe and the
lack of a powerful and genuine socialist alternative, the mass of Venezuelan
workers have not yet embraced the socialist alternative, even though they have
been fighting poverty and the horrors of capitalism. Consequently, mass
opposition to the neo-liberal policies of the 1990s and the explosion of anger
against the corrupt political elite have been expressed in the radical populist
movement led by Chávez.
In June 1973, a section of Chile’s military attempted to
overthrow Allende. This ‘tancazo’ anticipated the bloodbath to come. The
tancazo collapsed because the majority of the conspirators involved in the coup
were not yet ready. This gave the workers’ leaders time to crush the
counter-revolution. Half-a-million people demonstrated, demanding arms to defend
‘their’ government: "Allende, Allende el pueblo ti defiende" (the
people will defend you), was chanted on the streets of Santiago. Factories were
occupied. Tragically, the leaders failed to respond to these demands and a
bloodbath followed.
Although it may be more difficult for reactionary forces to
immediately initiate another coup against Chávez, the now-divided opposition
will attempt to regroup, prepare to undermine Chávez and try to strike again at
a later stage. There is an important difference between the Chilean tancazo and
Venezuela, which will probably force the rightwing to delay another coup
attempt. The tancazo was a premature attempt by a small section of the tank
regiment. The other conspirators remained in place to prepare their bloody
attack three months later. In Venezuela, the whole opposition was involved and
has now split. However, this is a difference in timing and does not diminish the
warning that the attempted coup represents for the masses.
Venezuela is of strategic importance as Latin America’s
fourth-largest economy, a major oil producer sharing a border with Colombia. The
US wants a compliant regime in place. Chávez provoked the wrath of the Bush
administration following the 11 September attacks on New York. Although
condemning the bombing of the World Trade Center, he criticised Bush for using
‘terror against terror’.
Mobilising reaction
AS IN CHILE, a massive campaign to destabilise the
government has been orchestrated by the ruling elite, military high command,
Catholic church, CIA and US State Department. On 5 February the CIA expressed
its "deep concern about the situation developing in Venezuela". US
Secretary of State, Colin Powell, expressed doubts that Chávez would last his
full term. On 7 February, Colonel Pedro Soto became the first in a series of
senior military officers to call on Chávez to resign. There was a flight of
capital: $700 million was taken out of the country in three days in
mid-February, further destabilising the economy.
A massive and vicious media campaign, spearheaded by the
right-wing daily newspaper, La Razon, has demanded that Chávez resign, branding
him "insane". This came to a head following attempts to reform the
corrupt state oil company, PVDSA, and replace managers with Chávez supporters.
The managers declared a ‘strike’. This was similar to the so-called lorry
drivers’ ‘strike’ initiated by the rightwing against Allende. Chávez
rightly denounced the managers as a ‘state within a state’, living in luxury
at the expense of the mass of the population. He increased taxation on oil
revenue from 16% to 30%.
The right-wing opposition has strengthened its position and
undermined support for Chávez because of the economic dead-end that the
government is in. Despite introducing land reform, providing one million
additional school student places, tripling the number of people on literacy
courses, and increasing the minimum wage by 20%, his policies have remained
within the limits of capitalism. The failure to overthrow capitalism leaves the
government unable to resolve the horrific social and economic problems: 80% of
the population live below the official poverty line. Average living standards
remain the same as when Chávez came to power in 1998.
Events culminated in a demonstration and the general strike
in mid-April. The leadership of the CTV (the main trade union confederation)
backed the strike on the grounds that the economic reforms - including
increasing taxes on oil companies profits and more state intervention - damaged
business interests and therefore employment.
The CTV leaders are corrupt gangsters linked to capitalist
parties, such as the Christian Democrats (Copei). They have a vested interest in
opposing Chávez. The new state constitution, adopted in 1999, includes a clause
that all trade union officials should be elected on the same salary as union
members. These leaders refused to submit recent election returns to the
government. They simply declared that they had won.
The original plan was to build opposition to Chávez and
force him out by ‘constitutional means’. However, events rapidly developed
as the different social forces involved in this conflict clashed, further
polarising the situation. Two wings of the ruling class were involved: the ‘hawks’
and the ‘doves’. The hawks included far-rightwing generals and the Catholic
Opus Dei grouped around retired General Ruben Rojas, son-in-law of former
president Rafael Caldera (founder of Copei). The CIA was in contact with this
grouping, which was planning a coup on 27 February.
STRATFOR (a research group with contacts in the US security
forces) reported on 14 April that this planned coup was aborted because Bush and
the State Department wanted to push Chávez out ‘constitutionally’ – the
doves’ position. Representatives of the Bush administration met with the
doves.
The armed clashes on the large anti-Chávez demonstration on
11 April, however, were used as a pretext for the military high command to step
in and remove Chávez, blaming his supporters for firing on unarmed protesters.
Subsequent reports point to this being part of a planned provocation. Rooftop
snipers have been identified as members of the far-right Bandera Roja
organisation and some of the dead were supporters of Chávez’s Movement for
the Fifth Republic (MVR). It has all the hallmarks of a set-up to allow General
Efrain Velasco to take over. The most right-wing sections of the opposition had
gained the upper hand in the anti-Chávez putsch.
A new government was rapidly sworn in headed by Carmona,
leader of the employers’ organisation, Fedecamaras. The regime was entirely
white, made up of far-right representatives of big business, members of the old
corrupt capitalist parties and Opus Dei - who Chávez had previously swept from
power. Rear Admiral and long-time protégé of Rojas, Hector Ramirez Perez, was
appointed defence minister. The foreign minister, Jose Rodriguez Iturbe, is a
member of Opus Dei. However, the CTV leadership, which had slavishly supported
the reaction, was excluded.
Sections of the anti-Chávez movement had got more than they
bargained for. This also contains an element of Chile 1973. Amongst the
conspirators in Santiago were groupings which supported a ‘white coup’ or a
‘black coup’. The white coup was supposed to overthrow Allende and rapidly
hand power over to the Christian Democrats. Once the coup was under way,
however, the generals tasted power and a bloody dictatorship ensued which lasted
for 15 years.
Carmona immediately announced draconian decrees which
negated all of the reforms implemented by Chávez. The single chamber Assembly
was suspended along with the supreme court. MVR deputies and activists were
arrested, including former ministers. Interior minister, Ramon Chacin, was
hauled off to jail and, according to the Wall Street Journal, almost lynched by
coup supporters (15 April).
Sections of the army began house-to-house searches, rounding
up opponents and looking for the arms distributed to some ‘Bolivarian Circles’
– community-based government support groups. Carmona cancelled the oil
supplies to Cuba, a step immediately rescinded when Chávez regained power.
US imperialism – despite its apparent preference for ‘constitutional’
change – remained silent and was the only government in the Americas not to
oppose the coup. The ruling classes of Brazil, Mexico and other countries
condemned the action for fear that it would provoke massive protests in their
own countries and give an impetus to the left, anti-imperialist and
anti-capitalist mood that is developing throughout the continent.
Mass support for Chávez
REVOLUTION SOMETIMES NEEDS the whip of counter-revolution.
The leaders of the coup overreached themselves and underestimated the support
for the reforms that Chávez had carried through and the determination of the
masses to defend democratic conquests from attack by a right-wing military
dictatorship. They underestimated the ingrained hatred of the ruling political
elite, which had ruled Venezuela for 40 years before Chávez came to power. The
repressive measures announced by Carmona provoked a massive social explosion.
The most exploited and downtrodden people entered the battle and the state
machine – the armed forces and police – split. Even sections of society
opposed to Chávez were not prepared to support a return to the old order.
The new administration enraged sections of the army by its
arrogance and contempt for the masses. Nicolas Maduro, a leading Chávez
legislator, said: "The presidential guard remained loyal to Chávez because
they saw Carmona and the oligarchs come in here and begin pouring champagne and
whisky. The guards hated that". (Financial Times, 15 April) One 21-year-old
private spent the weekend in a secret tunnel with others armed with a bazooka
and full combat gear: "We were with Hugo Chávez all along, hiding while
the generals took him away. Now he is back where he should be".
The Spanish daily newspaper, El País, reported how the
military split when Chávez was arrested and imprisoned in the Turiamo military
base. Once the officers had left the room, a National Guard rank-and-file
soldier spoke to Chávez: "‘Look, my commandante, clarify one thing for
me. Is it true that you have resigned?’ Chávez replied: ‘No, son, I have
not resigned and I will not resign’. The soldier placed himself immediately
under the command of the chief of the armed forces. The soldier then said that
this is what is being said through out the country: ‘They say you resigned and
left the country’. The soldier told Chávez that if he wanted to write any
message to leave it in the rubbish bin and he would get it later… The soldier
took the note and faxed it to Caracas where thousands of copies were distributed
amongst the demonstrators". (15 April) Chávez also revealed how a junior
officer gave him a mobile phone so he could call his daughter and get her to
announce that he had not resigned.
At the same time, thousands of people marched on the
presidential Miraflores Palace from the barrios. Their hatred of the ruling
elite was shown in their chants: ‘The same old ones are back again. The cream
at the top – the thieves of the old regime have returned’. Capitalist
commentators tried to portray the anti-Chávez protest as ‘another Argentina’.
In fact, it was part of a planned programme to overthrow Chávez by the US and
Venezuelan ruling classes. The march from the barrios to support Chávez and
oppose the new regime was the real ‘element of Argentina’ in this movement.
General Baduel of the 42nd paratroop regiment, along with
2,000 elite troops under his command, refused to recognise the Carmona regime.
Baduel took control of Maracay, Venezuela’s main garrison town. The permanent
secretary of the National Security and Defence Council, General Julio Garcia
Montoya, made his opposition to the coup known by telephoning Cuban television,
which broadcast the interview back to Venezuela.
The intervention of the masses and the revolt in the army
ranks were decisive. General Velasco, seeing support evaporate, withdrew his
backing for the new government unless it withdrew the decree suspending the
congress, which it did – but too late. The regime fragmented and was forced
out as support for Chávez hardened.
Reaction routed
DEFEATING THIS COUP attempt gives the working class and all
those exploited by capitalism a breathing space. These events have revealed the
hypocrisy of US imperialism. It proclaims its defence of ‘democracy’ but is
quite willing to dispense with it if a government does not serve its interests.
As the Wall Street Journal, the voice of US big business, pronounced: "The
thing about a true democracy is that there are basic freedoms that not even
overwhelming majorities can overwhelm. Mr Chávez’s wanton expropriation of
private property, his creation of Castro-style block committees to spy on and
control families and his reshuffle of management at the state oil company PDVSA
made him unpopular and demonstrators took to the street to demand his ouster.
They were fired on and at least 16 were killed Thursday in a massive anti-Chávez
demonstration. It was this butchery that precipitated the coup". (15 April)
In other words, a coup is justified if a radical government
touches private property! This is in response to increasing taxes on the major
companies, land reform and attempting to change the management at PVDSA. Imagine
the reaction of the ‘democratic’ writer of the Wall Street Journal if a
government was elected which was committed to overthrowing capitalism.
This illustrates the threat now facing the masses in
Venezuela. The crucial questions are how to avoid another right-wing coup
attempt and how to take the struggle forward. Massive pressure is being put on
Chávez by imperialism to ‘learn from this experience’ and adopt a more ‘moderate
and acceptable’ approach. On his return to power, Chávez appealed for
national unity and reconciliation, and for people to return home. He has
withdrawn his proposals to change the PVDSA management and pledged that there
will be no witch-hunt against those involved in the coup.
This may be an attempt to try and placate US imperialism and
the ruling class in Venezuela. But that would be a big mistake. Firstly,
shifting policy to the right will inevitably provoke increasing conflict with
the oppressed and poor. Secondly, it will not placate the capitalist class who
do not trust Chávez and want him removed from power.
The Wall Street Journal gave its response: "But many
analysts read the olive branch toward PDVSA as being primarily inspired by Mr
Chávez’s pragmatic need to get the oil revenue flowing again. And they said
that the failed coup was only likely to harden Mr Chávez’s opinions against
the groups that the former military paratrooper has made a career out of
demonising: business, the traditional Venezuelan political class, and the US.
‘There is the possibility he would be chastened by this and see the
possibility to change his style and bring the country together, but I doubt it’,
says Michael Shifter of the Inter-America Dialogue, a Washington Think Tank. ‘My
fear and concern is that you see a heightened polarisation’." (15 April)
The defeat of the attempted coup will not resolve any of the
underlying social contradictions. Chávez will come under increasing pressure
from those who rallied to his support to adopt even more radical policies. The
Financial Times warned: "In the coming months, he is likely to come under
pressure from more radical supporters to press ahead with a more confrontational
agenda". (15 April) The hardening positions were reflected in the reaction
of CTV leader, Carlos Ortega, to proposals by Chávez for national dialogue
between the different forces involved in the recent crisis: "We will
participate in nothing". (El País, 16 April)
The conciliatory announcements by Chávez have gone
alongside statements pointing in the opposite direction. This indicates the
pressure he is under. Although he pledged no witch-hunt, he also spoke of the
need for a "clear judgment which accords with the norms of international
human rights". (Folha de São Paulo, 15 April) Eighty officers are under
arrest and will face military tribunals. The military high command is being
restructured with supporters of Chávez in senior positions. General Montoya has
been appointed commander in chief. Folha de São Paulo also speculated that the
decision to accept the resignation of PVDSA managers appointed by him was so
that the "Venezuelan president would be able to begin the process of
restructuring the entire management".
Chávez will probably vacillate between conciliatory and
more radical positions as he comes under pressure from the different classes. It
is possible, however, that following this crisis Chávez will be forced in an
even more radical direction and strike important blows against capitalism and
imperialism.
Workers’ action needed
AN IMPORTANT LESSON is provided by the Portuguese
revolution. An attempted coup by General Antonio de Spinola in March 1975 drove
the revolutionary process much further to the left. Bank workers occupied the
banks, compelling the government to nationalise them. Up to 70% of the economy
was nationalised and the British daily, The Times, carried a headline:
"Capitalism is Dead in Portugal". However, the failure to totally
eliminate capitalism and establish a democratic socialist plan of production and
a workers’ government eventually allowed capitalism to recover its weakened
position and regain control of Portuguese society.
Chávez has spoken of the plight of the poor and denounced
neo-liberal policies. For this he has won the support of the most downtrodden in
Venezuela. Unfortunately, his Bolivarian revolution and its populist programme
are not about breaking with capitalism and establishing a workers’ democracy
and socialism.
This imposes severe limitations on what reforms his
government will be able to introduce to benefit the mass of the population. It
will not be possible for Chávez to end the poverty and exploitation which he
sincerely opposes. He will be pushed to take back with the right hand what he
has given with the left hand. The inability to solve the fundamental economic
and social problems will be used by the ruling class to undermine his support.
In order to build socialism it is necessary that the working
class democratically controls and plans society. Workers can play this decisive
role in the socialist revolution because of the collective consciousness and
experience they develop working in the factories and workplaces. Unfortunately,
Chávez regards the masses as a lever to pressure for reform and to support his
programme, which is then implemented from above. In a sympathetic biography on
Chávez – In the Shadow of the Liberator – Richard Gott recounts a meeting
to plan the 1992 attempted coup, which Chávez led. The questions of calling a
general strike and mass participation were raised. "Civilians get in the
way", was Chávez’s blunt response. Such a dismissive attitude cannot
take the revolution forward.
It is now more urgent than ever that the mass movement goes
onto the offensive. The lessons of this crisis and what now needs to be done
will be debated by activists throughout Venezuela and Latin America. The
essential lesson is the urgent need for a revolutionary socialist programme and
concrete steps to overthrow capitalism and the ruling elite.
The most pressing task is establishing independent
committees of the workers, urban poor, peasants, youth and rank-and-file
soldiers. They should be elected by assemblies and subject to recall. These
committees should link up on a city-wide, regional and national basis, and
establish armed defence units to thwart any further coup attempt.
These committees should form the basis of a workers’ and
peasants’ government. This government should nationalise the major monopolies,
banks and financial companies – national and foreign – and introduce a
system of democratic workers’ control and management. All officials should be
elected and subject to recall and receive the average wage of a skilled worker.
It is clear that the senior officers cannot be trusted.
Rank-and-file soldiers’ committees need to be formed. Officers should be
elected by rank-and-file soldiers and subject to immediate recall. A full
investigation into the planning and execution of the attempted coup should be
organised by popular tribunals and all those implicated brought to trial.
These steps must be linked with an appeal for solidarity
from the working class throughout Latin America around a programme to establish
a voluntary socialist federation of the continent. The call needs to go out for
solidarity from the working class and youth in the USA and against the
hypocritical government of Bush. Building an independent mass party of the
working class to fight for such a programme is now an urgent necessity in
Venezuela. If these steps are not taken, the threat of reaction and another coup
will arise again. This opportunity must not be lost.
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