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Council On Hemispheric Affairs |
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Monitoring Political, Economic and Diplomatic Issues Affecting the Western Hemisphere |
Tuesday,
August 23, 2005
Breaking News From COHA
Robertson Advises Bush to Take Already Self-Destructive Vendetta Against Chávez to an Outrageous Extreme
U.S. Policy Toward Venezuela: Playing With Oil, Playing With Trade, Playing With Fire
Radical right-wing Christian
broadcaster Pat Robertson took the future of U.S. diplomacy in South
America into his own hands Monday night when he urged the U.S. government
to assassinate Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez. In a widely
viewed broadcast of his television show, The 700 Club, Robertson
characterized Chávez as a “terrific danger” to U.S.
interests abroad and accused him of turning Venezuela into “a launching
pad for Communist infiltration and Muslim extremism all over the continent.” Robertson’s
comments devolved from baseless to inflammatory when he blatantly called
for the Venezuelan leader’s assassination, urging, “We
have the ability to take him out, and I think the time has come that
we exercise
that ability.”
The Bush administration has denied that it plans to assassinate Chávez,
but it is quite clear that the U.S. hopes to topple Venezuela’s democratically-elected
leader. In fact, Robertson’s incendiary language mimicked the equally
irresponsible rhetoric directed at Chávez by Secretary of State
Rice, Secretary of Defense Rumsfeld and even President Bush himself, who
have accused the
Venezuelan leader of “destabilizing” other Latin American countries.
Unsurprisingly, none of the administration’s charges have been
backed up by even a sliver of credible evidence.
It is possible that Washington hopes to use its unsubstantiated allegations
to prepare the groundwork for another attempted coup of Chávez,
just as it utilized false claims that he stole the 1998 presidential election
to help hatch the failed attempt to overthrow the Venezuelan president
in 2002. Such anti-Chávez odium on behalf of the U.S. administration
does not reflect legitimate derelictions on Chávez’s part.
Instead, it represents Washington’s distaste for his friendship with
Cuban leader Fidel Castro, which has absorbed 95 percent of the attention
that the U.S. addresses to Latin America. It also echoes the Bush administration’s
discomfort with the Venezuelan president’s vision to make the region
less hospitable to multinational corporations, create difficulties for
international lending institutions such as the IMF, open Latin American
crude oil reserves to new clients like China, discard the U.S.-backed
FTAA in favor of MERCOSUR and apply the brakes to the U.S.’ neo-liberal
development model.
Further revealing the Bush administration’s subversive agenda in
Venezuela, Congress recently passed legislation to ensure that slanted
U.S. media broadcasts – such as Robertson’s crackpot commentary – infiltrate
Venezuela’s airwaves. Though the State Department has disassociated
itself from Robertson’s unfounded and outrageous comments, the Bush
administration’s unsavory track record in Venezuela betrays its agreement
with his arrogant perspective. It will take more than a few quick words
at a State Department press briefing to subdue the fires of anti-American
sentiment that gave rise to Chávez’s widespread popularity
and have isolated the U.S. from the rest of the western hemisphere.
This commentary was prepared by COHA Research Associates Teddy Chestnut
and Jessie Gaskell.
For more information,
see COHA’s recent press releases on Venezuela: "Look
out Telenovelas, Telesur is in Town" authored
by COHA Research Associates Melissa Nepomiachi and Daniel Pacheco, "Rumsfeld
and Rice on Chávez: But Where’s the Beef?" authored
by COHA Research Associate Hampden Macbeth and "Álo
Presidente Hugo Chávez: Latin America's Rising Superstar" authored
by COHA Research Fellow Sarah E. Schaffer and COHA Research Associate
Teddy Chestnut.
Memorandum
to the Press 05.99
August
23, 2005
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