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Donald Trump is preparing the ground for military
intervention in Venezuela. He is working closely with the
leader of the far right opposition, Juan Guaido, who has
proclaimed himself President.
Trump has recognised Guaido as the legitimate President of
the county and has refused to withdraw US diplomats when the
country’s current leader, Nicholas Maduro, ordered them to
leave. Any attempt to physically remove them will be used by
Trump as a pretext for military intervention.
Trump claims to be acting in the name of ‘freedom and the
rule of law’. But this is a man who has imprisoned thousands
of Central American children in cages. He has currently shut
down the US government because he wants to build out a wall
– to keep out Venezuelans, Mexicans, Colombians and more,
who he implies are rapists or criminals.
The US has a long history of overthrowing regimes in Latin
America and backing right wing dictators. It helped
overthrow the Allende regime in Chile in 1972 and backed the
Pinochet dictatorship which murdered thousands of prisoners.
It backed a coup in Argentina which brought General Videla
to power and with him the disappearance of 30,000 victims.
It supported a military coup in Brazil in 1964 to ‘prevent
it becoming another Cuba’. It overthrew the Arbenz
government in Guatemala because it dared nationalise
plantation runs by the United Fruit Company.
The last thing that Venezuela needs is another US sponsored
coup. Trump’s pretexts for intervention are also fabricated.
He says he wants ‘freedom’ for Venezuela but he supports the
brutal regime in Saudi Arabia, even after its murder Jamal
Khashoggi and its role in Yemen.
He says that Maduro was not elected by the majority of his
people – but neither was Trump. He lost the popular vote to
Hillary Clinton – but no other country proclaimed her as the
legitimate President.
There have been a series of elections in Venezuela, which
have been conducted with at least the same degree of
fairness as in the US. The right wing opposition won control
of the National Assembly but later boycotted a Presidential
election won by Maduro. In regional elections for state
governors held in 2017, the right wing opposition predicted
they would get 90% of the vote – in fact the governing PSUV
took 18 out of the 23 governorships on a 54% poll.
None of this, however, means that the Maduro government
commands mass popular support today because the economy is
in free fall. Inflation in Venezuela has gone over 700%;
there are shortages of medical supplies and many face
malnutrition. One dramatic indicator of the crisis is that
an estimated 2 million people have fled the country.
The population is caught between an increasingly
authoritarian regime and a vicious right wing opposition who
have engaged in violent attacks to overthrow it. During the
last round of right wing inspired rebellions, 140 people
died. The opposition supports the rich and privileged in
Venezuela who look on the poor with disdain. They hate the
fact that Chavez ran social programmes to distribute oil
profits to the poorest districts.
The Venezuelan tragedy is being used by right wing
politicians all over the world to claim that it shows that
socialism fails. But nothing could be further from the
truth. The Venezuelan experiment did not go far enough in
establishing popular power and uprooting the controls
exercised by the wealthy over the economy. Here is a brief
explanation of how this occurred.
Venezuela has always been a deeply divided society but the
current period began when Hugo Chavez, a left wing army
officer, won an election in 1999. In 2002 the right wing
staged a coup against Chavez and briefly put into power a
business leader, Carmona. However, the poor rose up against
the coup and restored Chavez to officer, the events of which
are brilliantly in an Irish documentary The Revolution will
not be televised- Chavez: Inside the Coup. This in turn
helped to unleash a wider revolutionary dynamic against the
Venezuelan elite.
Chavez turned even more dramatically leftwards and began to
talk of building ‘21st century socialism’. This, in contrast
to the USSR model, was to be democratic and to be based on
grassroots participation. He used funds from the public
owned oil companies to distribute money to the poor. These
was organised through ‘Bolivarian Missions’ (named after the
liberator, Simon Bolivar) and these brought extra resources
for education, health and cultural activities to the
barrios.
However, Chavez himself recognizsed that this was a form of
redistribution – rather than socialism. Just before he died,
he wrote:
‘We shouldn’t let ourselves be deceived: the social and
economic system that still prevails in Venezuela is a
capitalist and rentier system.’
‘In order to move towards socialism, we need a people’s
power capable of disarticulating the oppression,
exploitation and domination plots that still exist in the
Venezuelan society. People’s power should be able to shape
up new social relations in our everyday life, where
fraternity and solidarity go hand in hand with the continued
emergence of new forms of planning and production of
material wealth for our people. To achieve that, it is
necessary to completely pulverize the bourgeois state that
we have inherited, which is still being replicated through
its old and nefarious practices, and ensure continuity in
the process of creation of new forms of policy management.’
Socialism implies more than mere re-distribution – it means
the taking of control of factories, offices and the wider
economy by working people. It cannot be handed down by
military officers or a guerrilla leader , no matter how left
wing they sound, but must be built by the mass of people
themselves. It is to Chavez’s credit that he partially
recognized this.
Even during his time, three problems began to emerge to
haunt the process he had begun:
The country became even more dependent on oil exports. Today
95% of Venezuela’s external income comes from oil, as
opposed to 67% twenty years ago. When oil prices collapsed,
the economy got into severe difficulties.
The Bolivarian revolution did not uproot the power of the
rich clans – the Capriles, Cohen, Otero Silva, Baute – who
dominated its society. In particular, private interests were
able to keep control the importation of food. They could get
a hold of dollars at very cheap rates – and then make huge
profits on the sale of food in the local currency inside
Venezuela.
Within a deeply corrupt state, a Chavista bureaucracy
emerged to thwart popular will. This became obvious when the
peasants tried to seize land or when workers wanted to take
control of their factories. The state bureaucracy, including
elements which pretended to support Chavez, stopped them.
On top of these problems the Obama regime in the US began to
impose sanctions on Venezuela, which Trump then intensified
when he took office. To go forward, Venezuela needed to
deepen the revolution – and seek to spread it to the Latin
American countries.
The tragedy is that Chavez’s successor is doing the
opposite. Faced with a chaotic situation, Maduro has
attempted to appease sections of the rich and the military
generals, even when they despise him. One example suffices
to show the direction:
The Arco Minero region is the equivalent to Venezuela’s
Amazon. It makes up 12 percent of the national territory and
has a surfeit of minerals, oil and gas. It is also the main
source of fresh water. While he was alive, Chavez refused to
allow exploration companies to exploit the region for
environmental reasons.
Maduro, however, invited in Barrick, a giant Canadian
company and even paid them compensation for previous
expropriations. He has offered them a ten year tax holiday –
all in the hope of bringing in more foreign investment. In
reality, these types of moves have only deepened the
economic chaos.
The Venezuela experience contains important lessons for
socialists all over the world.
First, we can never underestimate the determination,
brutality and sabotage that the rich will engage in to stop
any attempt – no matter how mild –to tamper with their
privileges. When they have no success in their own
countries, they will call in their Big Brother in the White
House.
Second, defeating them means continuing and deepening a
revolutionary process. Rather than halting at expressions of
loyalty to a left wing hero, working people must take
matters into their own hands to take over the wealth. Never
again must banks, food importers or key industries be left
in the hands of the rich.
We will always have to take forward the fight until we
uproot a brutal system based on exploitation and violence.

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