Time
for the International Left to Take a Stand on
Venezuela
By
Gregory Wilpert
July 16, 2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- The mainstream media consistently fails to
report who is instigating the violence in this
conflict.
Venezuela is heading towards an increasingly
dangerous situation, in which open civil war
could become a real possibility. So far over 100
people have been killed as a result of street
protests, most of these deaths are the fault of
the protesters themselves (to the extent that we
know the cause).
The possibility of civil war becomes more likely
as long as the international media obscure who
is responsible for the violence and the
international left remains on the sidelines in
this conflict and fails to show solidarity with
the Bolivarian socialist movement in Venezuela.
If the international left receives its news
about Venezuela primarily from the international
media, it is understandable why it is being so
quiet. After all, this mainstream media
consistently fails to report who is instigating
the violence in this conflict.
For example, a follower of CNN or the New
York Times would not know that of the 103 who
have been killed as a result of street protests,
27 were the direct or indirect result of the
protesters themselves. Another 14 were the
result of lootings; in one prominent case,
because looters set fire to a store and ended up
getting engulfed in the flames themselves.
Fourteen deaths are attributable to the actions
of state authorities (where in almost all cases
those responsible have been charged), and 44 are
still under investigation or in dispute. This is
according to data from the office of the
Attorney General, which itself has recently
become pro-opposition.
Also unknown to most consumers of the
international media would be that opposition
protesters detonated a bomb in the heart of
Caracas on July 11, wounding seven National
Guard soldiers or that a building belonging to
the Supreme Court was burnt by opposition
protesters on June 12th or that opposition
protesters attacked a maternity hospital on May
17.
In other words, it is possible that much of
the international left has been misled about the
violence in Venezuela; thinking that the
government is the only one responsible, that
President Nicolas Maduro has declared himself to
be dictator for life (though he has actually
confirmed that the presidential elections
scheduled for late 2018 will proceed as
planned), or that all dissent is punishable with
prison (disputed by major opposition leader,
Leopoldo Lopez – who was partly responsible for
the post-election violence in 2014 – recently
being released from prison and placed under
house arrest).
If this is the reason for the silence on
Venezuela, then the left should be ashamed for
not having read its own critiques of the
mainstream media.
All of the foregoing does not contradict that
there are plenty of places where one might
criticize the Maduro Government for having made
mistakes with regard to how it has handled the
current situation, both economically and
politically. However, criticisms – of which I
have made several myself – do not justify taking
either a neutral or pro-opposition stance in
this momentous conflict. As South African
anti-apartheid activist Desmond Tutu once said,
“If you are neutral in situations of injustice,
you have chosen the side of the oppressor.”
Perhaps the Venezuelan case is also confusing
to outsiders because President Maduro is in
power and the opposition is not. It could thus
be difficult to see the opposition as being an
“oppressor.”
However, for an internationalist left, it
should not be so confusing. After all, the
opposition in Venezuela receives significant
support not only from private businesses but
also the U.S. Government, the international
right and transnational capital.
Perhaps progressives feel that the Maduro
Government has lost all democratic legitimacy
and that this is why they cannot support it.
According to the mainstream media coverage,
Maduro canceled regional elections scheduled for
December 2016, prevented the recall referendum
from happening and neutralized the National
Assembly.
Let’s take a brief look at each of these
claims one by one.
First, regional elections (state governors
and mayors) were indeed supposed to take place
in late 2016, but the National Electoral Council
(CNE) postponed them with the argument that
political parties needed to re-register first.
Leaving aside the validity of this argument, the
CNE rescheduled the elections recently for
December 2017. This postponement of a scheduled
election is not unprecedented in Venezuela
because it happened before, back in 2004, when
local elections were postponed for a full year.
Back then, at the height of President Hugo
Chavez’s power; hardly anyone objected.
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As for the recall referendum, it was well
known that it would take approximately ten
months to organize between its initiation and
its culmination. However, the opposition
initiated the process in April 2016, far too
late for the referendum to take place in 2016 as
they wanted. If it takes place in 2017, there
would be no new presidential election –
according to the constitution – and the
vice-president would take over for the remainder
of the term.
Finally, with regard to the disqualification of
the National Assembly, this was another
self-inflicted wound on the part of the
opposition. That is, even though the opposition
had won 109 out of 167 seats (65%) outright,
they insisted on swearing in three opposition
members whose election was in dispute because of
fraud claims.
As a
result, the Supreme Court ruled that until these
three members are removed, most decisions of the
national assembly would not be valid.
In
other words, none of the arguments against the
democratic legitimacy of the Maduro Government
hold much water. Moreover, polls repeatedly
indicate that even though Maduro is fairly
unpopular, a majority of Venezuelans want him to
finish his term in office, which expires in
January 2019. As a matter of fact, Maduro’s
popularity (24% in March, 2017) is not as low as
several other conservative presidents in Latin
America at the moment, such as that of Mexico’s
Enrique Pena Nieto (17% in March, 2017),
Brazil’s Michel Temer (7% in June, 2017) or
Colombia’s Juan Manuel Santos (14% in June,
2017).
Now that we have addressed the possible reasons
the international left has been reluctant to
show solidarity with the Maduro Government and
the Bolivarian socialist movement, we need to
examine what “neutrality” in this situation
would end up meaning – in other words, what
allowing the opposition to come to power via an
illegal and violent transition would mean.
First
and foremost, their coming to power will almost
certainly mean that all Chavistas – whether they
currently support President Maduro or not – will
become targets for persecution. Although it was
a long time ago, many Chavistas have not
forgotten the “Caracazo” – when in February
1989, then-president Carlos Andres Perez meted
out retaliation on poor neighborhoods for
protesting against his government and wantonly
killed somewhere between 400 and 1,000 people.
More recently, during a short-lived coup against
President Chávez in April 2002 the current
opposition showed it was more than willing to
unleash reprisals against Chavistas.
Most do
not know this, but during the two-day coup over
60 Chavistas were killed in Venezuela – not
including the 19 killed, on both sides of the
political divide, in the lead-up to the coup.
The post-election violence of April 2013 left 7
dead, and the Guarimbas of February to April
2014 left 43 dead. Although the death count in
each of these cases represented a mix of
opposition supporters, Chavistas and
non-involved bystanders; the majority belonged
to the Chavista side of the political divide.
Now,
during the most recent wave of guarimbas, there
have also been several incidents in which a
Chavista, who was near an opposition protest,
was chased and killed because protesters
recognized them to be a Chavista in some way.
In
other words, the danger that Chavistas will be
generally persecuted if the opposition should
take over the government is very real. Even
though the opposition includes reasonable
individuals who would not support such a
persecution, the current leadership of the
opposition has done nothing to rein in the
fascist tendencies within its own ranks. If
anything, they have encouraged these tendencies.
Second,
even though the opposition has not published a
concrete plan for what it intends to do once in
government – which is also one of the reasons
the opposition remains almost as unpopular as
the government – individual statements by
opposition leaders indicate that they would
immediately proceed to implement a neoliberal
economic program along the lines of President
Michel Temer in Brazil or Mauricio Macri in
Argentina. They might succeed in reducing
inflation and shortages this way, but at the
expense of eliminating subsidies and social
programs for the poor across the board. Also,
they would roll back all of the policies
supporting communal councils and communes that
have been a cornerstone of participatory
democracy in the Bolivarian revolution.
So,
instead of silence, neutrality or indecision
from the international left in the current
conflict in Venezuela, what is needed is active
solidarity with the Bolivarian socialist
movement. Such solidarity means vehemently
opposing all efforts to overthrow the government
of President Maduro during his current term in
office. Aside from the patent illegality that
overthrowing the Maduro Government would
represent, it would also literally be a deadly
blow to Venezuela’s socialist movement and to
the legacy of President Chavez. The
international left does not even need to take a
position on whether the proposed constitutional
assembly or negotiations with the opposition is
the best way to resolve the current crisis. That
is really up to Venezuelans to decide. Opposing
intervention and disseminating information on
what is actually happening in Venezuela, though,
are the two things where non-Venezuelans can
play a constructive role.
Gregory Wilpert is the author of Changing
Venezuela by Taking Power: The History and
Policies of the Chávez Government (Verso Books,
2007)
This
article was first published by
teleSUR
-
The
views expressed in this article are solely those
of the author and do not necessarily reflect the
opinions of Information Clearing House.