Venezuela Gets a Hand from Nimble Castro
By Moises Naim
Originally published in the Financial
Times, on January 21, 2003
Oil and beauty queens: for decades, those were the only stories
from Venezuela to catch the attention of the international media. Now, with
its oil industry paralysed, the economy in free fall and President Hugo Chávez
stepping up his Bolivarian revolution, Venezuela's disintegration is a story
the world can no longer ignore.
The greatest surprise of the crisis is how little Washington
has mattered. Fidel Castro's Cuba - small, poor and isolated - has been far
more influential in Caracas than George W. Bush's mighty US. Indeed, few episodes
better illustrate the limits of US power than the outmanoeuvring of Uncle
Sam by Fidel in a country that is one of the largest suppliers of oil to the
US.
While the US government was once closely involved in any Latin
American political intrigue, it now seems strangely slow to appreciate what
is happening in its back yard. In only a few years President Chávez
has transformed one of most reliable partners of the US in South America into
one of its most adversarial neighbours. Last year, and despite common perceptions
to the contrary, the US was taken by surprise when a cabal of military officers
and business leaders hijacked a massive civil protest in Caracas and ousted
Mr Chávez - albeit briefly.
The clumsy, anti-democratic behaviour of the plotters and the
swift, effective reaction of Mr Chavez's supporters returned the president
to power, leaving White House spokesmen spluttering awkwardly about their
hesitation to condemn the coup unequivocally. More recently, Washington was
caught unawares by the strike that is blocking exports of Venezuelan oil,
just as the US prepares for war in Iraq.
Following the terrorist attacks of September 11 2001, Latin
America all but disappeared from the map of top US policymakers. Without Islamic
terrorists and nuclear capabilities, the region could not compete for attention.
Moreover, as long as Mr Chávez, a thuggish but democratically elected
president, did nothing to trigger an international reaction or threaten US
interests, the options for intervention available to even a superpower were
very limited. Washington's authority was further curtailed by its hesitant
and ambiguous reaction to the attempted coup, a reaction denounced by Democrats
in the US Congress.
In contrast, Cuba's attention to Venezuela has been sustained
and effective. There is no foreign policy goal more fundamental to Cuba's
economic well-being than ensuring that Mr Chávez stays in power. Venezuela's
oil, sold at highly advantageous terms to Cuba, is an important reason but
not the only one. An alliance with Venezuela has helped Cuba to ease the political
and economic stranglehold the US has maintained since the collapse of the
Soviet Union. Indeed, Venezuelan air force pilots report that the equivalent
of an airlift between Caracas and Havana has been established.
The Cuban regime is extending its influence by sending thousands
of government employees - among the health workers and sports trainers are
intelligence officers - to Venezuela for extended periods. Meanwhile, large
numbers of Mr Chávez's supporters are being sent to the island for
training. Commenting on the aborted coup, one European ambassador in Caracas
said: "I don't know which was a bigger factor in returning Chávez
to power - the ineptitude of his enemies or the effectiveness of the Cubans
- but I do know that both played a role."
Havana has the motives and means to prop up the Venezuelan leader.
Its intelligence is highly active and effective. The US authorities believe
the Cuban secret service has infiltrated some of the most sensitive intelligence
facilities in the US. Historically, Cuban agents either were directly involved
or had front-row seats in almost all the revolutions, coups and guerrilla
movements in the developing world.
Cuban diplomacy supported by Venezuelan oil money has also made
significant inroads in the island nations of the Caribbean, which control
an influential voting bloc in the Organisation of American States. Such ties
may well complicate the organisation's role as mediator in the talks between
Mr Chávez and the opposition.
The Venezuelan crisis can be solved only by Venezuelans. But,
as the crisis deepens, the role of other countries will be crucial. The world's
last remaining superpower will have to avoid being outsmarted again by the
western hemisphere's sole cold war dictator.
The writer is a former minister of trade and industry in Venezuela
and is editor of Foreign Policy magazine