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Hugo
Chavez: revolutionary socialist or leftwing reformist?
For
years, the Left in Britain and elsewhere, have sung the praises of
Fidel Castro and Che Guevara, ready always to defend the “gains”
of the Cuban revolution as that country withstood everything the US
had to throw at it. Now there is a new revolutionary on the block,
cast in the Castro mould, flicking the V’s
at Western imperialists as he implements social reform after social
reform and, like Castro, wining the applause of radicals around the
world. His name is Hugo Chavez, President of Venezuela, and he is the
mastermind of the country’s “socialist”
revolution, presenting the “threat of the
good example” that continues to panic the
USA.
It
is understandable why the left love him when he is regularly heard
mouthing slogans and making the kind of demands you normally see in
papers like Socialist Worker. Addressing
the 2005 World Social Forum in Porto Alegre, Brazil, earlier this
year Chavez said:
“It
is impossible, within the framework of the capitalist system to solve
the grave problems of poverty of the majority of the world’s
population. We must transcend capitalism. But we cannot resort to
state capitalism, which would be the same perversion of the Soviet
Union. We must reclaim socialism as a thesis, a project and a path, a
new type of socialism, a humanist one, which puts humans and not
machines or the state ahead of everything. That’s the debate we
must promote around the world, and the WSF is a good place to do it.”
By
all accounts, Chavez was not inebriated or stoned when he made this
statement. He was sober and deadly serious. He had never talked
about much socialism before, only about being a “Bolivarian”, a
humanist and a supporter of the Cuban revolution. But now he bandies
the word “socialism” around with the glee of a five year old
learning a new schoolyard profanity, and regularly mentions Marx,
Trotsky and Rosa Luxemburg.
“Socialism”
is the buzzword of Venezuela’s “Bolivarian Revolution” (so
called after Simon Bolivar who led the army that freed Venezuela from
Spanish rule). It is a word Chavez is keen to expunge of what he sees
as its negative connotations, namely state capitalism – despite the
fact that he seems unclear just what is meant by the term. Speaking
recently to senior heads of the country’s military, Chavez asked
that they carry the question of socialism ”into the barracks”, to
initiate debate and to reassess everything they had hitherto been
told about socialism and to help strengthen the ideological
offensive.
In
the TV programme Alo Presidente, broadcast on 1 September, he
pleaded for Venezuelans to “leave to one side the ghosts with which
the idea of socialism has been associated” and revealed the result
of an independent opinion poll carried out in May and June. He
informed his country that 47.9 percent said they preferred a
‘socialist government’, that 25.7 percent said they preferred a
capitalist government and that some 25 percent were yet to respond.
Since
Hugo Chavez declared that the way forward for Venezuela was to steer
towards socialism, this has turned into the main debate within the
“revolutionary Bolivarian” movement, and society generally
Reforms
Chavez’s
heart may be in the right place, even if he is somewhat muddled as to
the meaning of the word “socialism,” and he may well have decent
intentions. But his “socialist” agenda amounts to little more
than one vast reformist programme that is largely being financed by
the country’s oil, which is currently selling for five times its
1999 price.
The
generous profits from oil price rises have gone into financing
programmes to improve health, provide cheap food, extend educational
access, and to organise some land reform. Chavez has initiated
operations aimed at ending poverty and improving the economic and
cultural lives of Venezuelans. He is keen on educating the population
via literacy drives. He is re-nationalising universities and building
new housing. The state has taken over some sections of industry and a
TV station has been set up to transmit the “socialist” ideas of
the Bolivarian “revolution”.
While
Chavez faces a lot of opposition in urban centres, it is clear why,
in the poor working class shanties surrounding the city, support for
the government is vocal and widespread.
Cooperatives
Chavez,
is also keen on workers’ cooperatives. In his 1 September TV
broadcast he pointed out that the kind of cooperative he is proposing
is one that “generates collective wealth through joint labour,
going beyond the capitalist model which promotes individualism”. If
company owners found the going difficult, he said, the state was
prepared to come to their aid with low interest credit, though on the
understanding that “the employers give workers participation in
management, the direction and the profits of the company.” And
which capitalist could resist that offer? Chavez observed that 700
closed companies had been identified with a view to expropriation;
that many had assets and the machinery ready to start producing.
Expropriation
comes at a cost to worker organisation however. The first company to
be taken over was the paper mill Venepal, now renamed Invepal. There,
union leaders broke up the union – against the better advice
of others in the trade union movement – and now look forward to
buying out the state’s stake in the company so they will have sole
control over company and profits. Overnight, former militant trade
unionists have turned into aspiring capitalists.
As
far as the US is concerned with Venezuela, the “good example”
that the “Bolivarian revolution” poses is the least of their
problems at the moment. The real concern stems from the fact that
Venezuela has considerable oil wealth. Venezuela is the fifth largest
oil exporter in the world – 13 per cent of the world’s oil comes
out of the country – and Chavez controls the largest oil supplies
outside of the Middle East.
At
a time of rising oil prices, instability in the Middle East, and with
China emerging as a major challenge to US economic interests in the
near future, Chavez earlier this year signed an agreement with
China's vice president Zeng Qinghong, smoothing the way for the
Chinese National Petroleum Corporation to invest in the development
of Venezuelan oil and gas reserves. Chavez further agreed to sell
fuel and crude oil to China at reduced prices to compensate the high
shipping costs of oil to East Asia.
Moreover,
Caracas recently signed up to a much publicized agreement for a
group of sales reps from the Venezuelan state oil company to be
trained by Iranian experts on strategies for penetrating the Asian
market.
And
who else does Chavez cosy up to? None other than arch enemy of US
conservatism Fidel Castro. In the past two years, Venezuela has
supplied Cuba with vital shipments of subsidized oil to ease the
country’s perpetually faltering energy and transport systems, and
in return Cuba has sent an army of professionals to Venezuela to help
the ongoing social programmes, inclusive of 14,000 doctors, 3,000
dentists, 1,500 eye specialists and 7,000 sports trainers.
And
then there are Venezuela’s recent arms purchases – 40 helicopters
from Russia, attack light aircraft and 100,000 Kalashnikovs from
Brazil – which will no doubt provide the Bush regime with the
excuse to channel still more weaponry to neighbouring Colombia,
escalating regional tension and the likelihood of future instability.
Little
wonder the US is becoming a mite anxious at the ongoing antics of the
Latin American upstart Chavez. And just to make matters a little more
precarious, Chavez has repeatedly made it plain that if the US starts
flexing its muscles at Venezuela then he would not hesitate to cut of
all oil exports to the USA.
Pat
Robertson, tele-evangelist, entrepreneur, one-time presidential
candidate and close friend of the Bush family, undoubtedly expressed
the sentiments of many US neo-cons when, speaking on his TV show on
22 August, he referred to Chavez as “a dangerous enemy to our
south, controlling a huge pool of oil, that could hurt us badly”.
He
went on: “You know, I don’t know about this doctrine of
assassination, but if he [Chavez] thinks we’re trying to
assassinate him, I think that we really ought to go ahead and do it.
It’s a whole lot cheaper than starting a war, and I don’t think
any oil shipments will stop.”
Acknowledging
that the US had the ability to bump Chavez off, Robertson continued:
“I think that the time has come that we exercise that ability. We
don’t need another $200 billion war to get rid of one, you know,
strong-arm dictator. It’s a whole lot easier to have some of the
covert operatives do the job and then get it over with.”
Robertson’s
“un-Christian” outburst quickly brought condemnation from the
Republican hierarchy, keen to keep Bush away from further criticism.
Whilst Robertson may claim not to know “about this doctrine of
assassination”, the simple fact is that consecutive US governments
have attempted, arranged or supported the elimination of scores of
leaders around the world. That Chavez has lasted so long is
undoubtedly due to the international attention he has attracted of
late.
Not
Socialist
Venezuela
is no nearer socialism than Russia was when it claimed to have
established it. Not only is it the case that it is impossible to
establish socialism in one country, but it could never be established
by a leader. If Chavez can take his country into socialism, which is
downright absurd, then some other leader could just as easily lead
them out of it again. Similarly, the reforms he has implemented could
be taken away the moment he is removed from office.
Despite
his popularity amongst the poor that could well carry him to another
electoral victory next year and assure Venezuela of another six years
of Bolivarian reformism, Chavez is compelled by circumstances to
govern within the confines of capitalism..
The
country still has a monetary system. The banks and big business,
particularly oil interests, are still in private hands. There have
been no seizures of land. International oil companies have bent over
backwards to provide new investment, in spite of Venezuela having
increased the royalties that they have to pay. There is still
commodity production, still exploitation, still trade on the terms
laid down by international capital and still armed forces ready top
defend the economic interests of Venezuela’s capitalist class.
JOHN
BISSETT
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