Venezuelas D-Day: The December 2, 2007 Constituent Referendum
by James Petras
On November 26, 2007 the Venezuelan government broadcast and circulated a confidential memo from the US embassy to the CIA which is devastatingly revealing of US clandestine operations and which will influence the referendum this Sunday (December 2, 2007).
The memo sent by an embassy official, Michael Middleton Steere, was addressed to the head of the CIA, Michael Hayden. The memo was entitled Advancing to the Last Phase of Operation Pincer and updates the activity by a CIA unit with the acronym HUMINT (Human Intelligence) which is engaged in clandestine action to destabilize the forth-coming referendum and coordinate the civil military overthrow of the elected Chavez government.
Democratic Socialism or
Imperial Counter-Revolution
The Embassy-CIAs polls concede that 57% of the voters approved
of the constitutional amendments proposed by Chavez but also predicted
a 60% abstention.
The US operatives emphasized their capacity
to recruit former Chavez supporters among the social democrats
(PODEMOS) and the former Minister of Defense Baduel, claiming to have
reduced the yes vote by 6% from its original margin. Nevertheless the
Embassy operatives concede that they have reached their ceiling,
recognizing they cannot defeat the amendments via the electoral route.
The
memo then recommends that Operation Pincer (OP) [Operación Tenaza] be
operationalized. OP involves a two-pronged strategy of impeding the
referendum, rejecting the outcome at the same time as calling for a
no vote. The run up to the referendum includes running phony polls,
attacking electoral officials and running propaganda through the
private media accusing the government of fraud and calling for a no
vote. Contradictions, the report cynically emphasizes, are of no matter.
The
CIA-Embassy reports internal division and recriminations among the
opponents of the amendments including several defections from their
umbrella group. The key and most dangerous threats to democracy
raised by the Embassy memo point to their success in mobilizing the
private university students (backed by top administrators) to attack
key government buildings including the Presidential Palace, Supreme
Court and the National Electoral Council. The Embassy is especially
praiseworthy of the ex-Maoist Red Flag group for its violent street
fighting activity. Ironically, small Trotskyist sects and their trade
unionists join the ex-Maoists in opposing the constitutional
amendments. The Embassy, while discarding their Marxist rhetoric,
perceives their opposition as fitting in with their overall strategy.
The
ultimate objective of Operation Pincer is to seize a territorial or
institutional base with the massive support of the defeated electoral
minority within three or four days (before or after the elections is
not clear. JP) backed by an uprising by oppositionist military officers
principally in the National Guard. The Embassy operative concede that
the military plotters have run into serous problems as key intelligence
operatives were detected, stores of arms were decommissioned and
several plotters are under tight surveillance.
Apart from the
deep involvement of the US, the primary organization of the Venezuelan
business elite (FEDECAMARAS), as well as all the major private
television, radio and newspaper outlets have been engaged in a vicious
fear and intimidation campaign. Food producers, wholesale and retail
distributors have created artificial shortages of basic food items and
have provoked large scale capital flight to sow chaos in the hopes of
reaping a no vote.
President Chavez Counter-Attacks
In a
speech to pro-Chavez, pro-amendment nationalist business-people
(Entrepreneurs for Venezuela EMPREVEN) Chavez warned the President of
FEDECAMARAS that if he continues to threaten the government with a
coup, he would nationalize all their business affiliates. With the
exception of the Trotskyist and other sects, the vast majority of
organized workers, peasants, small farmers, poor neighborhood councils,
informal self-employed and public school students have mobilized and
demonstrated in favor of the constitutional amendments.
The
reason for the popular majority is found in a few of the key
amendments: One article expedites land expropriation facilitating
re-distribution to the landless and small producers. Chavez has already
settled over 150,000 landless workers on 2 million acres of land.
Another amendment provides universal social security coverage for the
entire informal sector (street sellers, domestic workers,
self-employed) amounting to 40% of the labor force. Organized and
unorganized workers workweek will be reduced from 40 to 36 hours a
week (Monday to Friday noon) with no reduction in pay. Open admission
and universal free higher education will open greater educational
opportunities for lower class students. Amendments will allow the
government to by-pass current bureaucratic blockage of the
socialization of strategic industries, thus creating greater employment
and lower utility costs. Most important, an amendment will increase the
power and budget of neighborhood councils to legislate and invest in
their communities.
The electorate supporting the constitutional
amendments is voting in favor of their socio-economic and class
interests; the issue of extended re-election of the President is not
high on their priorities: And that is the issue that the Right has
focused on in calling Chavez a dictator and the referendum a coup.
The Opposition
With
strong financial backing from the US Embassy ($8 million dollars in
propaganda alone according to the Embassy memo) and the business elite
and free time by the right-wing media, the Right has organized a
majority of the upper middle class students from the private
universities, backed by the Catholic Church hierarchy, large swaths of
the affluent middle class neighborhoods, entire sectors of the
commercial, real estate and financial middle classes and apparently
sectors of the military, especially officials in the National Guard.
While the Right has control over the major private media, public
television and radio back the constitutional reforms. While the Right
has its followers among some generals and the National Guard, Chavez
has the backing of the paratroops and legions of middle rank officers
and most other generals.
The outcome of the Referendum of
December 2 is a decisive historical event first and foremost for
Venezuela but also for the rest of the Americas. A positive vote (Vota
Sí) will provide the legal framework for the democratization of the
political system, the socialization of strategic economic sectors,
empower the poor and provide the basis for a self-managed factory
system. A negative vote (or a successful US-backed civil-military
uprising) will reverse the most promising living experience of popular
self-rule, of advanced social welfare and democratically based
socialism. A reversal, especially a military dictated outcome, will
lead to a massive blood bath, such as we have not seen since the days
of the Indonesian Generals Coup of 1966, which killed over a million
workers and peasants or the Argentine Coup of 1976 in which over 30,000
Argentines were murdered by the US backed Generals.
A decisive
vote for Sí will not end US military and political destabilization
campaigns but it will certainly undermine and demoralize their
collaborators.
On December 2, 2007 the Venezuelans have a rendezvous
with history.
James Petras, a former Professor of Sociology at
Binghamton University, New York, owns a 50-year membership in the class
struggle, is an adviser to the landless and jobless in Brazil and
Argentina, and is co-author of Globalization Unmasked (Zed Books). His
latest book is The Power of Israel in the United States (Clarity Press,
2006). His forthcoming book is Rulers and Ruled (Bankers, Zionists and
Militants (Clarity Press, Atlanta). He can be reached at:
jpetras@binghamton.edu. Read other articles by James, or visit James's
website.
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