While U.S. President George W. Bush played nice
to a deeply frustrated Mexican President Vicente Fox at the North American Summit
in Texas Wednesday, U.S. media attention was focused more on Pentagon chief
Donald Rumsfeld's efforts to sound the alarm against Latin American troublemakers
in his swing through the region this week.
Topping his list was populist Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, followed by
a nemesis from bygone days, former Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega, who was
accused by an unnamed "senior official" in Rumsfeld's delegation of
hoarding several hundred Russian-made surface-to-air missiles (SAMs) that Washington
wants to see destroyed.
Indeed, at the start of Rumsfeld's trip, Washington announced the suspension
of all U.S. military assistance to Nicaragua about $2.3 million worth
pending the destruction of the missiles that Washington contend might
be obtained by terrorists.
At the same time, the right-wing National Review published a cover story
by Bush's top Latin America aide during his first term, Otto Reich, on "Latin
America's Terrible Two," referring to Chavez and Cuban President Fidel
Castro (not available online). The magazine's
cover, with a photo of the two men in close conversation, featured a banner
reading "The Axis of Evil
Western Hemisphere Version."
"With the combination of Castro's evil genius, experience in political
warfare, and economic desperation, and Chavez' unlimited money and recklessness,
the peace of this region is in peril," wrote Reich, who remains influential
with his former colleagues, including his more diplomatic successor, Assistant
Secretary of State for Western Hemisphere Affairs Roger Noriega.
"The emerging axis of subversion forming between Cuba and Venezuela must
be confronted before it can undermine democracy in Colombia, Nicaragua, Bolivia,
or another vulnerable neighbor," he wrote, echoing a series of opinion
pieces that have appeared mostly in the editorial pages of the Wall Street
Journal in recent weeks.
Rumsfeld's efforts appeared to be part of an orchestrated campaign that began
in January when, during her confirmation hearings, Secretary of State Condoleezza
Rice referred to Chavez as a "negative force" in the region.
Last week, the Miami Herald reported
that Bush himself was taking a personal interest in Chavez' actions and rhetoric
and that various policy options to toughen Washington's stance toward Caracas,
including efforts to discredit the Venezuelan leader for alleged corruption,
and to persuade his neighbors, notably Brazil, to distance themselves from him,
were now being actively pursued.
"We need to have a strategy to contain Chavez," said Rogelio Pardo-Maurer,
the Pentagon's top Latin America official, at a recent defense conference in
Miami.
Pardo-Maurer, a hardliner whose thinking is close to that of Reich and Noriega,
later told the Financial
Times that Chavez "is picking on the countries whose social fabric
is the weakest. In some cases, it's downright subversion."
The fact that Rumsfeld chose Brasilia as the place from which to issue his
strongest attack on Chavez yet assailing Venezuela's decision to buy 100,000
AK-47s from Russia suggested that such a strategy is already in play.
"I can't imagine why Venezuela needs 100,000 AK-47s, I can't imagine what
is going to happen to 100,000 AK-47s," Rumsfeld said just before his meeting
with Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, who has served as a mediator
between Washington and Caracas in the past.
If the shipment goes through, Rumsfeld added, "it wouldn't be good for
the hemisphere."
But the AK-47s, which some U.S. officials have suggested may be intended for
left-wing guerrillas next door in Colombia or even for followers of indigenous
leader Evo Morales in Bolivia, are not the administration's only complaint against
Chavez, whose government has insisted that the guns will be used to replace
the 35,000-man army's aging stocks of FAL rifles.
Washington sees the AK-47 order as part of a much larger arms buildup, financed
by high global oil prices, that may include the purchase of fighter jets from
Brazil, gunboats from Spain, and as many as 50 assault attack helicopters and
30 MiG-29 fighter jets from Russia.
"These and other Venezuelan military acquisitions [the amount of weapons
transferred from Cuba or China is not known] threaten the peace of the entire
region," warned Reich who noted that, in addition to Colombia, Nicaragua,
and Bolivia were most vulnerable to subversion.
Washington is also increasingly worried about the larger geo-strategic implications
of Chavez' petro-policies.
The United States currently imports about 1.5 million barrels of oil a day
from Venezuela or about 60 percent of Venezuela's total oil exports. But
Chavez, who has warned that he will cut off the oil supplies if Washington tries
to overthrow him, has been trying to diversify his customers.
In recent months, he has signed contracts with France, India, and China, whose
Vice President Zeng Qinghong he hosted in January, one month after Chavez met
with his Chinese counterpart, Hu Jintao, in Beijing.
To help with his diversification effort, Chavez further alienated Washington
by commissioning Iranian technical assistance. Earlier this month, he hosted
Iranian President Mohammed Khatami, to whom he expounded on Tehran's right "to
develop atomic energy and to continue its research in that area" and voiced
his "profound rejection of the imperialist desires of the U.S. government."
At the same time, he has provided oil at cut-rate prices to Cuba in exchange
for the services of thousands of doctors and teachers (Reich refers to them
as "indoctrinators") working in rural areas and urban slums.
What makes all of this even more threatening to the Bush administration are
the leftward political trends throughout Latin America, as Reich himself conceded
despite their reflection on his own stewardship of U.S. policy.
Citing "press reports" that a "leftist-populist alliance is
engulfing most of South America," Reich, who also suggests that Ortega's
Sandinistas may soon be voted back into power in Nicaragua, notes that "this
is the reality U.S. policymakers must confront; and our pressing specific challenge
is neutralizing the Cuba-Venezuela axis."
The key to doing so, he argues, is by distinguishing between "democratic
leftists," who in his view include Chilean President Ricardo Lagos and
Brazil's Lula, and the radical populists who are presumably subject to the subversive
influences of Chavez and Castro.
"The real danger to regional peace and stability today does not emanate
as much from those relatively new democratically elected president as it does
from two demagogues who have been around a while longer: Fidel Castro and Hugo
Chavez," according to Reich.
To some critics, the campaign against Chavez and other radicals could well
prove counterproductive.
"It's as if these people have a compulsive need to see Latin American
reality only through a Manichaean lens whereby they have to identify an evil
force to mobilize against, and the complexities of the region get simplified
into these dualisms of good and evil," said Geoffrey Thale of the Washington
Office on Latin America, a human rights group.
"We've been dealing with Castro as evil incarnate, and we've made ourselves
a laughingstock throughout the region and done nothing to effectively to encourage
democratization and human rights in Cuba," he added. "If we approach
Chavez the same way, we're likely to have the same results."
(Inter Press Service)