Wikileaks has done it again. I guess the US will really have to get tough now with Julian Assange and Bradley Manning.
In a secret US cable to the State Department, dated November 9, 2006,
and recently published online by WikiLeaks, former US ambassador to
Venezuela, William Brownfield, outlines a comprehensive plan to
destabilize the government of the late President Hugo Chávez. The cable
begins with a Summary:
During his 8 years in power, President Chavez has systematically
dismantled the institutions of democracy and governance. The USAID/OTI
program objectives in Venezuela focus on strengthening democratic
institutions and spaces through non-partisan cooperation with many
sectors of Venezuelan society.
USAID/OTI = United States Agency for International Development/Office
of Transition Initiatives. The latter is one of the many euphemisms
that American diplomats use with each other and the world – They say it
means a transition to “democracy”. What it actually means is a
transition from the target country adamantly refusing to cooperate with
American imperialist grand designs to a country gladly willing (or
acceding under pressure) to cooperate with American imperialist grand
designs.
OTI supports the Freedom House (FH) “Right to Defend Human Rights”
program with $1.1 million. Simultaneously through Development
Alternatives Inc. (DAI), OTI has also provided 22 grants to human rights
organizations.
Freedom House is one of the oldest US government conduits for
transitioning to “democracy”; to a significant extent it equates
“democracy” and “human rights” with free enterprise. Development
Alternatives Inc. is the organization that sent Alan Gross to Cuba on a
mission to help implement the US government’s operation of regime
change.
OTI speaks of working to improve “the deteriorating human rights
situation in” Venezuela. Does anyone know of a foreign government with
several millions of dollars to throw around who would like to improve
the seriously deteriorating human rights situation in the United States?
They can start with the round-the-clock surveillance and the
unconscionable entrapment of numerous young “terrorists” guilty of
thought crimes.
“OTI partners are training NGOs [non-governmental organizations] to be activists and become more involved in advocacy.”
Now how’s that for a self-given license to fund and get involved in
any social, economic or political activity that can sabotage any program
of the Chávez government and/or make it look bad? The US ambassador’s
cable points out that:
OTI has directly reached approximately 238,000 adults through over
3000 forums, workshops and training sessions delivering alternative
values and providing opportunities for opposition activists to interact
with hard-core Chavistas, with the desired effect of pulling them slowly
away from Chavismo. We have supported this initiative with 50 grants
totaling over $1.1 million.
“Another key Chavez strategy,” the cable continues, “is his attempt
to divide and polarize Venezuelan society using rhetoric of hate and
violence. OTI supports local NGOs who work in Chavista strongholds and
with Chavista leaders, using those spaces to counter this rhetoric and
promote alliances through working together on issues of importance to
the entire community.”
This is the classical neo-liberal argument against any attempt to
transform a capitalist society – The revolutionaries are creating class
conflict. But of course, the class conflict was already there, and
nowhere more embedded and distasteful than in Latin America.
OTI funded 54 social projects all over the country, at over $1.2
million, allowing [the] Ambassador to visit poor areas of Venezuela and
demonstrate US concern for the Venezuelan people. This program fosters
confusion within the Bolivarian ranks, and pushes back at the attempt of
Chavez to use the United States as a ‘unifying enemy.’
One has to wonder if the good ambassador (now an Assistant Secretary
of State) placed any weight or value at all on the election and
re-election by decisive margins of Chávez and the huge masses of people
who repeatedly filled the large open squares to passionately cheer him.
When did such things last happen in the ambassador’s own country?
Where was his country’s “concern for the Venezuelan people” during the
decades of highly corrupt and dictatorial regimes? His country’a
embassy in Venezuela in that period was not plotting anything remotely
like what is outlined in this cable.
The cable summarizes the focus of the embassy’s strategy’s as: “1)
Strengthening Democratic Institutions, 2) Penetrating Chavez’ Political
Base, 3) Dividing Chavismo, 4) Protecting Vital US business, and 5)
Isolating Chavez internationally.” 1
The stated mission for the Office of Transition Initiatives is: “To
support U.S. foreign policy objectives by helping local partners advance
peace and democracy in priority countries in crisis.” 2
Notice the key word – “crisis”. For whom was Hugo Chávez’s Venezuela
a “crisis”? For the people of Venezuela or the people who own and
operate United States, Inc.?
Imagine a foreign country’s embassy, agencies and NGOs in the United
States behaving as the American embassy, OTI, and NGOs did in Venezuela.
President Putin of Russia recently tightened government controls over
foreign NGOs out of such concern. As a result, he of course has been
branded by the American government and media as a throwback to the
Soviet Union.
Under pressure from the Venezuelan government, the OTI’s office in Venezuela was closed in 2010.
For our concluding words of wisdom, class, here’s Charles Shapiro, US
ambassador to Venezuela from 2002 to 2004, speaking recently of the
Venezuelan leaders: “I think they really believe it, that we are out
there at some level to do them ill."
Source: williamblum.org
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