| Center
for Security Policy
Center calls for regime change in Venezuela; help
Chavez hasten his political self-destruction
Source: Center
for Security Policy
May 06, 2005
Press Release - No. 05-P 09
(Washington, D.C.): In a paper timed to coincide with
a major hemispheric policy address by Secretary of
State Condoleezza Rice, the Center for Security Policy
warned today that the increasingly repressive - and
aggressive - dictatorship in Venezuela must either
change or be changed if the region is to avoid the
terrible human costs of a new generation of revolutionary
upheaval.
The Center's just-released Occasional Paper entitled,
What to Do About Venezuela,
documents the extent to which the so-called revolutionary
"Bolivarian" regime in Venezuela is becoming
a "clear and present danger" to the countries
and people of Latin America and beyond.
In a stinging, point-by-point indictment of the regime
of Venezuelan strongman Hugo Chavez, the paper calls
on the Bush administration to repair its neglected
and strained relationships across Latin America, and
to work with neighboring democratic governments to
ensure that the regime cannot consolidate itself or
threaten its neighbors.
The paper strongly urges Secretary of State Condoleezza
Rice to reverse the Bush Administration's do-nothing
approach toward Latin America, noting that, "over
the past four years, Jimmy Carter has been the most
visible - and arguably the most influential - U.S.
leader in Latin America." Carter's imprimatur
on the results of a rigged Venezuelan election process
has given the regime priceless legitimacy.
"Nowhere is the lack of U.S. strategic policy
more evident than in the unchecked rise of a self-absorbed,
unstable strongman in Venezuela who has made common
cause with terrorists and the regimes that support
them, and has developed a revolutionary ideology that
has begun to plunge the Americas again into violence
and chaos," the paper says.
Noting that the Latin American Left is far from monolithic,
the paper urges the Bush administration to work with
the hemisphere's democratic governments, even anti-American
ones like that of Brazil - which has displayed growing
unease about the violence and chaos around its perimeter
that Venezuela has been fomenting - in order to contain
the subversion and prevent the further planned violence
emanating from Caracas.
The paper stresses that regime change is still possible
in Venezuela without the use of force, though military
action might be needed if the dictator decides to
take down the country's economic infrastructure with
him, as Saddam Hussein tried to do in Iraq. Noting
reports that Chavez is mentally unstable and has been
under psychiatric supervision for years, the Center's
paper urges the U.S. to "improve its psychological
strategy and help the Venezuelan leader to hasten
his own political self-destruction."
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