The Devil Wears Prada: US's Game against Venezuela
"The Devil Wears Prada:" María Corina Machado and Washington’s Indecent Game Against Venezuela
With the
State Department’s unwarranted recent expulsion of
Venezuelan diplomat Jeny Figueredo from her post as
second-in-command of that country’s Washington’s embassy,
its conflict with Caracas has reached its most stressful
phase yet. Building on a diplomatic tug of war over a
widening range of issues, including Washington’s efforts to
frustrate the Chávez government’s desire to purchase
upgraded military equipment for its modestly equipped armed
forces, the quid-pro-quo expulsion of the Venezuelan
official was just one more instance where the Bush
administration calculatedly poured salt on the deepening
wound affecting the two nations’ relations. This step
followed Venezuela’s public accusation that U.S. naval
attaché John Correa was engaged in espionage, which led to
his ejection from the country (Venezuela had no reason to
invent this claim and Washington, every reason to deny it).
The scorched earth diplomacy with which Washington
responded, made certain that Washington’s strategy was more
that just one more hostile sortie against an admittedly
abrasive Chávez. Hemispheric public opinion now deserves to
be sharply focused on the expulsion issue as an example of
using diplomacy to worsen, rather than improve, relations
between the two growing antagonists.
Washington’s actions lacked all proportionality and broke with diplomatic convention that, under normal circumstances, if one nation is expelling a person on the resident diplomatic list of that country, one should closely match it only with a person of comparable rank and station, as a candidate for retaliation. In this instance, the State Department decided to make its harsh point by choosing to expel the second highest ranking diplomat at the Venezuelan embassy in Washington. These perpetual aggressive negative demarches deserve to be seen as part of the Bush administration’s unremitting campaign against Chávez. One component of Washington’s larghetto attempts to undermine Venezuela’s constitutional rule has been the channeling of funds to anti-Chávez cabals being mixed in Venezuela, and then reacting with cultivated outrage when the leaders of such a movement are threatened with prosecution. No clearer example of this exists than the events surrounding María Corina Machado, the leader of the profoundly anti-Chávez Caracas group, Súmate.
Indignation Misplaced
In one of his
earliest initiatives after becoming Assistant Secretary of
State for Inter-American Affairs, Thomas Shannon appeared
before the House Subcommittee on the Western Hemisphere in
November, where he denounced Venezuela’s “persecution” of
Machado and Alejandro Plaz, leaders of the Súmate electoral
organization. The two are currently facing prosecution for
“conspiracy against the republican form of the nation,” a
charge stemming from Súmate’s acceptance of a $31,000
National Endowment for Democracy grant. As for Shannon’s
rhetoric, any hope that Shannon might bring some
professionalism and moderation to his job is now rapidly
evaporating. The White House’s ideological extremism that
has done so much damage to U.S.-Latin American relations
apparently is scheduled to continue.
While Washington is attempting to portray the Súmate trial as a case of a political vendetta by an authoritarian government against a bona fide democratic leader, the truth is that the established norm in many countries – including in the U.S. – is that locally-based political groups are forbidden from accepting financial contributions from foreign sources for election purposes. Nevertheless, the Bush Administration is enthusiastically toasting the work of Súmate and Sra. Machado’s contributions to the group’s efforts. The case has become something of a litmus test for the status of Washington’s relations with the Chávez government. In order to advance this strategy, the Bush administration brought Machado up to Washington last May where she had a high visibility Oval Office photo-op session with President Bush, and was also given a press conference on Capitol Hill. On each of these occasions the opportunity was taken by the White House to bash the alleged authoritarian tendencies of the Chávez government.
Even taking their implausible story at its word, what Machado and Plaz admit that they have done would have been met with comparably raised legal eyebrows in the U.S., where the Federal Electoral Code expressly prohibits donations to U.S. campaigns from foreign nationals or governments. It was precisely this prohibition which was a central part of the 1997 John Huang scandal when the Democratic fundraiser was accused of funneling donations from Chinese authorities wanting favors to Democratic Party officials. Yet somehow Washington believes that similar restrictions under Venezuelan law lack comparable validity or application. In fact, Caracas authorities accuse Machado of being a lynch-pin of the disloyal local political opposition. This group, composed of well-placed members of the middle class, was ready to risk irreparable and possibly permanent damage to Venezuela’s political system in order to topple the government of the day it happens to despise.
It’s the Law
The case against Plaz
and Machado seems to be clear cut: Venezuela’s Ley de
Partidos Politicos, Reuniones Públicos y Manifestaciones
(Political Party Law), which dates to 1965 contains the
clause in Article 25 that parties “may not accept donations
or subsidies…from foreign companies…or from foreign
governments or organizations.” Caracas authorities claimed,
then, that the organization’s acceptance and administration
of a $31,000 grant from the NED was precisely that, and that
Súmate’s behavior in the 2004 referendum – actions which
were funded by the grant – constituted political organizing
rather than non-partisan “democracy promotion.”
NED’s
Generosity to the Rich
Of course, it should be noted
that even a cursory examination would reveal that the NED is
far from being an ordinary charitable organization. In fact,
the word “endowment” was meant to be something of a conceit.
The NED has always operated as a quasi-intelligence agency
whose main purpose was to launder funds to ultra-right wing
overseas groups needing seed money to launch their coups and
assassinate their opponents. Reagan planners were originally
able to muster Congressional budgetary support – even from
liberal Democrats – by setting up a quadripartite system
meant to deliver pork to both the Republicans and Democrats.
This was done by the division of funds: half to ostensibly
centrist operations like the National Democratic Institute,
which was meant to be the self-respecting liberal deodorant
to relieve the foul scent of the three other right wing core
grantees, whose funds mainly go to extremist causes. NED was
chartered by congress and nearly all of its $80.1 million
2004 annual budget comes from U.S. taxpayers. It also should
be noted that the NED was founded by President Reagan at the
height of the Cold War and was meant to fund controversial
back-door Cold War projects with which the State Department
didn’t want to be publicly associated. NED’s president since
its founding has been Carl Gershman, who was one of the most
rightwing ideologues of the Reagan Administration (he was a
deputy to hardliner Jeanne Kirkpatrick, the Bolton-esque
U.S. ambassador to the UN at the time). Throughout its
history, the organization, whose core grantees, including
the International Chamber of Commerce and the International
Republican Institute (IRI), have been involved in
controversial projects linked to the heavy ideological
purposes to which their grants are directed – skillfully
earmarked its funds to extremist causes. In Haiti, for
example, the IRI was intimately involved with the
paramilitary “thugs” (as described by then Secretary of
State Powell) who eventually overthrew constitutional
President Jean-Betrand Aristide. Those types of unsavory
involvements were made evident in a recent New York Times
article, which suggested that the IRI partisanly worked
against Aristide rather than behaving in a non-partisan
fashion. It is not too far of a stretch to argue that the
IRI’s backing of Súmate was the mirror image of its earlier,
very controversial, activities in Haiti.
Tall Tales of
Innocence
While Súmate’s defenders argue that it is
technically an NGO, it is undeniable that, since its
founding, it has been an archly political organization with
a clear ideological bias. Echoing the millions of dollars in
NED funding that was surreptitiously earmarked for the
victorious 1990 presidential campaign of Violetta Chamorro
against Daniel Ortega and the Sandinistas in Nicaragua, the
language of the NED’s Súmate grant is unabashedly cast
against the Chávez government, declaring that “once in
office, President Chávez’s revolutionary rhetoric, public
disregard for democratic processes and institutions and
vitriolic attacks on his opponents, escalated political and
social tensions and hardened the opposition.”
Machado
on the Offensive
Claims by Súmate’s leadership of
their ideological impartiality and autonomy from foreign
influence are laughed off the stage when one considers that
Machado, a founding member of the organization and a lethal
Chávez foe, met for 50 minutes last May with President Bush
in the Oval Office – an honor that, as of yet, has not been
extended to Venezuela’s democratically-elected president or
to many domestic NGOs. Such cordiality regarding Machado was
based on a harmonious special view of the world and a shared
odium for leftist values, between the U.S. president and
Venezuela’s Madam Defarge, aka Maria Corina Machado.
At this point, it is important to recognize what Machado wasn’t. She was not a housewife called to arms by some Joan D’Arc-like vision. Since Chávez’s rise to power, she has evolved into a deadly political player. She didn’t just happen to be accidentally present, as she claims, when the backers of the failed 2002 anti-Chávez coup joined Machado in signing their names on the coup document, and proceeded to shut down the country’s basic institutions, like the Supreme Court and the legislature, while elsewhere Chávez was being physically seized.
As the Machado and Plaz trial proceeds, Washington will attempt to paint the deceptive picture of a Stasi-like authoritarian regime hounding the democratic opposition. A truer picture would find that Súmate has been operating in highly dubious legal territory. If it was a U.S. organization receiving funding from Chávez, its compromising actions would most likely have been questionable under the U.S. electoral code in the same manner that it deserves to be classified as of questionable legality under Venezuelan jurisprudence.
This
analysis was prepared by COHA Director Larry Birns