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	Venezuela in Washington's Crosshairs  
	By Stephen Lendman 
	Al-Jazeerah, ccun.org, March 24, 2010 
	   Washington fears Hugo Chavez for good reason. His "good example" 
	threat raises concerns that other regional leaders may follow. As a result, 
	throughout his tenure, he's been targeted and vilified - to discredit, 
	weaken and undermine his government to destroy Bolivarian benefits millions 
	of Venezuelans now enjoy, won't easily give up, nor should they.   
	Several failed coup attempts included:   -- April 2002 for two days, 
	an effort aborted by mass street protests and support from many in 
	Venezuela's military, especially from the middle-ranking officer corp;   
	-- the 2002 - 2003 general strike and oil management lockout, causing severe 
	economic disruption and billions of dollars in losses; and   -- the 
	August 2004 national recall referendum that Chavez won overwhelmingly with a 
	59% majority.   Thereafter, disruptions regularly followed to help 
	domestic and US oligarchs regain what they lost, so far without success, but 
	they persist, with supportive editorial, op-ed, and on-the-ground reporting. 
	Also from an Organization of American States (OAS) report, the Vision of 
	Humanity's annual Global Peace Index (GPI), US State Department, and 
	Pentagon.   On March 19, Reuters reported that, in testimony before 
	the House Armed Services Committee, General Douglas Fraser, USSOUTHCOM (US 
	Southern Command) head, claimed Chavez backs Colombian leftists, saying: 
	  His government "continue(s) to have a very anti-US stance and look(s) 
	to try and restrict US activity wherever they have the opportunity to do 
	that. (It's) continuing to engage with the region....and continuing to 
	pursue (its) socialism agenda. (It) remain(s) a destabilizing force in the 
	region."    He said Venezuela continues to support FARC-EP rebels, 
	providing "financial logistical support" and a safe haven based on evidence 
	found on a laptop seized in a 2008 Ecuadorean guerrilla camp raid - 
	information later proved bogus.   Yet a week earlier, before the 
	Senate Armed Services Committee, Fraser testified otherwise, saying:   
	"We have not seen any connections specifically that I can verify that there 
	has been a direct government-to-terrorist connection" between Chavez and 
	either the FARC-EP or the Basque separatist group ETA. "We have continued to 
	watch very closely for any connections between illicit and terrorist 
	organization activity within the region. We are concerned about it. I'm 
	skeptical. I continue to watch for it," but as yet haven't found it.   
	During her March 1 - 5 Latin American tour, Secretary of State Hillary 
	Clinton gratuitously insulted Chavez. So did Assistant Secretary of State 
	for Western Hemisphere Affairs, Arturo Valenzuela, in Senate testimony, 
	accusing him of FARC-EP ties - suggesting much more to come to boost 
	opposition candidates in September parliamentary elections.   US State 
	Department 2009 Human Rights Report: Venezuela   Released on March 11, 
	it followed earlier ones, bogusly accusing Chavez of:   -- harassing 
	and intimidating political opponents;    -- targeting the media; and 
	  -- numerous human rights violations, including:   -- "unlawful 
	killings;   -- summary executions of criminal suspects;    -- 
	widespread criminal kidnappings for ransom;    -- prison uprisings 
	resulting from harsh prison conditions;    -- arbitrary arrests and 
	detentions;    -- corruption and impunity in police forces;    
	-- a corrupt, inefficient, and politicized judicial system characterized by 
	trial delays and violations of due process;    -- (targeting) 
	political opponents and selective prosecution(s) for political purposes;  
	  -- infringement of citizens' privacy rights by security forces;    
	-- government closure of radio and television stations and threats to close 
	others;    -- government attacks on public demonstrations;    -- 
	systematic discrimination based on political grounds;     -- 
	considerable corruption at all levels of government;    -- threats and 
	attacks against domestic NGOs;    -- violence against women;    
	-- inadequate juvenile detention centers;   -- trafficking in persons; 
	and   -- restrictions on workers' right of association."   Other 
	charges have included drugs trafficking and ties to bogusly designated 
	"foreign terror organizations" like the FARC-EP and ETA.   These sham 
	charges and similar ones repeat regularly to discredit and undermine Chavez. 
	Ironically, they're more descriptive of American domestic and foreign 
	policies - ones that defy US and international laws with regard to human and 
	civil rights, equal justice, war, occupation, domestic tranquility, and the 
	Constitution's Article I, Section 8 for the Congress to "provide (for) the 
	general welfare of the United States," the so-called welfare clause applying 
	also to the Executive and judiciary.   In contrast, Chavez promotes 
	world solidarity, democratic freedoms, human and civil rights, judicial 
	fairness, fair and open elections, and a free and open media. He doesn't 
	invade other countries, has no secret prisons, doesn't practice torture, or 
	conduct fraudulent elections. As a result, he inspires millions worldwide, 
	and has widespread domestic majority support. Yet bogus State Department 
	charges persist.    Ones as well from a recent OAS report titled, 
	"Democracy and Human Rights in Venezuela," produced under the mandate of the 
	Washington-based Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR).    
	Among others, its bogus accusations include:   -- restricting human 
	rights "enshrined in the American Convention on Human Rights;"   -- no 
	independent separation among government branches;   -- state punitive 
	power to "intimidate or punish people on account of their political 
	opinions;"   -- denying journalists the right to report freely;   
	-- "a pattern of impunity in cases of violence," especially against "media 
	workers, human rights defenders, trade unionists, participants in public 
	demonstrations, people held in custody, campesinos (small-scale and 
	subsistence farmers), indigenous peoples, and women;"   -- restricted 
	opportunities for opposing political candidates to secure "access to power;" 
	  -- disempowering opposition politicians through legal and other means; 
	  -- intimidating and punishing dissent against official policy through 
	harassment, violence, and criminal proceedings;   -- targeting 
	peaceful opposition demonstrations;   -- the absence of an 
	independent, impartial judiciary; and   -- numerous other charges like 
	the US State Department's, more descriptive of America, suggesting a hidden 
	motive behind the report's issuance; perhaps also its timing, two weeks 
	before the State Department's  similar accusations.   Chavez 
	called it "pure excrement....ineffable (and) ignominious" in denouncing the 
	IACHR as "menacing....a true mafia and is part of the OAS, which is why one 
	of these days this organization must disappear....It is the same Commission 
	which backed (the de facto government of Pedro) Carmona" after the April 
	2002 coup. "But this is part of the attacks, of continued threats against 
	the Bolivarian Revolution, (a) continued campaign (supported by Venezuelan 
	and American oligarchs to) isolat(e) Venezuela."   OAS history is long 
	and shameful in deference to US interests.   Writing in Granma 
	Internacional in June 2009, Editor Oscar Sanchez Serra said:   
	Throughout its history, the OAS "made democracies ungovernable, turned them 
	into dictatorships, and when they were no longer useful, reconverted them 
	into even more diminished and servile democracies, because in the new, 
	neoliberal era, with transnationalized oligarch(ic) capital, they were part 
	of a much more sophisticated power structure, whose bases were not 
	necessarily located in the presidential palaces or parliaments, but in 
	continental corporations."   OAS nations had decades of "involvement 
	with death, genocide and lies for (it) to survive these times. It is a 
	political corpse and should be buried as soon as possible....The reality is, 
	without the OAS, the United States would lose one of its principle 
	political/legal instruments of hegemonic control over the Western 
	Hemisphere."   In February 2004, Washington got its backing to justify 
	ousting Haiti's President Jean-Betrand Aristide. Then in 2009, it abstained 
	from strong actions after Honduran President Manuel Zelaya was deposed, 
	opting instead for symbolic toothless measures. It's new report reveals 
	transparent support for bogus US charges, not Venezuela's participatory 
	democracy, largely absent in the region and unimaginable in America where 
	Washington is corporate controlled territory, and popular interests go 
	unaddressed.   The Global Peace Index (GPI)   Launched by 
	Australian entrepreneur, Steve Killelea, in May 2007, it claims to be the 
	first study of its kind ranking nations according to peacefulness, 
	identifying key peace drivers. Its initial report included 121 countries, 
	increased to 140 in 2008 and 144 in its latest 2009 report, released in June 
	last year.   Its problematic endorsers include:   -- the Dalia 
	Lama, a known CIA asset from the late 1950s to mid- 1970s, and may still be 
	one now;   -- John Malcolm Fraser, former Australian Prime Minister; 
	  -- Kofi Annan, infamous as UN Secretary-General for backing US imperial 
	wars while ignoring the plight of oppressed Africans and others globally; 
	  -- Ban Ki-moon, current UN Secretary-General, performing the same 
	services as Annan;   -- corporate figures including Ted Turner (CNN 
	founder) and Richard Branson (chairman, Virgin Group);   -- an array 
	of prominent current and past political and diplomatic figures;    -- 
	two members of Jordanian royalty;    -- numerous academics; and 
	others.   Organizations preparing GPI's report and/or responsible for 
	its data include:   -- the Economist Intelligence Unit (founded by a 
	former UK director of intelligence), calling itself "the world's foremost 
	provider of country, industry and management analysis" since 1946;   
	-- the Uppsala Conflict Data Program at Sweden's Uppsala University, 
	producing annual "States in Armed Conflict" reports;    -- the Oslo, 
	Norway International Peace Research Institute, a private/publicly funded 
	organization, producing "Conflict Resolution and Peacebuilding Annual 
	Reports;" and   -- the London-based International Institute of 
	Strategic Studies (IISS), calling itself "the world's leading authority on 
	political-military conflict" with 450 corporate and institutional members. 
	  The world was less peaceful in 2008, according to GPI, reflecting 
	intensified conflicts and the effects of rising food and fuel prices at a 
	time of global economic crisis, impacting employment, incomes, savings, and 
	for many shelter, enough to eat, and the ability to survive.   GPI 
	used 23 indicators to measure the level or absence of peace, divided into 
	three broad categories, including:    -- ongoing domestic and 
	international conflict;   -- safety and security in society; and   
	-- militarization.   Scores were then "banded, either on a scale of 1 
	- 5 (for qualitative indicators) or 1 - 10 (for quantitative data, such as 
	military expenditure or the jailed population, which have then been 
	converted to a 1- 5 scale for comparability when compiling the final 
	index)."   Indicators include:   -- number of external and 
	internal conflicts from 2002 - 07;   -- estimated number of deaths 
	from external conflicts;   -- estimated number from internal ones; 
	  -- level of internal conflicts;   -- relations with neighboring 
	countries;   -- perceptions of criminality in society;   -- 
	number of displaced people as a percentage of population;   -- 
	political instability;   -- level of disrespect for human rights;   
	-- potential for terrorist acts;   -- number of homicides per 100,000 
	people;   -- level of violent crime;   -- likelihood of violent 
	demonstrations;   -- number of jailed population per 100,000 people; 
	  -- number of internal security officers and police per 100,000 
	population;   -- military expenditures as a percent of GDP;   -- 
	number of military personnel per 100,000 population;   -- volume of 
	major weapon imports per 100,000 people;   -- volume of major weapon 
	exports per 100,000 people;   -- funding for UN peacekeeping missions; 
	  -- total number of heavy weapons per 100,000 people;   -- ease of 
	access to small arms and light weapons; and   -- the level of military 
	capability.   Conspicuously absent is any measure of outside influence 
	causing internal violence, instability, and/or disruption. Top rankings went 
	to New Zealand, Denmark and Norway. Ranked worst were Iraq, Afghanistan, 
	Somalia and Israel.    Venezuela ranked an implausible 120th behind 
	Yemen, Haiti, Iran, Honduras, Uzbekistan, Uganda, Rwanda, and dozens of 
	other unlikely choices. America was 83rd, despite hands down being the 
	world's most violent lawless state, directly or through global proxy wars 
	for unchallengeable world dominance.    It's also a domestic armed 
	camp, using police state laws to quash human rights and civil liberties, 
	criminalize dissent, illegally spy, control information, persecute political 
	opponents, steal elections, and transfer public wealth to elitist private 
	hands.    In contrast, Venezuela is democratic and peaceful, except 
	during periods of Washington-instigated  disruptions. America alone 
	endangers global stability and world peace, waging permanent wars, targeting 
	peaceful nations, and claiming the unilateral right to use first strike 
	nuclear weapons preemptively. It also maintains over 1,000 bases and many 
	secret ones in over 130 countries. Its annual military budget tops all other 
	nations combined - way over $1 trillion plus tens of additional billions for 
	intelligence and black operations, mostly for covert destabilization.   
	It overthrows democratically elected governments, assassinates foreign 
	leaders and key officials, props up friendly dictators, practices torture as 
	official policy,  operates the world's largest domestic and offshore 
	gulag, destabilizes world regions, and is hated and feared globally as a 
	result.    In contrast, Chavez seeks regional and global alliances; 
	engages foreign leaders cooperatively; assassinates no one internally or 
	abroad; has no nuclear weapons or seeks them; spends less than one-half of 
	one percent of the Pentagon's official budget; doesn't export weapons to 
	neighbors; is socially responsible at home; has no secret prisons; respects 
	the rule of law; is a model participatory democracy; governs peacefully; 
	supports civil and human rights and social justice; affirms free expression; 
	bans discrimination; and uses Venezuela's resources responsibly - for people 
	needs, yet is friendly to business at home and abroad.   Nonetheless, 
	GPI ranks it below America in human and civil rights, level of organized 
	internal conflict, relations with neighboring countries, potential for 
	terrorist acts, level of violent crime, political instability, perceptions 
	of criminality in society, ease of access to small weapons, freedom of the 
	press, political democracy, adult literacy (way above the US Department of 
	Education's assessment), and willingness to fight.   Transparency 
	International (TI) also rates Venezuela low in its 2009 Corruption 
	Perceptions Index (CPI), indicating the perceived level of public sector 
	corruption by country, claiming a 90% confidence of accuracy. It ranks 
	America implausibly high at 19th and Venezuela outrageously low at 162nd out 
	of 180 countries, behind notoriously corrupt states, including corporate 
	occupied  Washington, siphoning trillions of public dollars to private 
	hands as part of the greatest ever wealth transfer.    In ranking 
	America v. Venezuela, TI, GPI, and OAS measures look suspiciously 
	manipulated to place a global hegemon above a peaceful democratic state that 
	coincidentally is Washington's top regional target.   Stephen 
	Lendman lives in Chicago and can be reached at
	lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net. 
	Also visit his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com and listen to 
	cutting-edge discussions with distinguished guests on the Progressive Radio 
	News Hour on the Progressive Radio Network Thursdays at 10AM US Central time 
	and Saturdays and Sundays at noon. All programs are archived for easy 
	listening.   
	
	http://prognewshour.progressiveradionetwork.org/   
	
	http://lendmennews.progressiveradionetwork.org/   
       
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