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The United States, in its struggle against the Revolution,
had in the Venezuelan government its best ally: the eximious
Mr. Rómulo Betancourt Bello. We did not know it then. He
had been elected President on December 7, 1958; he had not
taken office yet when the Cuban Revolution triumphed on
January 1st, 1959. Weeks later I had the privilege of being
invited by the provisional government of Wolfgang Larrazábal
to visit Bolivar’s homeland, which had been so supportive of
Cuba.
Very seldom in my life had I seen a warmer people. The film
images are still preserved. We drove down the broad highway
that replaced the paved road I was taken through the first
time I traveled to Venezuela in 1948 -from Maiquetía to
Caracas- by the most reckless drivers I had ever seen.
That time I heard the noisiest, longest and most
embarrassing booing of my life when I dared to mention the
name of the recently elected President-to-be. The more
radical masses of the heroic and combative Caracas had
overwhelmingly voted against him.
The “illustrious” Rómulo Betancourt was referred to with
interest by Latin America and Caribbean political circles.
What was the explanation for that? He had been so radical
when he was young that at the age of 23 he became a full
member of the Political Bureau of the Communist Party of
Costa Rica and remained there from 1931 to 1935. Those were
the hard times of the Third International. From
Marxism-Leninism he learned about the class structure in a
society, the exploitation of men by men throughout history
and the development of colonization, capitalism and
imperialism in recent centuries.
In 1941, together other leftist leaders, he founded the
Partido Acción Democrática (Democratic Action Party) in
Venezuela.
He acted as provisional president of Venezuela from October
1945 to February 1948 by virtue of a civic and military coup
d’état. He went again into exile when the eminent Venezuelan
writer and intellectual, Rómulo Gallegos, was elected
Constitutional President and almost immediately after was
ousted.
The well-lubricated machinery of his party elects him
President during the elections held on December 7, 1958,
after the Venezuelan revolutionary forces, led by Junta
Patriótica (Patriotic Junta) that was headed by Fabricio
Ojeda, overthrew the dictatorship of General Pérez Jiménez.
By the end of 1959, when I spoke at Plaza del Silencio,
where hundreds of thousands of people had gathered, and I
mentioned, out of sheer courtesy, the name of Betancourt,
there was this colossal booing that I mentioned earlier
against the President-elect. To me that was a true lesson
of political realism. Later I had to pay a visit to him,
since he was the President-elect of a friendly nation. I
found him to be an embittered and resentful man. He was
already the model of “democratic and representative”
government the empire needed. He collaborated as much as he
could with the Yankees previous to the mercenary invasion
through Girón.
Fabricio Ojeda, a sincere and unforgettable friend of the
Cuban Revolution, whom I had the privilege to meet and with
whom I talked extensively, told me later much about the
political process in his homeland and the Venezuela he
dreamed of. He was one of the many persons assassinated by
that regime, which was totally to the service of the
imperialism.
Almost half a century has gone by ever since. I can attest
to the exceptional cynicism of the empire that we, the
Revolutionary Cubans, the proud heirs of Bolivar and Marti,
have indefatigably confronted.
During all these years, ever since the days of Fabricio
Ojeda, the world has changed significantly. The military
and technological power of that empire has grown bigger, and
so have its experience and total absence of ethics. Its
media is ever more costly and less committed to moral
standards.
To accuse Hugo Chávez, the leader of the Bolivarian
Revolution, of inciting a war against the people of Colombia
and unleash an arms race, to portray him as the mastermind
and promoter of drug trafficking, and accuse him of
repressing the freedom of expression, violating human rights
and other similar misdeeds is a repugnant and cynical
action, as everything else that the empire has done, still
does and promotes. We can neither ever forget nor stop
reiterating realities. Objective and well-reasoned truth is
the most important weapon with which we should ceaselessly
hammer into the conscience of peoples.
The US government –it is necessary to remind us of that-
promoted and supported the fascist coup d’état in Venezuela
on April 11, 2002, and after it failed, it pinned all its
hopes in an oil coup, supported with technical programs and
resources capable of destroying any government, thus
underestimating the people and the revolutionary leadership
of that country.
Ever since then, the US government has ceaselessly plotted
against the Venezuelan revolutionary process, just as it did
and has continued to do against the Revolution in our
Homeland for fifty years now. The United States is far more
interested in controlling Venezuela –given its huge energy
resources and the other raw materials it has, which are
obtained at negligible prices, as well as the huge
facilities and services owned by transnationals – than Cuba.
After violently crushing the Revolution in Central America
and thwarting, by bloody and repressive coups, the
democratic and progressive advances in South America, the
empire could not resign itself to the construction of
socialism in Venezuela. This is a real fact that could not
be denied by or hidden from those with a minimum political
education in Latin America or elsewhere in the world.
It is worthwhile remembering that not even after the coup
promoted by the United States on April 2002 the Venezuelan
government armed itself. One oil barrel was hardly 20
dollars worth, a currency that was already devalued since
1971, when Nixon suspended the gold standard mechanism,
almost thirty years before Chávez became President. When he
took office, the Venezuelan oil was hardly 10 dollars
worth. Afterwards, when prices went up, he invested the
country’s resources in social programs, development and
investment projects and cooperation with several Caribbean
and Central American nations and other poorer economies in
South America. No other country had offered such a generous
cooperation.
He did not buy a single rifle during the first years of his
government. He even did something that no other country
would have done at a time when his integrity was at stake:
he legally suspended the obligation of every honest and
revolutionary citizen to defend their country with the arms
in their hands.
I would rather say that the Bolivarian Republic waited for
too long to acquire new weapons. The infantry rifles they
had were the same that existed more than 50 years ago, when
the head of the Provisional Government, Admiral Larrazábal,
presented me with an automatic FAL rifle on November 1958,
the penultimate month of the war. Venezuela continued to use
that kind of infantry weaponry for several years after
Chávez took office.
It was the US government the one that decreed the
disarmament of Venezuela, when it banned the supplies of
spare parts for all the Yankee military equipment which it
had traditionally sold to that country, including fighting
planes, military transport aircraft and even communication
equipment and radars. Accusing Venezuela of engaging in an
arms build-up is an extremely hypocritical attitude.
Quite on the contrary, the United States has supplied
billions of dollars worth in arms, means of combat, aircraft
and training to the Armed Forces of the neighboring
Colombia. The pretext was the struggle against the
guerrillas. I can bear witness to the efforts made by
President Hugo Chávez in his quest for the internal peace in
that sister nation. The Yankees not only supplied weapons;
they also instilled feelings of hatred against Venezuela
among the troops they trained, as they did in Honduras,
through the Task Force based in Palmerola.
Wherever the US has military bases, it supplies the combat
units with the same type of uniform and equipment used by
the interventionist troops of that country anywhere else in
the world. The United States does not need soldiers of its
own, as in Iraq, Afghanistan or the northern region of
Pakistan, to plot acts of genocide against our peoples.
The imperialist extreme right, which holds the reins of
power, resorts to brazen lies to mask its plans.
The Venezuelan-American lawyer and analyst, Eva Golinger has
shown how the strategic arguments used in the message sent
on May, 2009, to the United States Congress to justify an
investment in the military base of Palanquero were
absolutely altered in the agreement whereby the United
States received that same base together with several other
civil and military facilities. The document sent to the
Congress on November 16 entitled “Addendum to reflect terms
of the US-Colombia Defense Cooperation Agreement”
that signed on October 30, 2009, has been completely
altered, as was explained by the analyst. The document is
no longer about “the
mobility mission providing access to the entire South
American continent with the exception of Cape Horn”. All
references to global reach operations, security theaters and
increased capability of the US Armed Forces to launch an
expeditious warfare in the region have also been modified,
according to the sharp and well informed analyst.
Furthermore, it is obvious that the President of the
Bolivarian Republic is striving very hard to overcome the
obstacles put by the United States against Latin American
countries, among them, social violence and drug
trafficking. The American society was not able to prevent
drug trafficking and consumption, the consequences of which
are affecting many countries of the region.
Violence has been of the most exported products by the
United States capitalist society during the last half a
century, through the increasing use of the media and the so
called entertainment industry. Those are new phenomena that
the human society did not know about before. Such means
could be used to create new values in a more humane and just
society.
Developed capitalism created the so called consumption
societies and with that it also created problems that it is
not able to solve today.
Venezuela is the country that has more rapidly been
implementing the social programs that can counteract those
extremely negative trends.The colossal successes achieved in
the last Bolivarian Sport Games is a proof of that.
At the
UNASUR meeting, the Foreign Minister of the Bolivarian
Republic made a crystal-clear explanation about the problem
of peace in the region. What is the position adopted by
each country regarding the installation of Yankee bases in
South America? This is an obligation not only of each and
every State, but also a moral obligation of each and every
conscious and honest man and woman of our hemisphere and the
world. The empire should know that whatever the
circumstances, Latin Americans will fight tirelessly for
their most sacred rights.
There
are far more serious and pressing problems affecting all
peoples in the world: climate change is perhaps the worst
and most urgent at this moment.
Before
December 18, each State should adopt a decision. Once again
the illustrious Peace Nobel Laureate, Barack Obama, should
define his position regarding this thorny issue.
Since
he accepted the responsibility of receiving the Prize, he
will have to respond to the ethical request launched by
Michael Moore when he heard the news: “now you should earn
it!” I wonder if he could. At a time when there is a
unanimous demand on the part of scientific circles to reduce
carbon dioxide emissions by no less than 30 per cent of the
levels attained in 1990, the United States is only offering
to reduce 17 per cent of what it emitted in 2005, which
hardly accounts for 5 per cent of the minimum that Science
demands from all the inhabitants of this planet by the year
2020. The United States consumes twice as much per
inhabitant than Europe, and its emissions exceed those of
China, despite its 1.338 billion inhabitants. An inhabitant
of the society that consumes the most, emits tens of times
more CO2 per capita that a citizen from a poor
country of the Third World.
In only
thirty more years, the no less than 9 billion human beings
that will inhabit the planet will require that the carbon
dioxide volumes emitted into the atmosphere be reduced to no
less than 80 per cent of the 1990 levels. Such figures are
being bitterly understood by an increasing number of leaders
of rich countries. But the hierarchy that leads the most
powerful and rich country in the planet, the United States,
comforts itself by asserting that such predictions are
scientific inventions.
Everybody knows that in Copenhagen, countries will, at best,
agree on continuing discussions so that an agreement could
be reached among the more than 200 States and institutions
that should discuss about the commitments, among them, a
very important one: which will be the rich countries that
will contribute to the development and energy saving of the
poorest countries and how much resources will they give?
Is
there any margin for hypocrisy and deceit?
Fidel Castro Ruz
November 29, 2009
7:15
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