Colombia, the US and the threat to Venezuelan sovereignty
A major diplomatic and political conflict has emerged between Colombia
and Venezuela subsequent to the revelation of a Colombian government
covert operation in Venezuela, involving the recruitment of Venezuelan
military and security officers in the kidnapping of a Colombian leftist
leader. Following an investigation by the Venezuelan Ministry of
Interior and reports and testimony from journalists and other
knowledgeable political observers it was determined that the highest
levels of the Colombian government, including President Uribe, planned
and executed this flagrant violation of Venezuelan sovereignty.
Once direct Colombian involvement was established, the Venezuelan
government asked for a public apology from the Colombian government
while seeking a diplomatic solution by blaming Colombian Presidential
advisers. The Colombian regime took the offensive, launching an
aggressive defense of its involvement in the violation of Venezuelan
sovereignty and beyond that laying claim to the legitimacy of future
acts of aggression on the bases of “national security”. As
a result President Chavez recalled the Venezuelan Ambassador from
Bogota, suspended all state to state commercial and political
agreements pending an official state apology. In response the US
Government gave unconditional support to Colombian violation of
Venezuelan sovereignty and urged the Uribe regime to pursue the
conflict further. What began as a diplomatic conflict over a
specific incident has turned into a major, defining crises in US and
Latin American political relations with potentially explosive military,
economic and political consequences for the entire region.
A High Stake Conflict
The Uribe regime in justifying the kidnapping of Rodrigo Granda, the
Colombian leftist leader, annunciated a new foreign policy doctrine
which echoes that of the Bush Administration: The right of
unilateral intervention in any country in which the Colombian
government perceives or claims is harboring or providing refuge to
political adversaries (which the regime labels as “terrorists”) which
might threaten the security of the state. The Uribe doctrine of
unilateral intervention echoes the preventive war speech, enunciated in
late 2001 by President Bush. Clearly Uribe’s action and
pronouncement is profoundly influenced by the dominance that Washington
exercises over the Uribe regime’s policies through its extended $3
billion dollar military aid program and deep penetration of the entire
political-defense apparatus.
Uribe’s offensive military doctrine involves several major policy propositions:
1.) The right to violate any country’s sovereignty, including the use
of force and violence, directly or in cooperation with local
mercenaries.
2.) The right to recruit and subvert military and security officials to serve the interests of the Colombian state.
3.) The right to allocate funds to bounty hunters or “third parties” to engage in illegal violent acts within a target country.
4.) The assertion of the supremacy of Colombian laws, decrees and
policies over and against the sovereign laws of the intervened country.
The Uribe doctrine is clearly a blatant repetition of Washington’s
imperialist global pronouncements. Uribe’s doctrine is directed
at establishing Colombia as a sub-imperialist, regional power
subordinated to US dictates. While the immediate point of
aggression involves Colombia’s relations to Venezuela, the Uribe
doctrine lays the basis for unilateral military intervention anywhere
in the hemisphere. Uribe’s doctrine is a threat to sovereignty of
any country in the hemisphere: its intervention in Venezuela and the
justification provides a precedent for future aggression.
Recent Precedents for Unilateral Intervention
The Uribe Doctrine is not original – it is an imitation of the
pronouncements of the Bush Administration and the Israeli
government. Both governments have provided a pseudo-legal
framework for their extra-territorial intervention in other
countries. In the past 5 years, US Pentagon openly boasts of
having “Special Forces” engaged in commando operations throughout the
world involving assassinations of “suspected terrorists”. The
Jewish State has been notorious for its extra-territorial death squads,
some of which have been exposed.
Colombia’s adoption and implementation of the extraterritorial policy
as part of its strategy of unilateral intervention is not coincidental,
as the Colombian security forces have been trained and advised by US
and Israeli secret political police. More directly Washington
through its $3 billion dollar military aid program is in a command and
control position within all sectors of the Colombian State and thus
able to determine the security doctrine of the Uribe regime. More
important Uribe has been a long-time, large-scale practitioner of death
squad politics prior to his ascendancy to the Presidency and prior to
receiving large scale US aid. By borrowing the Bush Doctrine from
his patron-state, Uribe has internationalized the terror practices
which he has pursued for the past 20 years within Colombia.
Prior to the recent spate of high profile trans-border kidnapping
(Trinidad in Ecuador, Granda in Venezuela), the Uribe regime has
engaged in frequent interventions, kidnapping and assassinating popular
leaders and soldiers from bordering countries, and providing material
and political support to would-be ‘golpistas’, especially in
Venezuela. Dozens of Colombian refugees fleeing marauding death
squads have been pursued into Venezuela and killed or kidnapped over
the past three years by Colombian paramilitary and security
forces. Six Venezuelan soldiers were killed by Colombian security
forces in an “unexplained” incident. More recently, in 2004, over
130 Colombian paramilitary forces and other irregulars were infiltrated
into Venezuela to engage in terrorist violence – to trigger action by
Venezuelan-US coup-makers. Shortly thereafter Colombian security
forces and the US CIA intervened in Ecuador to kidnap a former peace
negotiator of the FARC, Colombia’s major guerrilla group.
What is new and more ominous is that the Uribe regime’s de facto policy
of extra-territoriality has been converted into a de jure strategic
doctrine of unilateral military intervention. Colombia no longer
pretends to be engaged in a “covert” selective policy of violating
other countries sovereignty but has publicly declared the supremacy of
its laws and the right to apply them anywhere in the world where it
unilaterally declares its case for national security. Colombia’s
gross violations of Venezuelan and Ecuadorian sovereignty is a policy
clearly endorsed and dictated at the highest levels of the Colombian
State – exclusively the prerogative of President Uribe – and endorsed
at the highest level of the US government by its principal diplomatic
spokesperson in Colombia, Ambassador Woods (“We endorse Uribe’s action
100%”). The ‘Granda incident’ is not simply an isolated
diplomatic incident which can be resolved through good faith bilateral
negotiations. The kidnapping is part of a larger strategy
involving preparations – ideological, political and military – for a
large-scale, political-military confrontation with Venezuela.
Purpose of the Uribe Doctrine
The enunciation and practice of the Uribe Doctrine has several
purposes. One is in line with US imperialist and Colombian
elite policy: To overthrow the Chavez regime in order to eliminate
opposition to US worldwide and regional imperial domination.
Chavez opposes the US wars in Iraq and Afghanistan as well as its plans
to invade Iran. In Latin America, Chavez opposes the US-dominated
Free Trade of the Americas Pact. Secondly the Uribe doctrine
seeks to destroy Cuban-Venezuelan trade ties, in order to undermine the
Cuban revolutionary government. Thirdly the Uribe doctrine is
aimed at maintaining Venezuela as an exclusive oil exporter to the US –
at a time when the Chavez government has signed trade agreements to
diversify its oil markets to China and elsewhere. Fourthly, and
most probably most important from the strict perspective of the Uribe
regime’s survival, the Colombian government is profoundly disturbed by
the positive social impact which the Chavez welfare policies have on
the majority of Colombians living in poverty, especially his newly
announced agrarian reform, and his defense of national public
enterprises (especially the state petroleum company) within the
framework of free and democratic institutions. Uribe’s austerity
policies, his military and paramilitary forces displacement of 3
million peasants, his promotion of greater and greater concentration of
wealth and the slashing of social services, and worse, the systematic
long-term large-scale violations of human and democratic rights stand
in polar opposition to Venezuela under President Chavez which
provides a viable, accessible and visible alternative easily understood
by vast numbers of Colombians who migrate to Venezuela. By
intervening in Venezuela, by supporting US and its local coup-makers,
Uribe hopes to undercut the political appeal of revolutionary politics,
whether it takes the form of electoral, guerrilla and /or social
movements.
The most immediate purpose of the Uribe doctrine is to defeat the
20,000 person guerrilla armies which control or influence half of
Colombia’s territory. The purpose of the recent interventions is
to pressure neighboring governments to ally themselves with the
Colombian death-squads in a regional campaign to resolve the Colombian
elites internal problems – i.e. the decimation of the opposition to US
regional domination. The bombastic “anti-terror” international
propaganda campaign of the Uribe regime is an admission of the failure
of its internal counter-insurgency campaign. Uribe’s accusations
that the Venezuelan State is “protecting” or “providing sanctuary to
terrorists” is patently false. Uribe provides no systematic
evidence. The real purpose is to blackmail the Venezuelan state –
or its weakest and most malleable sectors – into abdicating their role
as a neutral peace mediators and submitting to the dictates of the
Colombian-US security apparatus.
Terrorism: Propaganda and Practice
The Uribe regime has been universally recognized as one of the worst
practitioners of state terrorism in the world throughout the new
millennium. Tens of thousands of peasants, social and human
rights activists, trade unionists and journalists have been murdered by
the security forces – the military directly, or via the state financed
paramilitary groups. Every day of every year, scores of peasants
and critics of the regime are murdered. State terror is the
defining characteristic of the Uribe regime and its US military
advisory and military mission. Yet in true totalitarian fashion,
the terrorist executioner accuses the victim of the crimes committed
against them.
Uribe who sends 130 paramilitary forces to terrorize Venezuela,
supports a failed violent coup and then provides asylum and material
support to the exiled senior members of the coup and who blatantly
bribes Venezuelan soldiers to betray their country to perpetuate a
kidnapping, accuses Chavez of harboring terrorists and calls for an
“international conference” on “terrorism”. Uribe’s purpose
in calling for a regional conference is not to discuss the state
terrorism which is endemic to and embedded in his regime (with US
backing), but to justify the Uribe doctrine of unilateral intervention
and to mobilize other regional US clients in support of its internal
war and to pressure the Chavez regime to subordinate itself to
Colombia’s security doctrine.
Chavez has recognized the growing security threat posed by the
kidnapping and has terminated state-to-state economic and military
projects and recalled his ambassador from Bogotá. He has proposed
to Uribe a bi-lateral meeting of heads of state to resolve differences
with regard to the kidnapping and related incidents. No
amount of diplomatic maneuvering on the part of Venezuela’s foreign
ministry nor aggressive propaganda campaign by the Colombian security
state can obviate the fact that the Colombian state following its own
interests and those of the US imperial state is bent on a course of
direct military confrontation with Venezuela.
Implication of Uribe Doctrine
The political and military implications of the Uribe Doctrine are an
extreme departure from the recognized norms of international law and
closely approximate the belligerent practices of imperial
satraps. If all countries were the apply the Uribe Doctrine we
would face a world of constant wars, conquests and prolonged liberation
struggles throughout Latin America.
A state of permanent belligerency is explicit in the Uribe Doctrine’s
claim to militarily intervene across national borders in pursuit of its
revolutionary opposition. This policy means that each and every
Latin American country must limit its sovereignty according to the
Colombian definitions of “national security”. This is clearly
unacceptable to any independent country, like Venezuela, though the
Gutierrez regime in Ecuador has accepted to be a “second level client”
, a client of the Uribe regime which in turn is a client of the US.
Equally serious, the Uribe Doctrine rejects recognized frontier,
meaning that it permits itself the right to cross national boundaries
at will without consulting the countries whose borders it
violates. It is a short step from not recognizing borders and
national boundaries to annexing adjacent regions for “security” or
economic reasons. Colombia has in the recent past (1992) nearly
provoked a major war by sending its warships into Venezuelan
waters. Uribe’s notion of an international ideological war
without frontiers is an exact replica of the Bush imperial project,
translated into the Andean region. Clearly Uribe aspires to play
a sub-imperial role in the Northern region of South America under US
tutelage.
The Uribe Doctrine stands as a stark rejection of all United Nation’s
principles and in violation of international law—which, however, has
already been weakened by the acquiescence of most of the major Latin
American countries in the US-led invasion of Haiti, the kidnapping of
its elected leader (President Bertrand Aristide) and the presence of
Latin American colonial occupation forces on the island.
Finally the Uribe Doctrine serves to advance joint military operation
betweens the US and Colombia armed forces as the forward shield for
consolidating US imperial power in Latin America. Washington’s
cynical 100% “endorsement” of Uribe’s intervention belies the fact that
this was a joint activity, sanctioned and approved by the US military
and special forces officials which operate throughout the Colombian
Defense Ministry.
Venezuela-Colombia: National or Class Struggle?
The Colombian threat to Venezuela’s sovereignty is seen by the
Venezuela’s rightwing opposition as a welcome intervention.
Having failed in all of its violent and unconstitutional efforts to
overthrow President Chavez, the bourgeois opposition is prepared to
accept reactionary Colombian hegemony in exchange for eliminating their
class enemy, the Chavista movement. This was crystal clear in the
Congressional debates following the kidnapping of Granda: The
opposition congress-people condemned the Venezuelan government’s
defense of national sovereignty and justified Uribe’s intervention in
Venezuela. When one Chavista congressperson, Luis Tascon, called
the opposition’s defense of Uribe “treason”. This can have a
deeper meaning: that the class interests of the Venezuelan bourgeois
are more important than any loyalty to their country of birth.
The idea of a “national patriotic front” against Colombian aggression,
put forth by some Chavista Congress-people, was dramatically
demonstrated to be an illusion. The Venezuelan bourgeoisie
chooses its political alignments on the basis of class and
pro-imperialist loyalties not on the basis of patriotic appeals.
The only consequential defenders of Venezuelan sovereignty are found in
the great mass of urban poor, class-conscious workers and progressive
lower middle classes in Venezuela and among their counterparts in
Colombia. Real life demonstrates that the conflict is not between
“Colombians” and “Venezuelans” but between the patriotic workers and
peasants of Venezuela and their enemies among the Colombian elites and
their auxiliaries among the traitorous Venezuelan bourgeoisie (los
esqualidos). The Venezuelan bourgeois represents a “Trojan Horse”
in case of an invasion from Colombia and the US. Today they
support Uribe’s felonious kidnapping of Granda, tomorrow they would
become the fifth column saboteurs backing an invasion.
Colombia: A Strategic Client of the US Empire
Washington has provided more military aid to Colombia than all the rest
of Latin America combined, and only second to Israel in the
world. The US strategy revolves around defeating the massive and
influential guerrilla movement as a first step toward consolidating
power in the Andean region and the upper Amazon basin. Once
secured this region would become a springboard toward invading and
taking over Venezuela and its oil fields and dealing a severe blow to
the revolutionary government in Cuba. The US, through Uribe, has
tripled the size of the Colombian armed forces over the past few years
to over 267,ooo troops. It has vastly increased its aerial
firepower (combat helicopters and fighter planes) and provided the most
advanced technological weaponry to detect and track guerrilla
movements. Yet the strategy, while massacring thousands of
peasant sympathizers and displacing millions of others, has failed to
gain any strategic military advantage over the guerrillas. As
long as the Colombian regime is tied down by the guerrilla resistance,
it can only play a limited role in any military invasion of
Venezuela. For Uribe to engage in a US-sponsored invasion of
Venezuela is a very risky proposition opening a large swathe of
territory for a guerrilla offensive. Engaging in a war on two
fronts (East and West) is a risky proposition as Hitler learned during
the Second World War and Bush is being taught today in the Middle
East.
The kidnapping of Granda is only the “dress rehearsal” of a larger
project of escalating provocations to test the loyalty, discipline and
effectiveness of the Venezuelan security system. Washington is
probing to see how far it can push Venezuela in surrendering its
sovereignty and control over its borders.
President Chavez’ forthright decision to break
economic and military relations, recall its ambassador and demand that
Uribe renounce the policy of unilateral intervention (framed in the
diplomatic language of asking for an apology) was a serious blow to
this kind of incremental or step-by-step[p intervention leading to
invasion.
Uribe and Washington’s effort to drive a wedge between the popular
resistance in Colombia and the Chavez government by using the
“terrorist issue” as a political club has, in part, backfired – it has
instead aroused a powerful undercurrent of nationalist sentiment in
Venezuela, while seriously jeopardizing important sectors of the
Colombian economy, including elite classes which normally back Uribe.
Washington and Uribe’s proposal for an international conference to
discuss the issue of terror is based on their recognition that most of
the Latin American regimes today are eager to serve US imperial
interests. During the previous period of sustained economic and
political warfare against the elected Chavez government by the
authoritarian right, Brazil’s Celso Amorin organized a group of
countries calling themselves “The Friends of Venezuela” made up of
hostile neo-liberal Ibero-Americans leaders, including
ex-Presidents Aznar of Spain and Bush of the US (who both supported the
failed military coup), Fox of Mexico and Lagos of Chile (notorious free
marketers) and, of course, Brazil which gave equal political standing
to the Venezuelan rightwing opposition as to the elected
government. Chavez rightly rejected the mediation of such
“friends”.
Today Lula offers his services once again to “mediate” between an
international aggressor and a sovereign country. Except for Cuba,
not a single Latin American client regime has condemned Uribe’s
aggression or, worse, spoken out clearly in opposition to his doctrine
of extra-territoriality. President Chavez is clearly aware of the
pitfalls of meeting in an “international summit” dominated by hostile
neo-liberal, pro-empire regimes that have already accepted and
submitted to the Bush-Uribe anti-terrorist doctrine.
Chavez is absolutely correct to counterpoise the notion of a bilateral
forum in which the focus is on Colombia’s intervention and hegemonic
pretensions, where the issues of Uribe’s brutal policy of state
terrorism could become part of the public debate on “terrorism”.
Of course, Washington will “advise” Uribe to refuse. Chavez could
then advise his foreign minister to take the matter to the UN General
Assembly as a matter of urgent importance of peace, security and
national sovereignty. Chavez has already retaliated to continued
US overt aggression by signing oil export and investment agreements
with China, Russia, Latin America and Europe. Shutting off
imports of Colombian agricultural imports could stimulate a more
intensified effort to promote local agricultural production, push for a
more expeditious agrarian reform and greater public investment in local
food production.
The kidnapping of Granda and the subverting of a few Venezuelan
officials can serve as a wake-up call for the Venezuelan leadership to
the real threats to national sovereignty which emanate from the
US-backed Uribe doctrine. The threat is real, it is systemic and
it is immediate. President Uribe has the backing of an imperial
power but Chavez has the backing of the overwhelming majority of
Venezuelans and the fact that they will be willing to fight to defend
their land, their government and their right to live as a sovereign
people. The question of Venezuelan sovereignty is now not
simply a question of diplomatic maneuvers but of organizing the mass of
the Venezuelans into becoming a formidable military deterrent to any
armed aggression.
January 20, 2005