I have not been too enthusiastic about blogging this week. Things have gotten so bizarre and depressing that it just seems impossible to even write coherently about what is going on here. But somehow, I feel I am neglecting my self-imposed task of reporting this era in detail. Thus, today I will simply ramble and ramble about the events this week.
When Hugo Chávez was first elected, his presence at summits was quite interesting, he had a star quality about him, and most Latin American leaders seemed to want to meet him, get to know him, take advantage of his popular image to benefit their own popularity by being seen with him. This has changed. Even before his US$ 80 million Airbus had taken off, Chávez was already making waves, by calling Bush’ National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice “illiterate” after her call for transparent elections in Venezuela. Separately, Chavez charged that the US was simply seeking his overthrow. The truth was, that all of this appeared to be a reaction to the fact that Chavez had been encouraged to believe by his collaborators that there was a possibility that he would meet Bush at the Summit. Just to set the stage, Chavez said right before leaving that that these summits were a waste of time. This is obviously true if you don’t believe you have anything to negotiate, contribute or share with the leaders of the Hemisphere. To top it all off, his interview in local newspaper El Universal, discussed in an earlier post and found here in English, did not help matters, as Chavez disqualified Spain and the US as countries unfriendly to Venezuela, when both are part of the “Group of Friends” involved in looking for a solution to the Venezuelan political crisis, while praising Fidel Castro and attempting to argue he is not really a Dictator.
At the summit, Chavez continued his erratic behavior as he did not attend meetings, even failing to show up at the gala dinner at its conclusion and was definitely beating his own drum. It was not all his fault. In contrast to four or five years ago, none of the leaders of the major Latin American countries wanted to even be seen with him for fears of having his home constituencies associate them with the Venezuelan President. Even Brazilian President Lula, failed to even have his picture taken with Chavez, after they were apparently close right after Lula’s election. The only President willing to meet with Chavez was Mexico’s Vicente Fox, as host of the summit, but Chavez simply failed to show up, meeting instead with Mexican opposition leader Cuauhtémoc Cardenas.
In his speech at the Summit, Chavez mentioned as one of the social achievements of his administration the example of the fact that the Venezuelan Government provides care for 80% of all AIDS patients in the country. Someone obviously did not give the President all of the information, as it turns out that this care is being provided only after the AIDS association in Venezuela sued the Government to force it to do it. Moreover, the same association is now suing the Government for barring HIV positive kids from Chavez’ Bolivarian schools.
Diplomacy was clearly not Chávez forte at the summit. He said Chilean President Lagos was not saying the whole truth about the Bolivia-Chile difference over the accessibility of the sea to Bolivia. Of course, it as Chavez himself who was ignoring old treaties between Bolivia, Chile and Peru which are being respected by all three countries. The Chileans were diplomatic, answering back that precisely because in Lagos words: the President of Chile tells the truth, this is a serous country, responsible”. All of this forced Vice-President Jose Vicente Rangel (whose wife is from Chile) to say that Venezuela would not break relations with anyone, trying to save the day after Chavez made a snide comment about Chile maybe breaking relations with Venezuela for saying what he was saying.
Chavez also made a somewhat despective remark, mostly ignored by the press abut Peruvian President Toledo, when he quoted Toledo on growth and social programs. It was subtle, but the way Chavez said something like “even Toledo, who is a Doctor in Economics has stated” as if he knew that despite not being educated.
At the end of the summit, Chavez praised Bush for his understanding of the recall against him when compared to his national Security Adviser, curiously, at the same time the Venezuelan Attorney General was doing exactly the opposite , saying that Bush’s statements were out of line and an attempt to get involved in the internal affairs of Venezuela.
But where Chavez truly failed to even come close to the regional leaders was when he was the only one of the 34 Latin American leaders in disagreement with the final declaration of the Summit. The declaration expresses the wishes of the 33 countries that signed it to integrate themselves economically sometime in the future and to work towards this goal. Venezuela was the only country to say they did not want to be part of it. Some analysts have interpreted all this as simply a way of Chávez of beginning to distance himself from the countries which are part of the “Group of Friends” in preparation to not recognizing the signatures for the recall referendum of the recall itself. I am not sure whether this interpretation is right or wrong.
What I do know is that after rebuffing his colleagues Chavez went straight to Cuba, surely to sit down with his Communist alter ego to plan their strategy going forward to preserve Chavez’ power. Curiously, while Hugo Chavez calls for the Central Bank to give him US$ 1 billion in reserves, Cuba has violated its somewhat illegal agreement with Venezuela by which Venezuela provides Cuba with 53,000 barrels of oil a day. Under the agreement, there is a grace period, but Cuba owes Venezuela by now more than US$ 800 million which should have already been paid. As Chavez arrived back in Venezuela, the bizarre got even more bizarre. Despite the efforts of some members of the Chavez administration to make the discussion of the US$ 1 billion disappear to appease international markets, in his State of the Union speech today, Chavez requested that the national assembly approve a “law for the utilization of excess international reserves” clearly reviving an issue which ahs all markets nervous. He added something like “Nobody is going to make believe that growth in macroeconomic numbers, or growth in the economy is good, the only thing that matters is that people are treated well, that is why I have so much respect for Fidel Castro”
As a well know economist I had lunch with told me yesterday: “ With his destruction, Chavez may be making two of my dreams a reality, that the dollar will circulate freely in Venezuela as people completely mistrust the local currency and that PDVSA is privatized as the only way for the country to survive”.
I fear he may be right in the end and the thought is so depressing that I will end my ramblings right here.