Chávez behind the Andean troubles
Carlos Alberto Montaner
The
Rio Group somewhat resembles a school yard during recess. The kids insult
each other, sometimes hit each other. Then the bell rings, the teacher
arrives, stops the fight, tells them to shake hands, and they all return
cheerfully to class.
Ibero-American
summits are like that. The absence of protocol loosens Hugo Chávez's sharp
tongue and hyperactive gestures. He rants, begins to sing, shouts,
threatens, hugs, pinches the others. Some months ago, the king of Spain, an
educated and sensible person, lost his patience and told him to shut up, but
that didn't work. The colonel does not know silence. He panics at the very
idea.
What the
computers reveal
It happens,
however, that the incident between Colombia and Ecuador cannot be settled
with a handshake. If Interpol determines that the three computers found in
the camp of Raúl Reyes, the FARC's second-in-command, are not a fabrication
of the Colombian government of President Alvaro Uribe but really belonged to
the narcoterrorist comandante killed by Colombian bombs, the
International Crimes Court must take up the case, investigate the events in
depth and punish the guilty.
The sentiment
was expressed with total authority by Diego Arria, former U.N. Security
Council president and an expert in these affairs: ``The fact that the
president of Colombia . . . denounced the presidents of Venezuela and
Ecuador as collaborators with the terrorists who are holding 700 people
hostage cannot be overlooked, no matter how many handshakes or forced
smiles.''
True enough.
The documents found in Reyes' computer tell of funding the FARC's activities
with Venezuelan money. No less than 300 million petrodollars.
Liaison
with narcoguerrillas
They describe
the complicity of the government of President Rafael Correa of Ecuador, who
assigned one of his principal ministers to be the liaison with the
narcoguerrillas and offered to remove from the border any soldiers who
interfered with the rebels' work.
The documents
also mention Arab dealers, willing to sell missiles. And there are
references to efforts to buy uranium, presumably to build ''dirty'' bombs
capable of contaminating thousands of people with radioactivity.
We are, then,
in the presence of an organization as lethal and sinister as al Qaeda,
except that it is much older (40 years), better structured and more
numerous. Its essential difference with Osama bin Laden's group is
metaphysical in nature.
Al Qaeda is
engaged in an anti-Semitic and anti-West religious crusade. The FARC is a
communist organization, built within the strategic and political concept of
the Cold War. It managed to survive after the disappearance of the Eastern
bloc because drug trafficking and kidnapping furnish it with the resources
it needs to remain viable.
Pact with
radical elements
It is very
important that we understand this fact, if we want to view reality through
Chávez's eyes and interpret his behavior. The Venezuelan sees himself as the
heir of the task and responsibilities that Moscow betrayed.
Chávez is
convinced that the Caracas-Havana-Quito-La Paz axis is the seed of what
someday will be a global power capable of destroying the rotten capitalist
Western world. He dreams that he will have the honor of founding that
glorious neocommunist era.
That is why he
makes pacts (as Moscow did in its expansive phase) with the world's most
radical elements, regardless of the ideology that sustains them or the
methods they utilize. Their only requirement is to be profoundly and
virulently anti-American and anti-West.
Whoever wishes
to understand Chávez's behavior should read Epic of the Insurrection,
a very interesting book, nicely written by Nicaraguan Gen. Humberto Ortega,
a Sandinista and former minister of defense. Ortega tells -- with absolute
frankness, much pride and thousands of facts -- how the Nicaraguan
communists, at great cost, set up the subversive and insurrectional
apparatus that liquidated the Somoza dictatorship.
Complicity
with criminal gangs
But a second
reading also demonstrates the intense degree of cooperation and solidarity
between the ''brotherly'' forces in the socialist camp and the entire anti-West
neighborhood.
Cubans, North
Koreans, Russians and Palestinian terrorists turned out to help their
Nicaraguan comrades ``unto victory forever.''
Chávez is not
just the heir to the Soviet cause. He also inherited the tradition and
strategy of ''revolutionary internationalism,'' something that includes
total complicity with the criminal gangs. Moscow managed to shirk the
consequences of that crime. Chávez probably will not be as lucky and will
wind up, like Milosevic, behind bars.
March 18, 2008
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