This is not a revolution that can be undone with one election, nor can it be simply legislated out of existence.
Counterpunch -- Much has been written about the outcome of Venezuela’s Dec. 6
legislative elections, with many of the analyses justifiably focusing on
the shortcomings of the Socialist Party (PSUV) and the difficulty of
the current state of affairs in the country. Indeed, even before the
political body was cold, post-mortem examinations abounded in the
corporate and alternative media, with dissections of seemingly every
aspect of the Bolivarian Republic’s political, economic, and social
life.
VENEZUELA: UNE REVOLUTION QUI NE MOURRA PAS (ici)
But what these journalists and political analysts often overlook is
the determination of the core of the Bolivarian Revolution, the radical
base that is committed to preserving what Hugo Chavez began building
more than 17 years ago. This is not a revolution that can be undone with
one election, nor can it be simply legislated out of existence. This
Revolution will not, as some cynics have argued, be brought down by the
weight of its own contradictions, or by internal rot and corruption, or
by external forces such as assassinations and economic destabilization.
Instead, the Revolution will survive. It will be resurgent. It will
be reborn thanks to the commitment of millions of dedicated Chavistas.
While one may take this as an article of faith, it is instead a
conclusion born of experience in Venezuela, one that is informed by
dozens of conversations with activists and organizers whose words of
love and dedication to the revolution are matched only by their actions
to build it.
In building the Revolution, these men, women, and children are pledged to defend it.
The Revolution’s Flesh Wounds
The election results, and the social problems from which they sprang,
are undeniably a comment on the level of discontent that many
Venezuelans feel, both toward their government and the general state of
affairs in the country. To read the corporate media, one would think
this is the end for the Bolivarian Revolution, that the defeat at the
polls is a repudiation of the entire program of the PSUV and its allied
political parties. But such a reading belies the reality and resilience
of the revolutionary process, one that has seen and overcome great
challenges before.
In April 2002, the U.S.-backed opposition in Venezuela staged a coup
against then President Chavez in a desperate attempt to reassert their
control over the country and extinguish the Bolivarian Revolution.
Hundreds of thousands of Venezuelans poured into the streets of Caracas,
with millions more in other parts of the country, calling for Chavez to
be restored tohis rightful office, and for the coup leaders to be
arrested. There was really no doubt that the U.S. was responsible for
this attempt at forced regime change, with many mainstream news outlets
reporting within days that high-ranking officials in the Bush
administration were intimately involved in orchestrating the coup.
Although it may seem like a mere historical footnote 13 years later,
the failed coup was a watershed moment in Venezuela –a proving ground
for the Revolution – when the people for whom Chavez and the Bolivarian
process meant a better future dared to challenge U.S. hegemony and the
attempted reestablishment of political power by the capitalist ruling
class.
But April 2002 represented even more than just resistance to
Washington. The restoration of Chavez to power was a demonstration of
the steadfastness with which Venezuelans were prepared to defend their
Revolution from external threats, even ones that until 1998 had seemed
omnipotent. It showed for the first (but certainly not the last) time
that the Revolution would not, and could not, be undone by the dirty
tricks of the Empire and its comprador class inside the country.
In the years since 2002 Venezuela has repeatedly been the target of
political, economic, and social destabilization by the United States.
These coordinated attempts have increased exponentially since the death
of Chavez in 2013 and the election of current President Nicolas Maduro.
Such subversion has taken many forms, including the use of highly
effective and well-planned forms of psychological warfare through the
manipulation of media and public opinion.
In 2007, author and investigative journalist Eva Golinger revealed
that Washington was funding a program to provide financial support to
Venezuelan journalists hostile to Chavez and the Bolivarian Revolution.
Indeed, the effort was aimed at influencing public opinion through the
right-wing media, shaping the views of Venezuelans against their
government.
A battle-tested method of destabilization by the CIA, such
tactics of psychological warfare were documented in the CIA’s
Psychological Operations in Guerilla Warfare, a manual distributed to
the contras in Nicaragua as Washington attempted to bring down the
Sandinista government in the 1980s. As noted here, the CIA wanted to
determine “the needs and frustration of the target groups … [and create
a] generalized anti-government hostility.” The objective was to create
the false impression in the minds of the population that the government
was “the cause of their frustration.”
This has been done to great effect in Venezuela. The right-wing media
in the country has done everything in its power to undermine the
government, and heap all blame onto the PSUV, including for the effects
of the economic war waged against it. According to the right wing media,
it is President Maduro and the entire government, along with the
movement they represent, that has created and exacerbated all these
problems with ineptitude and failed policies. While undoubtedly mistakes
have been made, it is equally true that many of the major problems in
the country were compounded by economic sabotage. The salient point here
though is that an economic war is transformed into a psychological war,
one that figured prominently in the recent elections.
Indeed, the economic war is critical to understanding the current
state of the country. In the wake of the opposition’s victory at the
polls, basic goods started magically reappearing on store shelves in
Venezuela, yet another indication that much of the scarcity can be
attributed not to failed economic policies, but rather to a coordinated
campaign of economic subversion. Similarly, some of the problems of
inflation and sale of contraband can be directly attributed to the
U.S.-backed opposition and its patrons in Miami and Washington. This is
certainly not to absolve the government of all blame, but rather to
point out that Venezuela and its Revolution have been directly targeted
by the forces of the Empire.
The destabilization of the country is also very much overt, with
assassinations playing a key role. Perhaps no targeted killing has had a
greater impact on the country and the Revolution than the 2014
assassination of Robert Serra, a young, up-and-coming legislator from
the PSUV who was murdered by individuals connected to former Colombian
President and self-declared enemy of the Bolivarian Revolution, Alvaro
Uribe.
A young, photogenic, and deeply committed activist and
legislator, Serra was seen by many as the future of the PSUV and of the
Chavista movement in the country. His murder was interpreted by
millions as a direct assault on the Revolution and the future of the
country.
Walking through the radical, working class neighborhoods of 23
January and El Valle, one is likely to find posters and/or graffiti
scrawled on walls with the simple phrase “Robert Vive” (Robert Lives),
and the iconic image of the young Serra – the future of the Revolution,
gunned down before he even had a chance to lead.
And this is the reality of the Revolution: the U.S. and its proxies
have done everything in their power to destroy the Bolivarian process.
And yet, the Revolution carries on. This is more than just a slogan of
resistance, it is objective fact.
Walking through the radical, working class neighborhoods of 23
January and El Valle, one is likely to find posters and/or graffiti
scrawled on walls with the simple phrase “Robert Vive” (Robert Lives),
and the iconic image of the young Serra – the future of the Revolution,
gunned down before he even had a chance to lead.
And this is the reality of the Revolution: the U.S. and its proxies
have done everything in their power to destroy the Bolivarian process.
And yet, the Revolution carries on. This is more than just a slogan of
resistance, it is objective fact.
These elections, which took place amid deteriorating economic
conditions and an intense psychological and economic war, still saw more
than 5 million Venezuelans cast votes for the PSUV and the Revolution,
for socialism and anti-imperialism.
Rumors of Chavismo’s demise have been greatly exaggerated. This dream, this revolution, will not die.
Eric Draitser is the founder of StopImperialism.org and host of CounterPunch Radio. He is an independent geopolitical analyst based in New York City. You can reach him at ericdraitser@gmail.com.
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