Castro did
it his way. Chavez chose a Venezuelan model. He envisioned socialism for the
21st century. He wanted it based on "solidarity, fraternity, love, justice,
liberty and equality."
He wanted it built bottom up. He deplored top
down. Popular protagonism over bureaucracy was policy.
He abhorred
neoliberal harshness. He called it incompatible with democracy. He wanted
another way. His legacy reflects his accomplishments.
Eva Golinger knew
Chavez. She called him a "grandiose visionary" "dream maker."
Venezuelans
loved him. So did millions worldwide. They did so for good reason. He cared. He
made a difference. His achievements are remarkable. They can't be
ignored.
He was honest, said Golinger. His roots were humble. He grew up
in a mud hut. He sold candies on streets. He did so to earn money for his
family.
He "dreamed of building a strong, sovereign nation, independent
of foreign influence….He dreamed of improving the lives of his
people…."
He wanted poverty eradicated. He wanted a better life for
Venezuelans. He called it el buenvivir (the good life).
He made dreams
come true. He achieved remarkable changes. They're more than just numbers. He
transformed one of Latin America's most unequal countries into its most
equitable. At the same time, he achieved impressive economic growth.
He
did so in 14 years. He spoke truth to power. He did it because it matters.
He cared about Venezuela's most disadvantaged. He lifted them from
poverty. He provided education, healthcare, affordable food, housing, and
hope.
"He recognized the rights of the disabled, of indigenous peoples,
all genders and sexualities. He broke down barriers of racism and classism and
declared himself a socialist feminist."
"He not only made his own dreams
come true, but he inspired us all to achieve our fullest potential."
"I
am just a soldier," he said. America wanted him dead. Bush failed several times
to remove him. Obama likely killed him.
Toppling foreign leaders by
coups or assassinations is longstanding US policy. William Blum's done some of
the best research. His books include "Rogue State." They're must
reading.
He documented dozens of successful and failed post-WW II US
interventions. They include:
- toppling Iran's Mohammad Mosaddegh in
1953; it was the CIA's first successful coup after an initial
failure;
- ousting Guatemala's Jacobo Arbenz in 1954;
-
failing to kill China's Chou En-Lai in 1955;
- failing hundreds times
to kill Fidel Castro;
- failing to kill France's Charles de Gaulle;
- plotting Gaddafi's assassination for decades;
- killing
him in 2011; and
- very likely killing Chavez.
Obama wanted him
dead.
Extrajudicial killings are indefensible. They're morally abhorrent.
They're illegal under international and US laws.
Article 23b of the 1907
Hague Regulations prohibits "assassination, proscription, or outlawry of an
enemy, or putting a price upon an enemy's head, as well as offering a reward for
any enemy 'dead or alive.' "
In 1980, the Sixth United Nations Congress
on the Prevention of Crime and the Treatment of Offenders condemned "the
practice of killing and executing political opponents or suspected offenders
carried out by armed forces, law enforcement or other governmental agencies or
by paramilitary or political groups."
On December 15, 1980, the General
Assembly adopted resolution 35/172.
It urged "member states to abide by
the provisions of Articles 6, 14 and 15 of the International Covenant on Civil
and Political rights."
They address right to life issues. They include
safeguards guaranteeing fair and impartial judicial proceedings.
The
first provision of the 1989 UN Principles on the Effective Prevention and
Investigation of Extra-legal, Arbitrary and Summary Executions
states:
"Governments shall prohibit by law all extra-legal, arbitrary and
summary executions and shall ensure that any such executions are recognized as
offenses under their criminal laws, and are punishable by appropriate penalties
which take into account the seriousness of such offenses."
"Exceptional
circumstances, including a state of war or threat of war, internal political
instability or any other public emergency may not be invoked as a justification
of such executions."
They "shall not be carried out under any
circumstances including, but not limited to, situations of internal armed
conflict, excessive or illegal use of force by a public official or other person
acting in an official capacity or by a person acting at the instigation, or with
the consent or acquiescence of such person, and situations in which deaths occur
in custody."
"This prohibition shall prevail over decrees issued by
governmental authority."
The International Criminal Court's Rome Statute
prohibits extrajudicial killings.
In 1976, Gerald Ford's Executive Order
(EO) 11905 said:
"No employee of the United States Government shall
engage in, or conspire to engage in, political assassination."
In 1981,
Ronald Reagan's EO 12333 said:
"No person employed by or acting on behalf
of the United States Government shall engage in, or conspire to engage in,
assassination."
Post-9/11, Bush reinstituted them. Targeted
assassinations again became official policy. US presidents lawlessly kill. They
have diktat authority to do so. They take full advantage.
Assassinating
foreign leaders and others is official US policy. Obama's kill list reflects it.
Anyone can be targeted for any reason or none at all. Independent head of state
are especially vulnerable.
Obama takes full advantage. He murdered
Gaddafi. He likely killed Chavez.
On March 6, RIA Novosti headlined
"Chavez Death Could be US Plot - Russian Communist Leader,"
saying:
Russia's Communist party leader Gennady Zyuganov believes
Washington may have killed Chavez. Suspicious cancers affected half a dozen
Latin American leaders.
"How did it happen that six leaders of Latin
American countries which had criticized US policies and tried to create an
influential alliance in order to be independent and sovereign states, fell ill
simultaneously with the same disease," asked Zyuganov?
"In my view, this
was far from a coincidence." He urged an internationally controlled
investigation.
Interim Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro is suspicious.
He suspects an "imperialist" plot. "The old enemies of our fatherland looked for
way to harm (Chavez's) health," he said.
Washington wanted Chavez dead.
Kurt Nimmo addressed the issue. Previous attempts failed.
Blum asked:
"How do we know that the CIA was behind the" failed April two-day
coup?
"Same way we know that the sun will rise tomorrow
morning."
CIA assassins never rest. Chavez knew he was marked for death.
He believed it. He said so numerous times.
Michel Chossudovsky asked if
he was "the object of a targeted assassination by the Obama administration?"
"In this context, the CIA would receive orders to assassinate foreign
leaders directly from the US President."
"There are secret lists of names
as confirmed by US government sources."
"The orders carried out by the
CIA to kill a foreign leader emanate from the US president."
Civil rights
groups want answers. An FOIA request was filed.
The Partnership for
Civil Justice Fund, ANSWER Coalition, and Liberation Newspaper want records and
documents that "relate to or reference or discuss any information regarding or
plans to poison or otherwise assassinate" Chavez.
They seek "(a)ll
records and documents, including but not limited to, emails, letters, cables or
other communications, memoranda, notes, minutes, photographs, audio recordings,
video recordings, digital recordings, intelligence assessments, communications,
records or other data that relate to or reference or discuss any information
regarding or plans to poison or otherwise assassinate the President of
Venezuela, Hugo Chavez, who has just died."
"This request in made in
light of the US government’s acknowledged history of knowledge and possession of
information regarding, and/or participation in, attempts to assassinate foreign
leaders."
People have an "urgent and compelling" right to know. At best,
heavily redacted documents will follow.
Regardless of what's gotten,
what known suggests direct US involvement. Bush and Obama want Chavez ousted.
They wanted him dead.
He's gone but not forgotten. His legacy lives.
Friday state funeral ceremonies were held. Dozens of high-level international
delegations attended.
Around 33 heads of state were present. In
alphabetical order they include:
- Antigua and Barbuda: Prime Minister
Baldwin Spencer
- Aruba: Prime Minister Michiel Godfried
Eman
- Belarus: President Alexander Lukashenko
- Bolivia: President
Evo Morales
- Brazil: President Dilma Rousseff
- Chile: President
Sebastian Pinera
- Colombia: Juan Manuel Santos
- Cuba: Raul
Castro
- Curacao: Prime Minister Daniel Hodge
- Dominica: Prime
Minister Roosevelt Skerrit
- Dominican Republic: President Danilo
Medina
- Ecuador: President Rafael Correa
- El Salvador: President
Mauricio Funes
- Guyana: President Donald Ramotar
- Haiti: President
Michel Martelly and Prime Minister Laurent Lamothe
- Honduras: President
Porfirio Lobo
- Iran: President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad
- Jamaica: Prime
Minister Portia Simpson-Miller
- Mexico: President Enrique Pena
Nieto
- Nicaragua: President Daniel Ortega
- Panama: President Ricardo
Martinelli
- Peru: President Ollanta Humala
- St. Kitts and Nevis:
Prime Minister Denzil Douglas
- St. Lucia: Prime Minister Kenny
Anthony
- St. Vincent and the Grenadines: Prime Minister Ralph
Gonsalves
- Suriname: President Desi Bouterse
- Trinidad and Tobago:
Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar
- Uruguay: President Jose
Mujica
- Argentina President Christina Fernandez was one of the first
high-profile mourners to arrive. On Thursday, she flew home to Buenos
Aires.
Spurious reports suggested Chavez's last words were "I don't want
to die. Please don't let me die."
US media headlined it. So did
Democracy Now's Amy Goodman. Presidential guard General Jose Ornella was
quoted.
Allegedly he said Chavez "couldn't speak but he said it with his
lips."
Reuters reported otherwise. It said "Chavez slipped into a coma on
Monday before dying the following day of respiratory failure." An unnamed source
said cancer spread to his lungs.
Venezuelans mourn. Chavez lay in state.
Over two million filed past him. Many weep. Some salute. Others cross
themselves. Their love and admiration are palpable.
Raul Castro said
Chavez "left undefeated." He was elected overwhelmingly four times.
"He
was invincible. He left victorious, and no one can take that away. It is fixed
in history."
He represented a threat of a good example. He was the
rarest of rare leaders. He was a people's president. He broke the chains that
bind.
Latin America no longer is America's backyard. Venezuelans won't
ever go back. Believe it. Bolivariarism is institutionalized. It's part of the
national culture. It's here to stay.
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