Venezuela's oil and Massachusetts' chimneys
By Noam Chomsky
05/21/06 "Information
Clearing House" -- --
"How Venezuela Is Keeping the Home Fires Burning in
Massachusetts," reads a recent full-page ad in major U.S.
newspapers from PDVSA, Venezuela’s state-owned oil company, and
CITGO, its Houston-based subsidiary.
The ad describes a program, encouraged by Venezuelan President
Hugo Chávez, to sell heating oil at discount prices to
low-income communities in Boston, the South Bronx and elsewhere
in the United States -- one of the more ironic gestures ever in
the North-South dialogue. The deal developed after a group of
U.S. senators sent a letter to nine major oil companies asking
them to donate a portion of their recent record profits to help
poor residents cover heating bills. The only response came from
CITGO.
In the United States, commentary on the deal is grudging at
best, saying that Chávez, who has accused the Bush
administration of trying to overthrow his government, is
motivated by political ends -- unlike, for example, the purely
humanitarian programs of the U.S. Agency for International
Development.
Chávez’ heating oil is one among many challenges bubbling up
from Latin America for the Washington planners of grand
strategy. The noisy protests during President Bush’s trip in
early November 2005 to the Summit of the Americas, in Argentina,
amplify the dilemma.
From Venezuela to Argentina, the hemisphere is getting
completely out of control, with left-center governments all the
way through. Even in Central America, still suffering the
after-effects of President Reagan’s "war on terror," the lid is
barely on.
In the southern cone, the indigenous populations have become
much more active and influential, particularly in Bolivia and
Ecuador, both major energy producers, where they either oppose
production of oil and gas or want it to be domestically
controlled. Some are even calling for an "indigenous nation" in
South America.
Meanwhile internal economic integration is strengthening,
reversing relative isolation that dates back to the Spanish
conquests. Furthermore, South-South interaction is growing, with
major powers (Brazil, South Africa, India) in the lead,
particularly on economic issues.
Latin America as a whole is increasing trade and other relations
with the European Union and China, with some setbacks but likely
expansion, especially for raw materials exporters like Brazil
and Chile.
Venezuela has forged probably the closest relations with China
of any Latin American country, and is planning to sell
increasing amounts of oil to China as part of its effort to
reduce dependence on a hostile U.S. government. Indeed,
Washington’s thorniest problem in the region is Venezuela, which
provides nearly 15 percent of U.S. oil imports.
Chávez, elected in 1998, displays the kind of independence that
the U.S. translates as defiance -- as with Chávez’ ally Fidel
Castro. In 2002, Washington embraced President Bush's vision of
democracy by supporting a military coup that very briefly
overturned the Chávez government. The Bush administration had to
back down, however, because of opposition to the coup in
Venezuela and throughout Latin America.
Compounding Washington’s woes, Cuba-Venezuela relations are
becoming very close. They practice a barter system, each relying
on its strengths. Venezuela is providing low-cost oil while in
return Cuba organizes literacy and health programs, and sends
thousands of teachers and doctors, who, as elsewhere, work in
the poorest areas, previously neglected.
Joint Cuba-Venezuela projects are also having a considerable
impact in the Caribbean countries, where, under a program called
Operation Miracle, Cuban doctors are providing health care to
people who had no hope of receiving it, with Venezuelan funding.
Chávez has repeatedly won monitored elections and referendums
despite overwhelming and bitter media hostility. Support for the
elected government has soared during the Chávez years. The
veteran Latin American correspondent Hugh O’ Shaughnessy
explains why in a report for Irish Times:
"In Venezuela, where an oil economy has over the decades
produced a sparkling elite of super-rich, a quarter of under-15s
go hungry, for instance, and 60 per cent of people over 59 have
no income at all. Less than a fifth of the population enjoys
social security. Only now under President Chávez [...] has
medicine started to become something of a reality for the
poverty-stricken majority in the rich but deeply divided --
virtually nonfunctioning -- society. Since he won power in
democratic elections and began to transform the health and
welfare sector which catered so badly to the mass of the
population, progress has been slow. But it has been perceptible
..."
Now Venezuela is joining Mercosur, South America’s leading trade
bloc. Mercosur, which already includes Argentina, Brazil,
Paraguay and Uruguay, presents an alternative to the so-called
Free Trade Agreement of the Americas (FTAA), backed by the
United States.
At issue in the region, as elsewhere around the world, is
alternative social and economic models. Enormous, unprecedented
popular movements have developed to expand cross-border
integration -- going beyond economic agendas to encompass human
rights, environmental concerns, cultural independence and
people-to-people contacts. These movements are ludicrously
called "anti-globalization" because they favour globalization
directed to the interests of people, not investors and financial
institutions.
U.S. problems in the Americas extend north as well as south. For
obvious reasons, Washington has hoped to rely more on Canada,
Venezuela and other non-Middle East oil resources.
But Canada’s relations with the United States are more "strained
and combative" than ever before as a result of, among other
issues, Washington’s rejection of NAFTA decisions favoring
Canada. As Joel Brinkley reports in The New York Times, "Partly
as a result, Canada is working hard to build up its relationship
with China [and] some officials are saying Canada may shift a
significant portion of its trade, particularly oil, from the
United States to China."
It takes real talent for the United States to alienate even
Canada.
Washington’s Latin American policies are only enhancing U.S.
isolation, however. One recent example: For the 14th year in a
row, the U.N. General Assembly voted on Nov. 8, 2005, against
the U.S. commercial embargo against Cuba. The vote on the
resolution was 182 to 4: the United States, Israel, the Marshall
Islands and Palau. Micronesia abstained.
Noam Chomsky is a professor of linguistics at the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology.
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