Showing posts with label Venezuela. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Venezuela. Show all posts

Friday, August 02, 2013

2-Aug-13: In Caracas, sometimes this is how politics and government work

Miguel Ángel Pérez Pirela [Image Source]
On the Harry's Place website, they refer to the appointment of a new Information Minister in the Venezuelan government. 

He is Miguel Ángel Pérez Pirela. When last in the public eye, he was a pro-Chavez TV host who had some sharp observations about crossword puzzles in the national newspaper Ultimas Noticias. One puzzle, he disclosed, was an instance of coded messages calculated to cause problems. What kind? A hidden message that called for the murder of President Hugo Chavez’s brother, Adan.

Here's what he found. The answer to one of the clues was Rabat, which everyone knows is the name of a Jewish holiday and probably the presumed date for the planned assassination. A Jewish holiday, and therefore evidence of a Jewish plot

Except that there is nothing remotely resembling the word Rabat in the Jewish calendar - though it does happen to be one of the ancient names for what is today the capital city of Jordan. (So perhaps the anti-Chavez conspiracists are Islamists. We're not certain and certainly not saying but you never know.) 

Venezuela's Jewish community dates back to the mid seventeenth century. With the rise of Hugo Chávez in 1999 and the massive changes he brought, about half of the country's Jews emigrated. The Jewish population has plummeted from about 22,000 in 1999 to something between 9,500 and 14,000 today, and its future looks bleak (see "Precedent Chavez: What the future looks like for the Jews of Venezuela").

As Harry's Place points out, Pérez Pirela is the person now officially appointed to make the Venezuelan government’s case to the nation and the world. 

Politics, government and officially-sanctioned anti-semitism in action.

Friday, February 17, 2012

17-Feb-12: Intrigue, hypocrisy, terrorism, Syria... and Latin America

Blood-soaked Syrian tyrant Al-Assad with Venezuelan friend
Terrorism-impacted bereaved families tend towards the cynical. We speak from experience.

Still, every so often, things happen on the international stage that cause a person to wonder how low the abysmal ethical standards of big-time politicians and diplomats can go. Take as a striking instance what the United Nations has been doing in relation to the unfolding massacre of civilians taking place this minute and for the past several months in the extremely unlovely republic of Syria.

As the state sponsor (actually one of two - Iran is the other) of the malevolent Hizbollah terrorists of Lebanon, Syria has never been on our most-favored nation list. The blood-drenched Al-Assad family that have owned Syria through two violent generations personify the evil of which men are capable. Bashir Al-Assad is conducting a war against his own citizens that has taken the lives (according to the UN and this report from today) of somewhere between 5,000 and 7,000 people. Just yesterday, Thursday, seventy newly dead Syrians were added to the list. CNN says today that this number includes 47 people killed by Al-Assad's troops on Thursday alone in one small village called Kafranbode, near Hama. It adds that "the approximately 200 people who were wounded were not taken to hospitals for fear that security forces would abduct them."

What a nightmare.

But politicians and tyrants like Bashir Al-Assad rarely, if ever, acknowledge the evil that everyone sees them doing. They have wives and sycophants and for them they invent narratives and issue press releases. There are bound to be people in certain quarters who will swallow the alibis and fantasies, or will make serious efforts to try.

While the Al-Assad massacres were going on (literally), the United Nations General Assembly passed a resolution yesterday
endorsing the Arab League plan for the Syrian president to step down. The vote was 137 in favor and 12 against, with 17 abstentions.
The United States ambassador to the UN, Susan E. Rice, said
"Today, the U.N. General Assembly sent a clear message to the people of Syria: the world is with you"
Britain's ambassador Mark Lyall Grant said
"We hope that the regime will listen to this overwhelming message from the international community today."
And French Foreign Minister Alain Juppe said
"This is a new step towards the end of the martyrdom of the Syrian people"
Deceased blood-soaked Libyan dictator Ghaddafi
with Venezuelan friend
All three statements are plainly nonsense. Notwithstanding those 137 votes and 17 abstentions and all those "new steps" and "hopes", the actual messages conveyed clearly to the people of Syria were
  1. It's all pretend. The resolution of the world's parliament was non-binding - some reports accurately call it 'symbolic', and the Syrians are expected to keep dying;
  2. Nothing is going to get better soon unless Al-Assad is killed. Russia and China blocked a potentially more substantive and enforceable decision of the UN Security Council just a week ago, and life went on. (And the same two states voted against yesterday's symbolic slap on the Syrian wrist. How do they sleep at night?)
  3. Certain thuggish regimes stand shoulder to shoulder with Al-Assad and his co-conspirators, and so long as they do, the blood is certain to keep flowing.   
Thuggish regimes? Consider Venezuela. Under the headline "Exclusive: Venezuela ships fuel to war-torn Syria", Reuters is reporting this morning that the Hugo Chavez government is delivering $50 million of Venezuelan diesel fuel to the Syrian port of Banias this week. That cargo will ensure Al-Assad's army tanks keep rolling and shooting, undermining the current weak Western sanctions, enabling Syria to keep fueling its military and maintaining the bloody Al-Assad crackdown.

Syria is better known as an exporter of crude oil but is experiencing a shortage of domestic refining capacity. Reuters says international sanctions have stopped Syrian oil exports since September last year, drastically stretching government budget revenues.
Ahmedinijad of Iran, with Venezuelan friend

Quite a piece of work is this Chavez. Thick-and-thin buddy of Bashar al-Assad, special chum of Iran's Mahmoud Ahmadinejad (who visited Venezuela last month in his fifth trip to Latin America since 2005) and - even today - defender of the now-dead Libyan dictator Muammar Gaddafi.

Ask Chavez or his mother if the man is a terrorist and the answer will be an emphatic "no".  But there is much about which to worry in the man's deeds. US Senator Richard Luger laid out the concerns well in a newspaper op ed this week entitled "Growing risk posed by Iran-Venezuela axis".
The chances of Venezuela serving as Iran’s surrogate in the hemisphere through terrorism or other coordinated action are increased by its chaotic state of affairs. Venezuela is in the midst of a make-or-break election that will determine the survival of its democracy amid continuing doubts about President Chávez’s health and a welcomed show of will by its diverse opposition groups. Divisions in Venezuela’s Russian-armed military, an inflation rate over 30 percent, a dilapidated oil infrastructure, widespread food and energy shortages, and soaring crime rates are all putting heavy pressure on President Chávez.
The whole Luger piece is worth your time.

Now take into account that Chavez-dominated Venezuela supplies the US with about 10 percent of its current imports of crude oil and petroleum products. As the cynics like to say, what could go wrong?

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

17-May-11: Did you imagine things were getting better?

Venezuela's President Hugo Chavez (left) with Iran's President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad
during an agreement-signing ceremony, Tehran September 6, 2009 
Iran, deeply involved in funding and encouraging jihadism in the Middle East already, is establishing itself as a shooting power in the Western hemisphere, according to one of German's leading newspapers. Die Welt said on Thursday [source] the Iranians are building rocket launch bases in Venezuela.
Iran is building intermediate- range missile launch pads on the Paraguaná Peninsula, and engineers from a construction firm – Khatam al-Anbia – owned by the Revolutionary Guards visited Paraguaná in February. Amir al-Hadschisadeh, the head of the Guard’s Air Force, participated in the visit, according to the report. Die Welt cited information from “Western security insiders.” The rocket bases are to include measures to prevent air attacks on Venezuela as well as commando and control stations. The Iranian military involvement in the project extends to bunker, barracks and watch tower construction. Twenty-meter deep rocket silos are planned. The cost of the Venezuelan military project is being paid for with Iranian oil revenue. The Iranians paid in cash for the preliminary phase of the project and, the total cost is expected to amount to “dozens of millions” of dollars, Die Welt wrote. The Paraguaná Peninsula is on the coast of Venezuela and is roughly 120 kilometers from America’s main South American partner, Columbia. According to Die Welt, the clandestine agreement between Venezuela and Iran would mean the Chavez government would fire rockets at Iran’s enemies should the Islamic Republic face military strikes.
As it happens, the Iranian news website Tehran Times ran an article under the headline "Venezuela calls for closer cooperation with Iran" just two months ago:
"Venezuela’s Foreign Minister Nicolas Maduro has said that Caracas is keen to have closer cooperation with Iran in the international arena. Maduro made the remarks during a meeting with Iranian Deputy Foreign Minister Behrouz Kamalvandi who is currently on a tour of Latin America. The Venezuelan foreign minister also said that his country is ready to cooperate with Iran to push ahead the two countries’ common goals. Kamalvandi highlighted the role of Venezuela in the campaign against the major powers’ imperialistic policies."
Putting those outlandish assertions into context, here's what the same newspaper wrote today about where Iran stands in the community of nations:
"Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has said that the Islamic Republic of Iran, which is ruled by a supreme jurisprudent, is the most progressive and democratic country in the world. The Islamic Republic of Iran faces no insurmountable problem thanks to the presence of the Supreme Leader, Ahmadinejad stated during a televised interview broadcast live on Iranian television on Sunday night."
It's wrong to laugh. These are serious people, with very serious resources at their disposal, including vast stocks of weapons. They're not smiling; neither should we.

Last year, a Washington Post article entitled "Is there a Chavez terror network on America’s doorstep?" reported on an August 2010 summit meeting of jihadists hosted by Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez at the Fuerte Tiuna compound in southern Caracas. Participants included Palestinian Islamic Jihad Secretary General Ramadan Abdullah Mohammad Shallah (on the FBI’s list of most-wanted terrorists); Hamas’s supreme leader Khaled Mashal; and Hezbollah’s chief of operations whose identity is a closely guarded secret.

Is the picture getting clearer?