Posted on 05/03/2002 5:20:00 AM PDT by 2Trievers
VENEZUELAS AGONY under a leftist demagogue elected by the people has enabled Democratic Sen. Christopher Dodd to revive his vendetta against Assistant Secretary of State Otto Reich. Dodd blames Reich for approving the 48-hour removal of Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez. The problem is that the aborted coup was not approved by Reich or anybody in the U.S. government. Dodd has wisecracked that Reich, in charge of Western Hemisphere affairs, lacked adult supervision in handling the coup while Secretary of State Colin Powell was in the Middle East. In fact, Chavezs government holds the U.S. blameless, recognizing that Reich neither encouraged nor condoned the Venezuelan presidents temporary removal. Why, then, are Dodd and his allies in Congress elevating Chavez, who as an army officer once bungled a left-wing coup himself, as a symbol of Latin American democracy? Dodd, who appears to be gearing up for an investigation of Reichs performance and is reported to be contemplating a trip to Venezuela, never seemed exercised about Chavez trampling democratic practices in trying to model himself after Fidel Castro. Nor do Reichs critics mention that Chavezs brief fall from power came after his troops opened fire on unarmed demonstrators. Dodd may be less interested in protecting democracy in Venezuela than in settling old scores with Reich. That seems out of character for the easy-going, politically ambitious Connecticut senator. But Dodds longtime adviser on Latin American affairs, Senate Foreign Relations Committee staffer Janice OConnell, has not forgiven Reich for his aggressive support for Nicaraguan Contras. She also sees the Cuban-born Reich as an obstacle to warm relations with Castros Cuba. OConnell impresses on State Department officials that she represents the permanent government whose word must be heeded by temporary Presidential appointees. When Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage went to Capitol Hill to confer with Dodd last week, OConnell was at the senators side. As chairman of the Foreign Relations subcommittee dealing with the Western Hemisphere, Dodd refused even a hearing on Reichs nomination. Reich took office this year as a recess appointment to avoid the confirmation process, but President Bush plans to submit the nomination again in 2003. When a Reich supporter asked Dodd whether he would convene a hearing giving him a chance to refute charges spread by the senators staff, Dodd replied: Over my dead body. The Venezuelan fiasco now has generated new accusations. I asked one senior U.S. intelligence official whether the CIA had a hand in the coup, and he replied: I assure you that if we did, we wouldnt have made such a mess of it. While the agency surely lacks the capability of removing hostile regimes in Iran or Guatemala as in Cold War days, neither is it capable of making the mess in Caracas. This was an amateur affair with the brief succession to president of businessman Pedro Carmona concocted by billionaire Venezuelan oil families, on the telephone from Miami. While pro-Chavez legislators in Caracas have blamed Washington for plotting a coup, Chavezs minister of defense has denied it. I think this is reckless, Jose Vicente Rangel said last week. Nor were reports accurate that Reich telephoned Carmona during his two-day reign. Charles Shapiro, the career diplomat newly installed as U.S. ambassador in Caracas, did call Carmona at Reichs instruction in two futile efforts to dissuade him from dissolving the National Assembly. Last week, I interviewed two non-political eyewitnesses to the tumultuous events in Venezuela: a newspaper reporter and a police officer. They described in detail the course of events that led to Chavezs removal and restoration. There was no mention of a hidden hand from Washington. The surest signal was the lack of uproar, outside of Havana, about Yankee intervention. The false dawn of Hugo Chavezs removal was greeted with relief in private corridors of power throughout the hemisphere as it was by Venezuelas people. Objective observers believe his popularity has diminished radically as he has driven down the economy. None of this in itself will save Otto Reich. Dodds vendetta poses a threat because of a potential stab in the back from career foreign service officers at the State Department. Reich must rely on constancy from the President and the secretary of state, who share his views and support his positions. Robert D. Novak is a Washington political columnist and a commentator on CNN.
Can you think of something more reckless than being a Senior member of Congress and asserting your Nation conducted a secret act of war?
Cast doubt on the conduct of your Nation, Dodd. If Castro is busy, you have to fill in.
Then I move to Texas and get Dick Armey! What a relief.
CA - Feinster & Boxstein!
OUCH, trumped by the wicked witches of the Left! (But not by much).
Try Minnesota. We've got that braying, grandstanding self-appointed champion of the little guy, Paul "Welfare" Wellstone, accompanied by the very model of a modern parlor Bolshevik, Mark "I was on Nixon's Enemies List, no really I was!" Dayton.
Good one. What a snake he was.
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