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Chavez Spokesman Re-Affirms Support for North Korea: "Model To Follow"
militaresdemocraticos.com ^ | January 10, 2002 | Johan Freitas, in Caracas

Posted on 01/11/2003 2:19:35 AM PST by Cincinatus' Wife

Venezuela, already an ally of Cuba and Iraq, is now making overtures to also align itself with North Korean leader Kim Jong Il.

Monday, in Caracas, a spokesman for the Hugo Chavez government sent a signal of support to North Korea's capital Pyongyang, and re-affirmed the ideological similarities of the two regimes.

Education minister Hector Navarro, while attempting to open the country's leading university, Universidad Central de Venezuela, declared that he and the Bolivarian government stood firm in their principles, and that those principles would not change. He then extended a salute of "solidarity" to "friendly nations", naming, specifically, Algeria, Cuba, Iran, and North Korea.

Students and teachers of the university have joined in refusing to follow Hugo Chavez down the Cuban path to ruin, and are striking to force the government to hold early elections.

The naming of Cuba comes as no surprise. Chavez is the Cuban leader's life support. Iran and Algeria can also be explained: Last week, Algeria sent oil workers in an attempt to restart Venezuela's oil industry, and Sunday a government delegation from Iran arrived in Caracas, also to help break up the strike, now in its sixth week. But why single out North Korea? For that, we must look at the background of Hector Navarro and other members of the Chavez inner circle. Before taking power, Navarro hailed North Korea as a model to follow, and in a document co-authored with former Chavez industry and commerce minister Jesús Montilla and former Chavez central planning minister Jorge Giordani, he wrote: "Socialism survives [...] in North Korea which, although isolated and alone, has achieved a strong economy."1

While this opinion may be shared by other graying leftists who have hitched their star to Hugo Chavez's Marxist experiment -- having previously bet the farm on socialist dreamlands like Russia, China, Vietnam, Cuba, Nicaragua, Cambodia and El Salvador -- more clear-headed analysts plainly disagree. North Korea is one of the world's most centrally planned and isolated economies, and faces desperate economic conditions. Far from having "achieved a strong economy", industrial capital stock is nearly beyond repair as a result of years of underinvestment and spare parts shortages. Industrial and power output have declined in parallel. In North Korea, large groups of the population survive by eating grass and bark off the trees.

This, however, does not affect Navarro, nor his boss Hugo Chavez, who in a recorded message took to the airwaves late Sunday and again Monday at noon, repeatedly reminding Venezuelans that "We have burned our boats. There is no turning back. We will carry on consolidating and deepening this Revolution,"2 and promising the country's 24 million citizens to take their country a few hundred years back in time: "If we have to cook with firewood for 2 years, we will. Or for 20 years, if we have to."3

The belief that a pure revolution can only be born once all remnants of the previous society have been destroyed is a popular theory among followers of Pol Pot's illfated Cambodia and of Mao's Cultural Revolution. And, according to Chavez-watcher Richard Gott, several of the president's closest advisers were once associated with a Chinese-oriented split from the Venezuelan Communist Party, while Chavez himself has declared that "I have always been a maoist".4

In Caracas today, with a government spokesman who is holding up North Korea as a model to follow, it is no wonder that millions of ordinary Venezuelans have taken to the streets demanding free and democratic elections. As an aspiring nuclear weapons power, the North Korean one-man dictatorship is clearly a danger to Asia. In South America, another strongman, Hugo Chavez, is also bent on going nuclear. This was one of the plans discussed in late December 2002 with Marco Aurelio Garcia, a known terrorism sponsor who visited Chavez personally in Caracas. But if Garcia can not bring the bomb, maybe Pyongyang can.

" - It is too early to determine with certainty what the nuclear weapons plans of Hugo Chavez are", says Brigadier General Nestor Gonzalez Gonzalez, a former Chavez-loyalist who broke with the president when his totalitarian ambitions became clear, and who is today one of the leaders in Venezuela's military resistance movement, Militares Democraticos. " - But Monday's re-affirmation of support for North Korea is a troubling sign," warns Gonzalez. "I personally know Chavez very well, and he is capable of anything."


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: communism; hugochavez; latinamericalist; strike; venezuela
Hugo Chavez - Venezuela


Hundreds of Venezuelans stand in line to apply for a Spanish passport in Caracas January 10, 2003. A strike launched December 2, 2002 by opposition members of Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez has battered Venezuela's oil-reliant economy, rattled global energy markets and fired up the political conflict between opponents and supporters of the leftist leader to resign and call elections. REUTERS/Kimberly White REUTERS

1 posted on 01/11/2003 2:19:35 AM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: Cincinatus' Wife
I think ol' Hugo Chavez should stand tall and proud beside Nicholai Ceaucescu
against a stone wall.
2 posted on 01/11/2003 4:24:24 AM PST by theDentist (So. This is Virginia..... where are all the virgins?)
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To: Cincinatus' Wife
No. They can't just wait until the next election.
No, he can't just be removed by peaceful democratic means.
No, he is not just going to go into exile.
Yes, he will need to be removed by force.
Yes, the Ceaucescu example or the Pinochet example is the one to follow.
Any other questions?
Oh and yes, it is that bad.
3 posted on 01/11/2003 4:43:48 AM PST by Harmless Teddy Bear (Learn to listen to your inner grizzly)
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To: theDentist
Cuba Opens Up Virgin Keys to Lure Foreign Tourists*** CAYO COCO, Cuba (Reuters) - Watch out Cancun and Jamaica. When European charter airlines begin direct flights to this sandy key in the coming weeks, Cuba will be taking another step to recover its position as a premier tourist destination in the Caribbean. Flamingos, iguanas and alligators on a nature reserve are an added attraction for tourists looking to lie on sun-soaked snowy-white beaches and sip daiquiris. Last month, Cuba's communist authorities opened an international airport able to receive wide-bodied jets on Cayo Coco, the largest of a string of hundreds of keys along Cuba's north shore known as Jardines del Rey. Cuba has already built 11 high-end hotels on Cayo Coco and neighboring Cayo Guillermo to draw vacationers from Canada, Britain, Germany and Spain. Havana is also banking on the lifting of a U.S. travel ban some time soon -- a move that would bring Americans to the Cuban keys, which are 250 miles south of Nassau in the Bahamas. ***
4 posted on 01/11/2003 5:51:08 AM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: Harmless Teddy Bear
Oh and yes, it is that bad.

Bump!

5 posted on 01/11/2003 5:51:38 AM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: *Latin_America_List
http://www.freerepublic.com/perl/bump-list
6 posted on 01/11/2003 7:35:56 AM PST by Free the USA
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To: Cincinatus' Wife
Thank you for posting this.

BTW, for any doubting 'comrades' lurking, here are the...

REFERENCES:

1: "Ciencia y Tecnología para Venezuela: Una propuesta alternativa", (Science and Technology for Venezuela, an alternative suggestion), Editora Apucv, Caracas, 1994, pp. 7 and 26, authored by Jorge Giordani, Juan de Jesús Montilla, Víctor Morles, Hector Navarro.

2: Reuters - "Venezuela's Chavez, Foes Set for More Confrontation", Jan 6, 2003.

3: Official transcript, Ministerio de la Secretaria de La Presidencia de la República Bolivariana de Venezuela, Jan 6, 2003.

4: "In the Shadow of the Liberator: Hugo Chavez and the Transformation of Venezuela" by Richard Gott, published by Verso, U.K., 2000

-Shane


7 posted on 01/11/2003 7:55:58 AM PST by shanec
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To: Cincinatus' Wife; RnMomof7; Fiddlstix; JohnHuang2
ping
8 posted on 01/11/2003 4:32:36 PM PST by madfly
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To: madfly
They can get more out of us if they first make nice noises at our enemies..these 3rd world nations know how to play us like a viloin ..
9 posted on 01/11/2003 4:36:43 PM PST by RnMomof7 (Eph 2:8 For by grace are ye saved through faith; and that not of yourselves: [it is] the gift of God)
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To: Cincinatus' Wife
Hugo musta forgot...SOCIALISM ALWAYS FAILS.
10 posted on 01/11/2003 4:39:04 PM PST by Republic of Texas
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To: backhoe; HAL9000; Freedom'sWorthIt; rintense; OXENinFLA; Tailgunner Joe; Sparta; ...
fyi
11 posted on 01/11/2003 5:38:29 PM PST by madfly
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To: Cincinatus' Wife; MattinNJ; weikel
Chavez definitely needs the Allende solution.
12 posted on 01/11/2003 9:42:10 PM PST by Sparta (Statism is a mental illness)
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