The 12-Step Method of Regime Change
On 15 September 1970, US President Richard Nixon
and National Security Advisor Henry Kissinger authorised the US government to
do everything possible to undermine the incoming government of the socialist
president of Chile, Salvador Allende. Nixon and Kissinger, according to the
notes kept by CIA Director Richard Helms, wanted to ‘make the economy scream’
in Chile; they were ‘not concerned [about the] risks involved’. War was
acceptable to them as long as Allende’s government was removed from power. The
CIA started Project FUBELT, with $10 million as a first instalment to begin the
covert destabilisation of the country.
US business firms, such as the telecommunication giant ITT, the soft
drink maker Pepsi Cola and copper monopolies such as Anaconda and Kennecott,
put pressure on the US government once Allende nationalised the copper sector
on 11 July 1971. Chileans celebrated this day as the Day of National Dignity
(Dia de la Dignidad Nacional). The CIA began to make contact with sections of
the military seen to be against Allende. Three years later, on 11 September
1973, these military men moved against Allende, who died in the regime change
operation. The US ‘created the conditions’ as US National Security Advisor
Henry Kissinger put it, to which US President Richard Nixon answered, ‘that is
the way it is going to be played’. Such is the mood of international gangsterism.
Chile entered the dark night of a military dictatorship that turned over
the country to US monopoly firms. US advisors rushed in to strengthen the nerve
of General Augusto Pinochet’s cabinet.
What happened to Chile in 1973 is precisely what the United States has
attempted to do in many other countries of the Global South. The most recent
target for the US government – and Western big business – is Venezuela. But
what is happening to Venezuela is nothing unique. It faces an onslaught from
the United States and its allies that is familiar to countries as far afield as
Indonesia and the Democratic Republic of Congo. The formula is clichéd. It is
commonplace, a twelve-step plan to produce a coup climate, to create a world
under the heel of the West and of Western big business.
Step One: Colonialism’s Traps.
Most of the Global South remains trapped by the structures put in place
by colonialism. Colonial boundaries encircled states that had the misfortune of
being single commodity producers – either sugar for Cuba or oil for Venezuela.
The inability to diversify their economies meant that these countries earned
the bulk of their export revenues from their singular commodities (98% of
Venezuela’s export revenues come from oil). As long as the prices of the
commodities remained high, the export revenues were secure. When the prices
fell, revenue suffered. This was a legacy of colonialism. Oil prices dropped
from $160.72 per barrel (June 2008) to $51.99 per barrel (January 2019).
Venezuela’s export revenues collapsed in this decade.
Step Two: The Defeat of the New International
Economic Order.
In 1974, the countries of the Global South attempted to redo the
architecture of the world economy. They called for the creation of a New
International Economic Order (NIEO) that would allow them to pivot away from
the colonial reliance upon one commodity and diversify their economies. Cartels
of raw materials – such as oil and bauxite – were to be built so that the
one-commodity country could have some control over prices of the products that
they relied upon. The Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC),
founded in 1960, was a pioneer of these commodity cartels. Others were not
permitted to be formed. With the defeat of OPEC over the past three decades,
its members – such as Venezuela (which has the world’s largest proven oil
reserves) – have not been able to control oil prices. They are at the mercy of
the powerful countries of the world.
Step Three: The Death of Southern Agriculture.
In November 2001, there were about three billion small farmers and
landless peasants in the world. That month, the World Trade Organisation met in
Doha (Qatar) to unleash the productivity of Northern agri-business against the
billions of small farmers and landless peasants of the Global South.
Mechanisation and large, industrial-scale farms in North America and Europe had
raised productivity to about 1 to 2 million kilogrammes of cereals per farmer.
The small farmers and landless peasants in the rest of the world struggled to
grow 1,000 kilogrammes of cereals per farmer. They were nowhere near as
productive. The Doha decision, as Samir Amin wrote,
presages the annihilation of the small farmer and landless peasant. What are
these men and women to do? The production per hectare is higher in the West,
but the corporate take-over of agriculture (as Tricontinental: Institute for
Social Research Senior Fellow P. Sainath shows) leads to increased hunger as it
pushes peasants off their land and leaves them to starve.
Step Four: Culture of Plunder.
Emboldened by Western domination, monopoly firms act with disregard for
the law. As Kambale Musavuli
and I write of the Democratic Republic of Congo, its annual budget
of $6 billion is routinely robbed of at least $500 by monopoly mining firms,
mostly from Canada – the country now leading the charge against Venezuela.
Mispricing and tax avoidance schemes allow these large firms (Canada’s Agrium,
Barrick and Suncor) to routinely steal billions of dollars from impoverished
states.
Step Five: Debt as a Way of Life.
Unable to raise money from commodity sales, hemmed in by a broken world
agricultural system and victim of a culture of plunder, countries of the Global
South have been forced to go hat in hand to commercial lenders for finance.
Over the past decade, debt held by the Global South states has increased, while
debt payments have ballooned by 60%. When commodity prices rose between 2000
and 2010, debt in the Global South decreased. As commodity prices began to fall
from 2010, debts have risen. The IMF points out that of the 67 impoverished
countries that they follow, 30 are in debt distress, a number that has doubled
since 2013. More than 55.4% of Angola’s export revenue is paid to service its
debt. And Angola, like Venezuela, is an oil exporter. Other oil exporters such
as Ghana, Chad, Gabon and Venezuela suffer high debt to GDP ratios. Two out of
five low-income countries are in deep financial distress.
Step Six: Public Finances Go to Hell.
With little incoming revenue and low tax collection rates, public
finances in the Global South has gone into crisis. As the UN Conference on
Trade and Development points out, ‘public finances have continued to be suffocated’.
States simply cannot put together the funds needed to maintain basic state
functions. Balanced budget rules make borrowing difficult, which is compounded
by the fact that banks charge high rates for money, citing the risks of lending
to indebted countries.
Step Seven: Deep Cuts in Social Spending.
Impossible to raise funds, trapped by the fickleness of international
finance, governments are forced to make deep cuts in social spending. Education
and health, food sovereignty and economic diversification – all this goes by
the wayside. International agencies such as the IMF force countries to conduct
‘reforms’, a word that means extermination of independence. Those countries
that hold out face immense international pressure to submit under pain of extinction,
as the Communist Manifesto (1848) put it.
Step Eight: Social Distress Leads to Migration.
The total number of migrants in the world is now at least 68.5 million.
That makes the country called Migration the 21st largest country in the world
after Thailand and ahead of the United Kingdom. Migration has become a global
reaction to the collapse of countries from one end of the planet to the other.
The migration out of Venezuela is not unique to that country but is now merely
the normal reaction to the global crisis. Migrants from Honduras who go
northward to the United States or migrants from West Africa who go towards
Europe through Libya are part of this global exodus.
Step Nine: Who Controls the Narrative?
The monopoly corporate media takes its orders from the elite. There is
no sympathy for the structural crisis faced by governments from Afghanistan to
Venezuela. Those leaders who cave to Western pressure are given a free pass by
the media. As long as they conduct ‘reforms’, they are safe. Those countries
that argue against the ‘reforms’ are vulnerable to being attacked. Their
leaders become ‘dictators’, their people hostages. A contested election in
Bangladesh or in the Democratic Republic of Congo or in the United States is
not cause for regime change. That special treatment is left for Venezuela.
Step Ten: Who’s the Real President?
Regime change operations begin when the imperialists question the
legitimacy of the government in power: by putting the weight of the United
States behind an unelected person, calling him the new president and creating a
situation where the elected leader’s authority is undermined. The coup takes
place when a powerful country decides – without an election – to anoint its own
proxy. That person – in Venezuela’s case Juan Guaidó – rapidly has to make it
clear that he will bend to the authority of the United States. His kitchen
cabinet – made up of former government officials with intimate ties to the US
(such as Harvard University’s Ricardo Hausmann and Carnegie’s Moisés Naím) –
will make it clear that they want to privatise everything and sell out the
Venezuelan people in the name of the Venezuelan people.
Step Eleven: Make the Economy Scream.
Venezuela has faced harsh US sanctions since 2014, when the US Congress
started down this road. The next year, US President Barack Obama declared
Venezuela a ‘threat to national security’. The economy started to scream. In
recent days, the United States and the United Kingdom brazenly stole billions
of dollars of Venezuelan money, placed the shackles of sanctions on its only
revenue generating sector (oil) and watched the pain flood through the country.
This is what the US did to Iran and this is what they did to Cuba. The UN says
that the US sanctions on Cuba have cost the small island $130 billion.
Venezuela lost $6 billion for the first year of Trump’s sanctions, since they
began in August 2017. More is to be lost as the days unfold. No wonder that the
United Nations Special Rapporteur Idriss Jazairy says that ‘sanctions which can
lead to starvation and medical shortages are not the answer to the crisis in
Venezuela’. He said that sanctions are ‘not a foundation for the peaceful
settlement of disputes’. Further, Jazairy said, ‘I am especially concerned to
hear reports that these sanctions are aimed at changing the government of
Venezuela’. He called for ‘compassion’ for the people of Venezuela.
Step Twelve: Go to War.
US National Security Advisor John Bolton held a yellow pad with the
words 5,000 troops in Colombia written on it. These are US troops, already
deployed in Venezuela’s neighbour. The US Southern Command is ready. They are
egging on Colombia and Brazil to do their bit. As the coup climate is created,
a nudge will be necessary. They will go to war.
None of this is inevitable. It was not inevitable to Titina Silá, a
commander of the Partido Africano para a Independència da Guiné e Cabo Verde
(PAIGC) who was murdered on 30 January 1973. She fought to free her country. It
is not inevitable to the people of Venezuela, who continue to fight to defend
their revolution. It is not inevitable to our friends at CodePink: Women for
Peace, whose Medea Benjamin walked into a meeting of the Organisation of
American States and said – No!
It is time to say No to regime change intervention. There is no middle
ground.
Vijay
Prashad is the George and Martha Kellner Chair of South Asian History and
Director of International Studies at Trinity College, Hartford, CT. Prashad is
the author of seventeen books. He can be reached at: vijay.prashad@trincoll.edu
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