The Not So Odd Couple: Chávez & Castro
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Council On Hemispheric Affairs
Monitoring Political, Economic and Diplomatic
Issues Affecting the Western
Hemisphere
Memorandum to the Press
05.62
Word Count: 2550
Tuesday, 21 June 2005
The Not So Odd Couple: Venezuela’s Hugo Chávez and Cuba’s Fidel Castro
• In late 2004, President
Hugo Chávez nearly doubled Venezuela’s daily oil barrel
deliveries to Cuba and Havana doubled the number of
healthcare professionals and teachers it was stationing in
Venezuela.
• The ongoing relationship between Chávez and
Cuba's Fidel Castro began with Chávez's 1994 visit to
Havana, significantly deepened after Chávez was elected
president in 1998 and reached its culmination in late 2004.
• Chávez, a long-time admirer of Castro's achievements
and of Havana’s refusal to buckle to the U.S., has pursued
close ties with Castro because the Cuban leader is committed
to helping him achieve his vision of a Bolivarian
state.
• Venezuela’s increasing subsidization of the
Cuban economy has allowed the island to rebound from the
devastation it suffered when the U.S.S.R collapsed in
1989.
• The main reason for the tension between the U.S.
and Venezuela is because Washington is frustrated that
Chávez has undermined its effort to force Castro from power,
by propping up the Cuban economy and making it more immune
to being brought down by Washington’s hostile
tactics.
On April 29, 2005 Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez and Cuban President Fidel Castro met in Havana to renew their call for a hemispheric trade pact, the Bolivarian Alternative for the Americas (ALBA), as an alternative to the U.S.-led Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA). The leaders’ initiative is merely the latest in a series of joint actions aimed at strengthening economic and political ties between the two leftist, anti-U.S. regimes.
Cooperation
Chávez and Castro’s mutual
affection for each other began 11 years ago when Chávez
visited Havana upon his release from a Venezuelan prison in
1994, after staging a failed coup. Since then, the two men
have remained friendly and after Chávez won the Venezuelan
presidency in 1998, they have collaborated on several trade
and political programs. In 2000, the two leaders signed an
accord in which Chávez agreed to provide Cuba with 53,000
barrels of oil a day at preferential prices from his
country’s extensive oil stock. In exchange, Castro pledged
to supply Venezuela with 20,000 medical professionals and
educators. In August 2004, shortly after Chávez easily won a
referendum on his presidency, the agreement was expanded:
Venezuela now provides 90,000 barrels a day and Cuba upped
the number of medical, public health officials and teachers
to 40,000 in order to help staff the increasing number of
health care and teaching centers it has in Venezuela. In
April, Castro and Chávez signed the Regional Integration
Project to further meld their countries’ respective
economies not only by calling for the ALBA, but also by
ensuring an influx of Venezuelan capital (the Venezuelan
state oil company and bank opened offices in Cuba) into the
Cuban economy and providing for the Cuban purchase of US
$412 million worth of heavily subsidized goods from
Venezuela that are critical to the well being of the Cuban
economy.
Chávez and Castro often work in tandem on a number of fronts, providing each other with critical political support while opposing Washington’s increasingly overbearing deportment in the hemisphere. In 2004, critics claimed that Chávez turned a blind eye to Cuba’s alleged human rights abuses and voted against investigating these violations by the United Nations (UN) Human Rights Commission. Both leaders also have vehemently denounced U.S.-mandated free market principles, specifically the FTAA, as being hostile to Latin America’s economic well-being. Chávez and Castro also infuriated the U.S. by loudly expressing their disapproval of the war in Iraq.
Chávez’s Reasons for Cooperation
Chávez began pursing
closer ties with Castro’s Cuba at a time of deteriorating
political and economic conditions in Venezuela as a result
of unrelenting opposition by the country’s middle class-led
opposition, this situation culminated in the attempted coup
of April 2002. During the 1990s, Venezuela, as did most
other Latin American countries, embraced the neoliberal
economic policies encouraged by the International Monetary
Fund (IMF), which all but required that commitments to
social programs and economic equity had to be severely cut
in order to use scarce resources to strengthen the country’s
free market standing. In exchange for adopting policies that
drained Venezuela’s education and healthcare systems of
critical financial resources, the then corrupt and narrowly
focused Carlos Andrés Perez’s government received billions
of dollars from the IMF and as well as loans from the major
private international banks. But such loans only served to
dramatically increase the country’s foreign debt to over $22
billion in 1999, meaning even fewer funds could be earmarked
for schools and medical facilities. By the end of the 1990s,
the quality of life in Venezuela had fallen considerably as
the education and healthcare systems had declined under the
financial strains of neoliberal economic policies.
Chávez who came to consider himself a “new socialist,” won the vast support of Venezuela’s poor in his 1998 electoral victory and soon embarked on an ambitious campaign to implement social reforms, most notably to eradicate illiteracy. From early in his presidency it was clear that Chávez’s first priority was to improve the lot of Venezuela’s economically disadvantaged. After his convincing 2000 reelection victory, Chávez was even more emboldened to aggressively attack his country’s social failings – he further initiated a series of reforms, known as “missions,” to make medical care, for example, more readily accessible to Venezuela’s poor and continued his campaign against illiteracy and to better feed Venezuelans living below the poverty line.
However, Venezuela lacked both the medical and educational skills and professionals necessary to guarantee the success of his reform program. However, Castro’s Cuba has been remarkably successful in providing quality education and healthcare to all Cubans (Cuba has a near 100 percent literacy rate and universal health care). Thus, given that Chávez and Castro are both ardent socialists, it made eminent sense for Chávez to appeal to Castro for the necessary expertise to carry out his reform package on the basis of a barter arrangement. In 2000, Chávez and Castro reached an agreement in which Castro supplied Chávez with healthcare experts and teachers to assist underprivileged Venezuelan neighborhoods in exchange for oil at preferential prices. Chávez’s collaboration with Cuba represented a bold move to improve the life of the average Venezuelan.
Chávez also had a political motivation for cozying up to Castro. Chávez’s “new socialist” revolution, or as he calls it Bolivarism, named after South American revolutionary leader Simón Bolívar, promotes state intervention in the economy yet tolerates private business, and mobilizes society through his revolutionary party, but allows political opposition the necessary vehicles to proselytize as well. The goal of this medley of policies is to make Venezuela as self-sufficient as possible and to make it, in Chávez’s words, a “small major power.”
Chávez sees Cuba as, in a certain respect, a role model for his Bolivarian dream. He stated that in 1999: Venezuela should head “toward the same sea as the Cuban people […] a sea of happiness, true social justice and peace.” Chávez wants to partially emulate the success of Castro’s Cuba – a highly literate, relatively healthy society with a strong sense of revolutionary spirit and fundamental patriotism though plagued by low domestic living standards due to a derelict economy. Accordingly, he has welcomed Cuba’s assistance in helping to transform Venezuela into a more self-reliant society. Chávez has also replicated many of Castro’s societal ideas, creating Bolivarian Youth Brigades and Bolivarian Circles, which are similar to Castro’s Young Pioneers and Committees for the Defense of the Revolution, in order to build support among the poor for Bolivarianism. Chávez’s open admiration for Castro’s perceived success in transforming Cuba into a socialist society has influenced the Venezuelan president to see him as being able to help Venezuela achieve his vision of a Bolivarian state, and has admired the Cuban leader’s accomplishments, with relatively few resources and in spite of unremitting U.S. hostility
Chávez’s Bolivarian vision, much like Bolívar’s own, is continentalist in nature and emphasizes the creation of a unified South America that can operate as an independent power in the hemisphere and the world; i.e. free to thwart Washington’s goals for a dependent Latin America. Castro and Chávez’s shared opposition to the U.S.-domination of the global political system partially explains Chávez’s pursuit of a close relationship with Castro after he came to power in 1998.
Chávez’s anti-U.S. rhetoric in the late 1990s at first isolated him from other Latin American leaders who openly supported U.S. interests and policies. With the recent emergence of the New Left in Latin America – Argentina, Brazil and Uruguay, and with prospects that Mexico, Ecuador and Bolivia will soon join the list of left-leaning presidents, – Chávez’s vision of a Latin American coalition of nations may be near. However, any such coalition will probably not be as unified as Chávez would prefer, but certainly it will be a powerful force that could somewhat act as an antidote or counterweight, or even as a possible alternative in the future to U.S. power being unqualifiedly projected on the hemisphere and the international system.
Castro’s Reasons for
Cooperation
For Castro, close ties with Chávez’s
oil-rich Venezuela represents a strong remedy for the
island’s perpetually hamstrung economy. With the 1989
downfall of the U.S.S.R., Cuba lost its largest trading
partner and its economy grievously suffered. Despite the
significant hardship caused by the loss of US $6 billion
annually in subsidies from Russia, Cuba began the early
phases of its recovery in the mid 1990s when the economy was
restructured to encourage more foreign investment, leaving
behind an entirely bleak few years known as the “special
period.” As a result, the sugar industry, if only briefly,
began to improve and Cuba became a popular tourist
destination. However, Cuban standards of living still
remained lower than they had been during the Cold War era.
In many ways, Chávez’s 1998 victory and the subsequent 2000
trade agreement between the two countries was an absolute
godsend for Castro, with Venezuela helping to prop up a
still ailing Cuban economy. Despite limited improvements,
some Cubans still lived in near poverty living conditions,
especially after the 2004 drought which the Cuban government
estimated cost the Cuban economy $1 billion. Venezuela’s
daily oil shipments together with Cuba’s booming tourist
industry provided Havana with the boost that significantly
improved Cuba’s economy and enhanced Castro’s worldwide
stature. The increase in daily oil imports allowed Castro in
May of 2005 to double the minimum wage for 1.6 million
workers, raise pensions for the elderly and deliver cooking
appliances to poor Cubans. The daily 90,000 barrels subsidy
has had a significant and marked effect on the Cuban
economy, as even an anti-Castro researcher like Damian
Fernandez, director of the Cuban Research Institute at
Florida International University, observed: “Without this
artificial lifeline the Cuban economy would be dead in the
water.” Castro needed a close relationship with Chávez to
raise the country’s declining standard of living, at the
very time the Bush administration was single-mindedly
tightening the screws on the Cuban economy.
As Chávez was drawn to Cuba, Castro was also politically motivated to pursue a close working relationship with Venezuela. For ten years, after the collapse of the U.S.S.R and as the U.S. came to dominate the hemisphere’s political agenda through heavily sold free trade agreements and economic reforms in the 1990s, aimed at coronating the private sector in the hemisphere, Castro’s Cuba was the target of Washington’s political isolation not only in the hemisphere but in the wider global community as well. The 1998 presidential victory of his close friend Chávez and the subsequent strengthening of relations between the two nations, along with dramatic shifts in attitude throughout the hemisphere, allowed Castro to end his political isolation and triumphantly emerge as a credible hemispheric leader.
Castro’s “Real Socialism” vs. Chávez’s “New
Socialism”
Despite appearances to the contrary,
Chávez and Castro differ on several critical ideological
issues. Castro believes in traditional “real socialism,” in
which the economy is controlled by the state and it exerts a
strong influence over the economic affairs of its citizens
and foreign trade. However, Chávez thinks “real socialism’s”
time has passed, saying: “[w]e have to re-invent socialism.
It can be the kind of socialism that we saw in the Soviet
Union, but it will emerge as we develop new systems that are
that are built on cooperation, not competition,” with this
being seen as “new socialism.” One manner in which “new
socialists” differentiate themselves from “real socialists”
is that they are significantly more tolerant of private
economic enterprise and considerably more experimental in
the approaches they are willing to take to achieve their
socialist goals. Evidence suggests that Latin America might
be returning to its traditional “mixed economy” where an
important role is assigned both to the public and private
sectors.
The U.S. Reaction
It is no
exaggeration to say that the Bush administration has been
greatly exercised by Chávez’s budding relationship with
Castro. In part, this stems from the administration’s
renewed efforts to isolate and marginalize Castro by
limiting the flow of dollars to Cuba by capping the number
of times Cuban-Americans can visit their relatives on the
island and by supporting Cuban dissidents in the hopes that
the economy and Castro’s political support would deteriorate
to the point where there would be a budding movement to
remove him from office. However, the massive oil subsidy
that Castro now receives from Chávez has allowed Cuban
planners to take steps to improve the economy’s performance
and has increased both living conditions on the island along
with Castro’s popularity. Chavez’s policies have seriously
undercut U.S. efforts to strangle the island’s economy in
order to force Castro from power.
U.S. policymakers, and in particular, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice are concerned that Chávez and Castro’s partnership could be the beginning of a new direction for the burgeoning New Left coalition in Latin America that is hostile to fundamental U.S. security interests in the region and Washington’s trade priorities for the hemisphere. During her recent Latin American trip, Rice expressed her concerns about Chávez, pointedly terming him a “destabilizing” influence in the region. Chávez, concerned that Washington’s increasingly hostile rhetoric toward him was the lead up to a possible invasion of Venezuela, threatened the U.S. with a “100-year war” if his country was ever invaded. However, the two nations are so economically dependent on each other – Venezuela sends 60 percent of all of its oil exports to the U.S. and the U.S. receives 15 percent of all its oil imports from Venezuela – that neither nation is likely to seriously consider outright military confrontation with the other. In fact, Chávez recently said of the U.S.: “Okay, we have differences, but let’s talk about them.”
The
Future
As the New Left movement continues to gain
strength in Latin America, Chávez and Castro will almost
certainly continue to engage in economic and political
cooperation to improve living conditions in their respective
countries and to increase their influence in the
international political system. This cooperation is one of
the more interesting developments in the region and could
reflect a giant leap in the direction of regionalism without
the U.S. participating, and the recognition that the
asymmetrical relationship of the U.S. and the rest of the
hemisphere is so out of scale, that each might have to
consider going their own independent ways.
This analysis was prepared by COHA Research Associate Hampden Macbeth.
June 21, 2005
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