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Venezuela : AFL-CIO involved like they were in Chile 1973

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TinaTyson Donating Member (186 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Mar-26-04 12:20 PM
Original message
Venezuela : AFL-CIO involved like they were in Chile 1973
Also discusses AFL-CIO -> NED connection

AFL-CIO in Venezuela: Déjà Vu All Over Again
http://www.labornotes.org/archives/2004/04/articles/e.html

Massive mobilizations, strikes, street conflict, hysterical mass media, social and economic disruption: Chile in 1972-73 Venezuela in 2002-04.

The AFL-CIO is once again on the scene, this time in Venezuela, just as it was in Chile in 1973. Once again, its operations in that country are being funded by the U.S. government. This time, the money is being laundered through the quasi-governmental National Endowment for Democracy, hidden from AFL-CIO members and the American public.

Once again, it is being used to support the efforts of reactionary labor and business leaders, helping to destabilize a democratically-elected government that has made major efforts to alleviate poverty, carried out significant land reform in both urban and rural areas, and striven to change political institutions that have long worked to marginalize those at the lowest rungs in society. And also like Allende's Chile, Venezuela's government under president Hugo Chavez has opposed a number of actions by the U.S. Government, this time by the Bush Administration.

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seventhson Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Mar-26-04 12:34 PM
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1. Kerry needs to get his Shit straight on this issue
and by "shit" I mean his priorities.

If the Bush Internatiuonal Crime and Fascist collective is trying to overthrow Chaves then Kerry needs to support democracy and expose these crimes.

His bashing Chavez the other day under these circumstances is UNACCEPTABLE.

I for one will be happy to protest on this issue in Boston in the same way that peace protesters and democrats protested at the Dem convention in Cicago and I protested at the dem convention in NYC in 1976 due to Carter's being in bed with Rockefeller/Kissinger/Brezinzki (sp?) et al.

I am a Democrat. But I am NOT for Bush lite democrats who demagogue for the corporate right on issues like this.
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TinaTyson Donating Member (186 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Mar-26-04 12:45 PM
Response to Reply #1
2. Who will you vote for then?
The appointments to the courts and the environmental programs that I believe Kerry will follow up on is more than enough to "win" my vote. Court appointments can effect the country for 40 years and time is running out on the environment.

That said, I just don't see the need to close my eyes to the parts of John Kerry that will be business as usual. Our interventionist policies are a root cause of terrorism. And corporate rule is the direct cause of increasing inequality and decreasing democracy (all the important decisions made in unaccountable institutions).

Vote Kerry please. For abortion, for some sane gun laws and to at least make a small effort to save our species.

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Classical_Liberal Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Mar-26-04 01:08 PM
Response to Reply #2
4. Exactly,
but it looks to me like poster said he will vote for Kerry. He just won't be silent on Kerry's pandering.
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TinaTyson Donating Member (186 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Mar-26-04 02:15 PM
Response to Reply #4
7. OK.
Wasn't clear.
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AP Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Mar-26-04 01:07 PM
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3. The good stuff in this article starts here:
The war against Chavez has continued ... with the AFL-CIO's American Center for International Labor Solidarity (ACILS) deeply involved.

ACILS-also known as the Solidarity Center-has overseen all of the AFL-CIO's foreign labor operations since 1997, centralizing a previously decentralized set of regional bodies that had long worked in Africa, Asia, Europe and Latin America. These organizations, which played a key role in the Cold War, had a terrible affect in the developing regions of the world.

There is a consensus that ACILS' work under President John Sweeney has been considerably better than foreign operations carried out under previous AFL-CIO presidents George Meany and Lane Kirkland. But the continuing lack of transparency, accountability and even simple reporting to AFL-CIO members about ACILS has generated concerns among activists about what the organization actually does in the many countries in which it operates. Solidarity Center Director Harry Kamberis' background is not a typical labor background and looks suspiciously like CIA, which also adds to activists' unease. (See my report in Labor Notes, February 2004.).

Most of ACILS' funding comes from the National Endowment for Democracy (NED), not the AFL-CIO. The NED was created by the Reagan Administration in 1983. One of the authors of the enabling legislation has said that NED was to do at least some of the work previously done by the CIA, albeit publicly: its talk appears progressive, but its actions are reactionary. One of the NED's initial directors was that well-known democrat, Henry Kissinger, Richard Nixon's point man in the campaign against Chile's elected president, Salvador Allende.

NED is funded by the U.S. Government, through the State Department, but operates "independently" from any on-going governmental control. This enables the U.S. Government to deny any responsibility for NED's activities, and NED can claim it is an independent non-governmental organization (NGO), not a governmental one, and thus not subject to governmental scrutiny or oversight.
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Commie Pinko Dirtbag Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Mar-26-04 01:15 PM
Response to Reply #3
6. OT: better formatting to your sig:
Insert a {b} (but use square brackets instead of curly braces) just before the Costco image link.
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TinaTyson Donating Member (186 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Mar-26-04 01:12 PM
Response to Original message
5. More NED stuff. From back in 2002 at time of coup.
Probably posted before.

Our Gang in Venezuela?
by David Corn

http://www.thenation.com/doc.mhtml?i=20020805&c=1&s=corn

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Created by President Ronald Reagan and Congress in 1983, NED was designed to run a parallel foreign policy for the United States, backing and assisting entities that Washington might not be able to officially endorse--say, an opposition party challenging a government with which the United States maintained diplomatic relations. In a way, NED took public some of the covert political activity the CIA had previously mounted. The endowment--which devotes much of its budget to funding the foreign policy arms of the Democratic and Republican parties, the Chamber of Commerce and the AFL-CIO (its core grantees)--has been involved in both questionable and praiseworthy projects. It awarded a large grant to a student group linked to an outlawed extreme-right paramilitary outfit in France, helped finance the development of conservative parties in countries where democracy was doing just fine and played a heavy-handed role in Nicaragua's 1990 elections. In the late 1980s it aided the pro-democracy opposition in Chile and antiapartheid organizations in South Africa. But even if its programs have indeed enhanced democracy on occasion, NED overall has long been problematic, as it has handed taxpayer dollars to private groups (such as the two major parties) to finance their overseas initiatives and has conducted controversial programs that could be viewed abroad as actions of the US government. What might the reaction be here, if the British government funded an effort to improve the Democratic Party's get-out-the-vote operation in Florida?

Which brings us back to Venezuela--where the US Embassy was compelled after the coup to declare as a "myth" the notion that "the US government, through organizations such as the National Endowment for Democracy, financed coup efforts." For months before the coup, Americans--including US government officials and officials of NED and its core grantees--were in contact with Venezuelans and political parties that became involved or possibly involved with the coup. This has provided Latin Americans cause to wonder if the United States is continuing its tradition of underhandedly meddling in the affairs of its neighbors to the south. And these contacts have prompted some, though not much, official probing in Washington. The issue is not only whether the United States in advance OK'd this particular coup (of which there is little evidence) or tried to help it once it occurred (of which there is more evidence). But did discussions between Americans and Chavez foes--such as those involving NED--encourage or embolden the coup-makers and their supporters? Give them reason to believe the United States would not protest should they move against Chavez in an unconstitutional manner? Much of the two-day coup remains shrouded in confusion. (It came and went so quickly: Carmona fled office the day after he seized power, once several military units announced they opposed the military coup, whereupon Chavez was returned to his office.) But enough questions linger about US actions in Venezuela to warrant a good look.

Consider some NED activities there. When Consorcio Justicia began to assemble the pro-democracy conferences, it approached the two main opponents of Chavez--Carmona and his Fedecamaras, as well as the Confederation of Venezuelan Workers (CTV), the leading anti-Chavez labor union--according to documents obtained from NED under a Freedom of Information Act request. Christopher Sabatini, NED's senior program officer for Latin America, says, "The idea was that the conferences (which were to include Chavistas) would be able to define a consensus-based policy agenda" for the entire country. But certainly NED's core grantees were trying to beef up Venezuelan organizations challenging Chavez. The AFL-CIO, for example, was working (seemingly laudably) to bolster and democratize the CTV, which Chavez had been trying to intimidate and infiltrate. The International Republican Institute was training several parties that opposed Chavez. At one session, Mike Collins, a former GOP press secretary, taught party leaders how to mount photo-ops; at another he suggested to Caracas Mayor Alfredo Peña, a prominent Chavez foe, how he "could soften his aggressive image in order to appeal to a wider range of voters," according to an IRI report. (Human Rights Watch found that at least two members of the police force controlled by Peña--now Chavez's primary rival--fired weapons during the April 11 melee.) The question, then, is, since it was not explicit US policy to call for Chavez's ouster--though his departure from office was desired by the Bush Administration, which detested his oil sales to Cuba and close ties to Iraq, Iran and Libya--should US taxpayer dollars have gone to groups working to unseat Chavez, even through legitimate means?

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