Contrary to statements by Venezuelan
caudillo Hugo Chávez, a cancerous tumor discovered in his colon late last month
has not been removed, according to my sources. Heeding the self-serving advice
of Cuban doctors, Chávez has rejected surgery so that he can return to his
public duties as soon as possible and bolster his regime’s ongoing succession
strategy. The Castro brothers need him back on the political stage in
Venezuela, not in a hospital bed. Meanwhile, back in Caracas, corrupt military
leaders are consolidating their power and plotting their political survival as
if Chávez were already dead.
Non-Cuban medical specialists insist
that the larger-than-expected tumor must be removed before resuming last-ditch
chemotherapy and radiation. They believe that Chávez’s decision to refuse
surgery will hasten his death. Members of Chávez’s family and some close
friends are furious that the Cubans are manipulating his megalomania to
convince him that sustaining his “revolution” is more important than extending
his life.
Havana’s ruthless leaders are obsessed with trying to manage the transition in Caracas in order to ensure continued oil and aid for Cuba’s comatose economy. There is bad blood between the Castro brothers and the military vanguard that has been taking charge since January. New National Assembly President Diosdado Cabello knows that Fidel Castro convinced Chávez to marginalize him years ago. And the new minister of defense, General Henry Rangel Silva, is convinced that Castro will betray him and other narco-military officers in order to inoculate the regime against U.S. scrutiny. Indeed, the Castro regime is appalled that these hyper-corrupt military leaders would emerge as the face of Chavismo, preferring a civilian formula that will placate the international community and answer to Havana.
According to sources in the Chavista
inner circle, Cabello and Rangel Silva have grown accustomed to their
preeminent positions. They have been empowered by the most corrupt elements of
the armed forces to do anything to sustain the regime, so they no longer depend
on Chávez and have no use for the regime’s civilian cadre. Although Cabello and
his loyalists believe that they can engineer a victory for Chávez, they are
worried that if their ailing boss appears weak and frail on the campaign trail,
the viability of opposition candidate Henrique Capriles Radonski may grow.
If Chávez dies before the October 7
elections, the narco-generals believe that fielding a substitute candidate may
be an unnecessary risk. This assessment puts them on a collision course with
Chávez and his favored civilians. Brazilian leader Lula’s famed political
advisor Joao Santana has begun grooming Nicolas Maduro to substitute for
Chávez. However, after Chávez’s death, it will be extraordinarily difficult for
Maduro to convince Cabello and the narco-generals to let him compete in the fall
elections, take the reins of the movement, or manage a perilous transition.
For now, the Chavistas intend to
emphasize their unity at all costs. However, the key players are plotting
against one another to position themselves as Chávez’s heir. Because none of
them believe that any potential successor can duplicate Chávez’s charisma,
Cabello and his cadre will emphasize their ruthless efficiency in holding on to
power over Maduro’s potential electoral appeal. The Cubans and Iranians, who
depend on Venezuelan hospitality, will surely support Syria-style repression on
the streets of Caracas if that is what is required to keep power. However, such
violent tactics may split the military by alienating less radical officers and
rank-and-file troops.
The narco-generals believe the Obama
administration is too preoccupied with the Iranian crisis and rising gasoline
prices to interfere with a Chavista succession. To make matters worse, because
the Venezuelan opposition has consciously avoided any outreach to the United
States, at least for now this democratic alternative is virtually invisible in
Washington.
At this critical hour, Russian and
Chinese policymakers are having second thoughts about pumping additional
billions of dollars into the campaign coffers of a dying man. However, they are
nervous about losing their sweetheart deals if Chávez’s regime were to perish
along with him. Unless they believe that their investments will be safe under a
democratic successor, they may double-down on the current team with the
expectation that the Chavistas will retain power and honor their corrupt
bargains.
A bipartisan cadre in the U.S.
Congress is paying close attention to Iran’s beachhead in Venezuela, and may
mobilize quickly to reject strong-arm tactics by the Chavistas. If a
narco-state or violent crackdown emerges so near to U.S. borders, the White
House will no longer be able to avert its attention from the mess in Venezuela
or to “lead from behind.”
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