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VENEZUELA:
US Neo-Cons
Accuse Chavez of Anti-Semitism
Jim Lobe
WASHINGTON, (IPS) - Despite
objections by major Jewish
organisations in Venezuela and
the United States, some
influential U.S.
neo-conservatives are charging
President Hugo Chavez with
anti-Semitism, which they say is
consistent with the country's
friendly relations with Iran.
In what appears to be a new line
of attack against the populist
leader, two of the White House's
favourite publications this week
ran articles denouncing remarks
made by Chavez in a televised
address to the nation Christmas
Eve as anti-Semitic.
Quoting Chavez as declaring that
"minorities, the descendants of
those who crucified Christ, have
taken over the riches of the
world", the Wall Street
Journal's "Americas" columnist,
Mary Anastasia O'Grady, charged
that his words constituted an
"ugly anti-Semitic swipe that
was of a piece with an insidious
assault over the past several
years on the country's Jewish
community".
Her column, entitled "The New
Tehran-Caracas Axis", came in
the wake of another article
published Thursday in the
neo-conservative Weekly Standard
that also focused on Chavez'
Christmas Eve broadcast as
evidence, along with his
"alliance" with Iran, of
anti-Jewish animus.
"On Christmas Eve, Venezuela's
President Hugo Chavez's
Christian-Socialist cant drifted
into anti-Semitism," began the
article, titled "Blast from the
Past: Hugo Chavez Veers into
anti-Semitism while explaining
how to create a workers'
paradise," by Aaron Mannes,
author of the "TerrorBlog" and a
book on Middle East terrorism
published by the Jewish
Institute of National Security
Affairs.
To his credit, Mannes' rendition
of Chavez' remarks included a
phrase in the middle of the
sentence that was omitted by
O'Grady, which identified "the
descendants" not only as those
"that crucified Christ", but
also "the descendants of the
same ones that kicked (South
American liberator Simon)
Bolivar out of here and also
crucified him in their own way
over there in Santa Marta, in
Colombia..."
As additional evidence of
Chavez' anti-Semitism, Mannes
cited his past association with
"Holocaust-denying Argentine
social scientist Norberto
Ceresole", his praise of
imprisoned terrorist Illich
Ramirez Sanchez, better known as
the retired terrorist "Carlos
the Jackal", and his meetings
with former Iraqi President
Saddam Hussein and Libyan leader
Moammar Gadhafi. Mannes also
cited Chavez' "alliance" with
the Islamic Republic of Iran and
its president, Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad, who has called for
Israel's destruction.
Nor was this the first time that
the Weekly Standard, which,
along with the Journal, has
depicted Chavez as a dangerous
demagogue inimical to U.S.
interests in South America and
beyond, has charged the
Venezuelan leader with
anti-Semitism.
In another article last August,
for example, it wrote that "(h)ostility
to Jews has become one of the
hallmarks of the Venezuelan
government" under Chavez... and
of Chavismo, the neo-fascist
ideology named for him".
The article pointed in
particular to a raid carried out
on the "Hebraica" Jewish
elementary school in Caracas in
November 2004 by police
commandos who were allegedly
searching for weapons linked to
the bombing that killed a local
prosecutor, amid rumours that
the Israeli intelligence agency
Mossad may have equipped the
perpetrators.
"The Hebraica raid was not an
isolated or random act of
state-sponsored anti-Jewish
violence," wrote the Standard's
Thor Halvorssen, president of a
New York-based group called the
Human Rights Foundation, who
noted that the raid coincided
with Chavez' visit to Teheran.
As O'Grady wrote Friday, the
raid was "a way to show Tehran
that Venezuela is on board".
What is remarkable, however, is
that the charge of
anti-Semitism, which recalls
remarkably similar accusations
by the Reagan administration,
neo-conservatives, and the Wall
Street Journal against
Nicaragua's Sandinista
government 20 years ago, does
not appear to be shared either
by close observers of Venezuelan
politics here, nor by some
prominent U.S. Jewish
organisations or even by the
leadership of the Jewish
community in Venezuela.
"Chavez has a lot of rage,"
noted Michael Shifter, an
influential and oft-quoted
Andean specialist and
vice-president of the
Inter-American Dialogue, who has
been outspoken in his criticism
of the Venezuelan leadership,
"but it hasn't been driven
toward Jews in particular."
The Hebraica raid was ordered by
a local judge acting on his own
initiative without the approval
or direction of the central
government, according to
Shifter.
As to the anti-Semitic
interpretation of Chavez'
Christmas Eve remarks by O'Grady
and Mannes, who in fact were
echoing a formal protest to
Caracas last week by the Los
Angeles-based Simon Wiesenthal
Centre, it was explicitly
rejected by Fred Pressner,
president of the Confederation
of Jewish Associations of
Venezuela (CAIV), as well as two
major U.S. Jewish groups.
"You have interfered in the
political status, in the
security, and in the well-being
of our community," according to
a draft letter from the CIAV to
the Wiesenthal Centre obtained
by The Forward, the
largest-circulation Jewish
newspaper in the United States.
"You have acted on your own,
without consulting us, on issues
that you don't know or
understand."
"We believe the president was
not talking about Jews and that
the Jewish world must learn to
work together," according to the
draft letter, which noted that
the latest protest was the third
time that the Wiesenthal Center
had publicly criticised Chavez
without first consulting the
local community.
The two U.S. groups -- the
American Jewish Committee and
the American Jewish Congress,
both of which have Latin America
divisions -- echoed Pressner's
contention that Chavez'
comments, when considered in
their full context, including
sentences that both preceded and
followed the (already-abridged)
sentence quoted by O'Grady and
Mannes, were not aimed at Jews.
Rather, they believe the target
was the white oligarchy that has
dominated Venezuela's and South
America's economy since colonial
times -- a theme that has
dominated much of Chavez'
political rhetoric for the past
seven years.
Whether that will make any
difference in the public or
internal administration debate
over U.S. policy towards Chavez
is doubtful, however, as both
the Journal and the Standard
reach a much wider audience than
The Forward and are particularly
influential in key
administration offices, notably
that of Vice President Dick
Cheney. The New York Times has
reported that the White House
receives 50 copies of the
Standard, which is edited by
William Kristol.
Ironically, Kristol's father,
Irving Kristol, and the
Journal's editorial page to
which he contributed, led a
public campaign to discredit
Argentine publisher Jacobo
Timerman when he emerged in 1980
from two-and-a-half years of
imprisonment in secret prisons
in Argentina claiming that Jews
like himself had been
systematically singled out for
the worst treatment and torture
by a military regime whose
ideology was as close to Nazism
as any since World War II.
Unlike Venezuela today,
Argentina was then seen by the
incoming Ronald Reagan
administration (1981-1989) and
its neo-conservative backers as
a vital Cold-War ally.
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