Chavez’s early ties with the FARC and ELN

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Hugo Chavez recently proposed a humanitarian plan to free several people kidnapped by the FARC (Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia), a Colombian narco-guerrilla terrorist organization. Although Chavez has always denied supporting the FARC, we now know he was not telling the truth. In fact, information found in the computer of the FARC’s second-in-command, Raul Reyes, reveals that Chavez openly assists the guerillas. This is not surprising, as the relationship between them goes back to the 1970s.

Venezuelan democracy started in 1958 with a broad political agreement among the country’s main democratic forces called the Pact of Punto Fijo. The first years of democracy were difficult. Marxist organizations, with the support of Cuba and the USSR, opted for armed struggle in order to install a communist regimen. The guerrillas placed bombs, destroyed pipelines, and kidnapped and murdered people as a means of terrorizing the civilian population. In 1966, a Cuban expedition led by General Arnaldo Ochoa invaded Venezuela from the coast of Machurucuto. The invasion failed and by 1967 the guerrillas had been defeated. During the early 1970s, the Venezuelan Government decreed a general amnesty in order to pacify the country. However, some small Marxist groups continued to operate clandestinely, in an attempt to revive the guerrilla war. Those groups were Red Flag, Socialist League and the Party of the Venezuela Revolution (PRV). Some of the most important and active members of the PRV were its leader Douglas Bravo, as well as Rafael Ramirez, and Adam Chavez, the brother of Hugo Chavez.

The overwhelming defeat suffered by the guerrilla groups made them rethink their strategy. They decided the best way to achieve their goals was to infiltrate the armed forces. In 1970, their first contact was established between former Lieutenant William Izarra and Douglas Bravo. Then in 1971, Hugo Chavez entered the Military School and immediately established contacts with the PRV through his brother, Adam, and began organizing the clandestine Bolivarian Revolutionary Movement (MBR) to recruit other military personnel for the revolution. The failed coup that Hugo Chavez led in 1992 was organized in cooperation with the clandestine organizations MBR, PRV, Red Flag and the Socialist League. 

Adam not only introduced his brother, Hugo, to Marxism but also provided him with the necessary contacts to the Venezuelan guerrillas as well as to their Colombian counterparts, with whom their Venezuelan mates had had a long-standing relationship. The first contact between Hugo Chavez and the Colombian guerrillas was made through two members of the Colombian Army, Majors German Cadena Montenegro and Mario Alberto Galeano, who collaborated with the now dissolved guerrilla group M-19 since they were in the Colombian military school. Those contacts and activities did not represent a major threat until the 1992 coup changed the political situation in Venezuela, and the difficult economic situation made Venezuelans look for unconventional alternatives that made Chavez popular. 

When Hugo Chavez left prison in 1994, he visited Colombia, where Majors Cadena and Galeano, by that time already retired, received him. Chavez then stayed in Colombia for six months, adopting the nickname of Commander Centeno, while establishing contacts with the Colombian Marxist narco-guerrilla group, the National Liberation Army (ELN). At this time Chavez proposed to the ELN that they organize a joint Colombian-Venezuelan guerrilla force in order to fight a “true independence war.” That same year, Chavez established contacts with the other major Colombian guerrilla group, the FARC. This contact was made by Ramon Rodriguez Chacin. It is now well-documented that the FARC gave money to Chavez when he was in jail, and most likely, in 1998, during his first electoral campaign. 

From Colombia, Chavez traveled to Cuba where he established contacts with Fidel Castro. Later, in 1999 when Chavez began his first presidential term, the retired Colombian Majors Cadena and Galeano join his Bolivarian Movement 2000 with the mission of winning adherents within the Colombian Armed Forces, as a means of destabilizing democracy inside Colombia. Since then, Chavez has repeatedly tried to establish direct contacts with the Colombian Armed Forces and did so again by talking directly with the chief of the Colombian Armed Forces, General Mario Montoya, against the wishes of the President of Colombia. That is why President Uribe decided to remove Chavez as a mediator in trying to free some of the hostages from the Colombian guerrillas. Once fired, Chavez became so mad that he insulted President Uribe, and stated that Venezuela does not have borders with Colombia but with the FARC’s territory.

Yet, recent events indicate that the exact position of the FARC’s second in command was detected from a direct phone call from Chavez to Raul Reyes, and among the documents found was one listing a 300 million dollar “donation” that Chavez gave to the Colombian guerrillas. Currently, the FARC operates freely in Venezuela in seven different areas and receives protection from the government. Chavez’s closest collaborators are his brother, Adam, his minister of Interior, Ramon Rodriguez Chacin, Jose Vicente Rangel (former presidential candidate of the communist party), Jorge Rodriguez (Socialist League), Minister of Energy Rafael Ramirez (PRV), Minister of Propaganda William Izarra (PRV) and the foreign Affairs Minister, Nicolas Maduro (Socialist League). Now the former Venezuelan guerrillas, the long standing close friends of their Colombian counterparts, are the individuals who now govern Venezuela.

Jose Noguera obtained a Ph.D. degree from State University of New York at Buffalo. He currently teaches and conducts research on macroeconomics, political economy and development with the rank of Associate Professor at the Whittemore School of the University of New Hampshire. He has also been appointed at Michigan State University, CERGE-EI (Prague, Czech Republic), the University of Warsaw, Central University of Venezuela and Mohila Academy University of Kiev.

 

Representatives Mack and Ros-Lehtinen introduce congressional resolution calling for Venezuela to be named a state sponsor of terrorism.

Citing Venezuela’s continued support of and ties to the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), an internationally-recognized terrorist organization, Congressman Connie Mack (FL-14) and House Foreign Affairs Committee Ranking Member Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (FL-18) introduced a resolution in the House of Representatives today that calls on the Administration to add Venezuela to the state sponsors of terrorism list.

Their resolution also condemns the Venezuelan government for its support of terrorist organizations and urges the Venezuelan government to immediately cease all support and ties to the FARC. The resolution is cosponsored by Reps. Michael McCaul (TX-10), Lynn Westmoreland (GA-03), Mike Pence (IN-06), Mario Diaz-Balart (FL-25), Doug Lamborn (CO-05), Patrick McHenry (NC-10), Lincoln Diaz-Balart (FL-21) and Mary Bono Mack (CA-45). Mack, a member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee and one of Congress’ sharpest critics of Venezuelan strongman Hugo Chavez, said: “For decades, the FARC has terrorized Colombians and foreign citizens through kidnappings, bombings, killings, and drug trafficking. The evidence that Hugo Chavez is assisting a recognized terrorist organization is overwhelming. He has supported these terrorists by giving them fuel, money, a safe haven within Venezuelan borders, and public support. “Chavez has not only befriended and supported the FARC, he has developed strong relationships with the leaders of Iran and Cuba – both state sponsors of terrorism – and has used those relationships to systematically disrupt stability in Latin America and the rest of the Western Hemisphere.” “Naming Venezuela a state sponsor of terrorism and passing the Colombia Free Trade Agreement in Congress will strengthen the stability of the Andean region and help in the effort to preserve freedom, security and prosperity for the Latin American people. I urge my colleagues to support this important resolution.” The resolution was referred to the House Foreign Affairs Committee where it awaits further action.

Full resolution: https://mack.house.gov/index.cfm?FuseAction=PressReleases.View&ContentRecord_id=549

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