Hugo Chavez: 'I am not a socialist!'
Yes, Hugo Chavez really said it: "I am not a socialist!" Not recently, to  be sure, but 14 years ago when Chavez - as a cashiered Army paratrooper who'd  led a failed military coup in February 1992 -- was making a run for Venezuela's  presidency.
 
"I am not a socialist!" he said during a television  interview, wearing a suit and speaking in reasonable tones. This was when he  was trying hard to convince voters - especially middle-class and well-off  Venezuelans who were leery of him -- that he'd definitely cast aside the bullet  for the ballot. Chavez, at the time, claimed he was an idealistic moderate who  would pursue a "Third Way" between capitalism and socialism. He pledged to  reverse wide-spread poverty, clean up endemic corruption, and restore the  oil-rich but impoverished South American nation's national pride - a nation  that, during the era of high oil prices, was a beacon of democracy in the region  and, many Venezuelans believed, was poised to attain first-world status. Back  then, the country was dubbed "Saudi Venezuela."
 
"I am not a  socialist!" Chavez's words now figure prominently into a powerful YouTube video  - "Yo no soy socialista" - that juxtaposes Chavez's original campaign pledges  against his leftist rhetoric that started soon after he took office in 1999. The  video comes as Chavez, 58, is in a close election race against 40-year-old state  governor Henrique Capriles. 
 
You don't need to understand Spanish to understand the video in which El Presidente -- who now speaks of creating a paradise of "21st Century Socialism" -- extols the virtues of "fatherland, socialism, or death" ("patria, socialismo o muerte) to an audience. At another point, he declares: "I am a true revolutionary!"
  
 
In the mainstream media's Venezuela coverage, an  important piece of context is often omitted regarding Chavez's rise to power -  it's erroneously suggested that only Venezuela's poor voted for Chavez, who won  the second-largest popular vote ever, 58.4%, in 1998. In fact, many middle-class and well-off  Venezuelans voted for Chavez. They didn't see him as a messiah as did  Venezuela's poor, to be sure. But they did regard him as a sincere reformer -- a  political outsider not associated with Venezuela's traditional parties, a man  who would be an antidote for Venezuela's decline. 
 
But as the  YouTube video dramatically shows, Chavez carried out a monstrous bait-and-switch  after becoming president. Declaring himself a revolutionary socialist and  adopting an anti-American foreign policy, despite Venezuela's historically close  ties with the U.S., Chavez consolidated his power by rewriting the constitution  and packing the Supreme Court and other institutions with his supporters. He  demonized anybody who disagreed with him. It happened because of Venezuela's  weak checks and balances and the popular wave of support on which Chavez  was riding.
 
As a Caracas-based journalist at the time, I was  impressed at the way some prescient Venezuelans, a minority to be sure,  avoided group think. They saw Chavez as a wolf-in-sheep's clothing from the  start. Even before Chavez's landslide election victory, for instance, many  upper-level executives in state oil company PDVSA were resigning -- making plans  for early retirement abroad, with Miami being a popular spot to weather the  storm. Many were among Venezuela's best and brightest. They had wanted to be  part of the solution to Venezuela's problems. But Chavez, a class warrior  instead of a uniter, saw them as part of Venezuela's problems.  
 
Ultimately, Chavez took three bad ideas from Venezuela's past -  statism, authoritarianism, and bread-and-circus populism - and took them to new  heights. He stoked anti-Americanism like never before, traveling frequently  abroad as he made alliances with Cuba's Fidel Castro and Middle Eastern  strongmen. He even praised Venezuelan-born terrorist Carlos the Jackal as a  "worthy heir of the greatest [leftist] struggles." 
 
As for PDVSA,  it used to be one of the world's most respected state oil companies, a vital  source of income. Under Chavez, it has become rife with political cronyism. Oil  production has declined significantly, according to many observers. It's thought  the Chavez administration's mismanagement was responsible for a huge refinery  explosion last month - whose flames, as shown in the "I-am-not-a-socialist"  video, look like scenes from hell. It's an apt metaphor for what "21st Century  socialism" has brought to Venezuela.
 
In his reelection campaign,  Chavez has had a clear advantage. He controls the levers of power and has no  qualms about using state resources to aid his campaign, as was underscored on  Tuesday with a report from television news channel Globovision: It showed PDVSA vehicles  driving around with Chavez campaign stickers. 
 
Capriles is good  looking compared to the puffy-faced Chavez who claims to be in remission from  cancer; and in Venezuela -- home to many beauty queens -- looks  matter. Capriles has connected with audiences by hammering away at Venezuela's  epic levels of corruption, mismanagement, and Chavez's willingness to use  Venezuela's oil to support leftist political goals abroad -- all while Venezuela  has suffered regular electricity outages, food  shortages, and one of the world's highest murder  rates.
 
What will happen when Venezuelans go to the polls this  Sunday? It may be ugly. Chavez, after all, sees himself as being on a divine  mission, a veritable reincarnation of Venezuelan independence hero Simon  Bolivar, his hero. He believes the ends justify the means. Most ominously,  Chavez and his senior advisers have  asserted that Venezuela will suffer violence and political instability if  he's not reelected. All of which raises fears that the country is poised for a  social explosion, with Chavez's most fanatical supporters and government forces  taking to the streets. This would be in response to a Capriles victory - or  perhaps in response to a Chavez victory that's regarded by enraged  Capriles' supporters as being rigged.
 
"A number of multinational  companies with operations in Venezuela (including oil companies) are updating  contingency plans to pull their expatriate staff out of the country quickly if  there's a sudden eruption of social and political conflict," writes blogger Caracas Gringo, a prescient American expat who writes anonymously  from Venezuela. 
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Whoever wins,  Venezuela's sad decline will not be reversed anytime soon. 




