"The Chavez Code" by Eva Golinger
- 14 March 2005
English Translation by Sue Ashdown
"What message do you have for my country?" General Rafael Oropeza had
no answer for the military official from the United States standing
before him on April 11, 2002 in the military barracks of Fort Tiuna in
Caracas. Colonel James Rodgers, military attaché at the U.S. Embassy in
Caracas, repeated the question. In the moment of the coup d'etat
against President Hugo Chávez Frías, General Oropeza was charged with
registering everyone who entered and exited Fort Tiuna, the base for
the Venezuelan Defense Ministry and the premier military installation
in the country. Photographs of Rodgers driving a vehicle around the
perimeter of the Fort during the coup were published afterwards in the
Venezuelan daily Ultima Noticias.
The State Department denied the existence of any James Rodgers, even
though he was registered as a military attaché of the Embassy in
Caracas. But the most compromising moment for the U.S. military in
Venezuela during the period surrounding the April 2002 coup against
President Chávez happened April 8, at a goodbye party for a Chinese
military attaché, held in the luxury Hotel Melía in Caracas. It was
that night, exactly, that an official of the U.S. Marine Corps, David
Cazares, confused General Roberto González Cárdenas with General Néstor
González Gonzáles. It was an understandable error. Both men were bald,
approximately the same height and both dressed in Venezuelan Army
uniforms, complete with medals and an i.d. tag that said simply,
"González".
Cazares sidled up to General González and, accusingly, asked, "Why
haven't you contacted the ships we have off the coast or our submarine
submerged in La Guaira? What's going on? Why hasn't anyone called me?
What are you waiting for?"
General González hadn't the remotest idea what the U.S. Marine officer
was talking about, but before he could respond, a military attaché from
Brazil approached to say goodbye. Cazares took advantage of the
distraction to ask the Marine captain, Moreno Leal, standing nearby, if
this was indeed General González, "the one who was stationed on the
border". Moreno answered: "That is General González, but I don't know
if he was stationed at the border." Cazares continued interrogating
General González Cardenas, demanding to know why no-one had yet made
contact with him or with the three boats and the submarine located off
the Venezuelan coast. Prudently, González Cárdenas limited his
responses to a simple "We'll inquire." On leaving the party, the two
met again in the elevator. "This has an operative cost. I'm waiting for
your answer," said Cazares firmly.
The Venezuelan general Néstor González González was a secret
participant in the coup d'etat of April 2002 against President Chávez.
April 10, the general appeared on national television and demanded the
resignation of the president, "or we shall see". On April 12, after the
failed coup, a television program aired which revealed that González
González made this statement with the simple goal of preventing Chávez
from traveling to Costa Rica, where he was to participate in a meeting
of the OAS General Assembly that same day. The plot worked. Chávez
remained in Venezuela and the coup began to unfold according to plan.
However, the erroneous exchange between Cazares and González Cárdenas
that April 8 was passed to a higher level and uncovered by Venezuelan
investigators after Chávez's brief demotion, while the United States
simply ignored it. Cazares's term in Venezuela was reduced afterwards,
and he was re-posted to Chile when the amazing article appeared in
Últimas Noticias.
Another Piece in Place
On March 5, 2002, something pleasant happened for the United States. A
cable sent from the U.S. Embassy in Caracas to Washington, to the CIA,
the DIA
(Defense Intelligence Agency) the NSC (National Security Council) and
others, arrived with the following heading: THE UNIONS, THE BUSINESS
SECTOR AND THE CHURCH ANNOUNCE A TRANSITION AGREEMENT.
The body of the cable said: "With great fanfare, Venezuela's best
gathered on March 5 to listen to representatives of the Venezuelan
Workers' Union, the Chamber of Commerce and the Catholic Church present
their combined democratic agreement, with ten principles to guide a
transitional government. This accord constitutes an important step for
the opposition, which has never wavered in its condemnation of Chávez,
but until this moment had not offered a comprehensive vision of its
own."
The U.S. government appeared pleased with the agreement reached by the
opposition on March 5, taking into account that it had brought an
investment of nearly two million dollars in an effort to strengthen and
unify the opposition parties. A comment in a cable from the Embassy
revealed this satisfaction: "Another piece in place," wrote Cook, an
embassy staffer, "this agreement could well constitute a reference
point in the code of conduct for a transition government."
The remark "another piece in place" should have caught the attention of
some, more than just a little. If the opposition accord for a
post-Chávez transition government was another "piece" of the plan, then
the overthrow of Chávez should have been the final piece in the
conspiracy. The United States, continually complaining of the lack of
opposition unity, reasoned that this called for an investment of some
two million dollars through the National Endowment for Democracy (NED)
in order to strengthen the political parties and help them unite around
a strategy. The accord of March 5 confirmed that this investment had
brought results: "another piece" had been placed correctly and the day
of the final objective was approaching.
On March 11, 2002, the government of the United States was convinced that the coup had been organized.
The CIA in Venezuela sent another urgent notice to the five
intelligence agencies in Washington, this time in the form of an alert.
The alert was prepared for the Strategic Alert Committee of the
Director of Central Intelligence (DCI), a strictly confidential and
high level group governed by the National Intelligence Office to alert
and integrate the director's representatives in the National Security
Agency, the DIA, and the National Mapping Agency, as well as for the
undersecretary of State for Intelligence and Investigation, and the
vice-director of Intelligence for the CIA. The strictly confidential
alert was more specific: "There are growing signals that the Venezuelan
business leaders and officials are feeling dissatisfied with President
Chávez.the military could try to overthrow him."
Absolutely not!
The American ambassador in Caracas, Charles Shapiro, visited (Pedro)
Carmona several times during the coup. He claimed that his visits on
April 12 were to try to convince him to reinstitute the Congress and
other institutions he had dissolved, but Shapiro's answers to questions
about his relationships with the leaders of the opposition and the
participants in the resulting coup were prefabricated and well planned.
Not by him, however.
April 16, 2002, Shapiro received a cable from the State Department in
Washington, with a Press Guide for Western Hemispheric Affairs,
prepared by an L.S. Hamilton in the State Department, and approved by
Richard Boucher, State Department spokesperson.
If they ask "Did U.S. officials meet with Venezuelan opposition
officials prior to the April 11 removal of President Chávez from
power," he was to memorize the following response: "U.S. officials have
met with a broad spectrum of Venezuelans over the past several months
both in Caracas and in Washington. U.S. officials met with business
community representatives, labor union officials, Catholic church
leaders, opposition political leaders, and a wide array of Venezuelan
government officials."
In reference to questions about the meetings with Carmona, the Press
Guide said: "If asked" - that is, don't offer information if not asked
- the proper response would be: "In the course of normal diplomatic
contacts, U.S. officials met with Pedro Carmona, the President of the
Venezuelan Federation of Chambers of Commerce (Fedecamaras). Our
message to all Venezuelan contacts has been consistent. The political
situation in Venezuela is one for Venezuelans to resolve peacefully,
democratically and constitutionally. We explicitly told all of our
Venezuelan interlocutors on numerous occasions and at many levels that
under no circumstances would the United States support any
unconstitutional, undemocratic effort, such as coup (sic), to remove
President Chávez from power.
A message of "zero coups" was categorically sent, meanwhile the
government of the United States was filling the pockets of coup
conspirators with millions of dollars, and meeting with them from time
to time to discuss their plans.
Hardly surprising then, that the response to the question "Was the
United States involved in the effort to remove Venezuelan President
Chávez from power?" should be "Absolutely not."
[See also the Venezuela Freedom of Information Act web site (www.venezuelafoia.info) where all the documents regarding US meddling in Venezuela are published]
English Translation by Sue Ashdown
"What message do you have for my country?" General Rafael Oropeza had
no answer for the military official from the United States standing
before him on April 11, 2002 in the military barracks of Fort Tiuna in
Caracas. Colonel James Rodgers, military attaché at the U.S. Embassy in
Caracas, repeated the question. In the moment of the coup d'etat
against President Hugo Chávez Frías, General Oropeza was charged with
registering everyone who entered and exited Fort Tiuna, the base for
the Venezuelan Defense Ministry and the premier military installation
in the country. Photographs of Rodgers driving a vehicle around the
perimeter of the Fort during the coup were published afterwards in the
Venezuelan daily Ultima Noticias.
The State Department denied the existence of any James Rodgers, even
though he was registered as a military attaché of the Embassy in
Caracas. But the most compromising moment for the U.S. military in
Venezuela during the period surrounding the April 2002 coup against
President Chávez happened April 8, at a goodbye party for a Chinese
military attaché, held in the luxury Hotel Melía in Caracas. It was
that night, exactly, that an official of the U.S. Marine Corps, David
Cazares, confused General Roberto González Cárdenas with General Néstor
González Gonzáles. It was an understandable error. Both men were bald,
approximately the same height and both dressed in Venezuelan Army
uniforms, complete with medals and an i.d. tag that said simply,
"González".
Cazares sidled up to General González and, accusingly, asked, "Why
haven't you contacted the ships we have off the coast or our submarine
submerged in La Guaira? What's going on? Why hasn't anyone called me?
What are you waiting for?"
General González hadn't the remotest idea what the U.S. Marine officer
was talking about, but before he could respond, a military attaché from
Brazil approached to say goodbye. Cazares took advantage of the
distraction to ask the Marine captain, Moreno Leal, standing nearby, if
this was indeed General González, "the one who was stationed on the
border". Moreno answered: "That is General González, but I don't know
if he was stationed at the border." Cazares continued interrogating
General González Cardenas, demanding to know why no-one had yet made
contact with him or with the three boats and the submarine located off
the Venezuelan coast. Prudently, González Cárdenas limited his
responses to a simple "We'll inquire." On leaving the party, the two
met again in the elevator. "This has an operative cost. I'm waiting for
your answer," said Cazares firmly.
The Venezuelan general Néstor González González was a secret
participant in the coup d'etat of April 2002 against President Chávez.
April 10, the general appeared on national television and demanded the
resignation of the president, "or we shall see". On April 12, after the
failed coup, a television program aired which revealed that González
González made this statement with the simple goal of preventing Chávez
from traveling to Costa Rica, where he was to participate in a meeting
of the OAS General Assembly that same day. The plot worked. Chávez
remained in Venezuela and the coup began to unfold according to plan.
However, the erroneous exchange between Cazares and González Cárdenas
that April 8 was passed to a higher level and uncovered by Venezuelan
investigators after Chávez's brief demotion, while the United States
simply ignored it. Cazares's term in Venezuela was reduced afterwards,
and he was re-posted to Chile when the amazing article appeared in
Últimas Noticias.
Another Piece in Place
On March 5, 2002, something pleasant happened for the United States. A
cable sent from the U.S. Embassy in Caracas to Washington, to the CIA,
the DIA
(Defense Intelligence Agency) the NSC (National Security Council) and
others, arrived with the following heading: THE UNIONS, THE BUSINESS
SECTOR AND THE CHURCH ANNOUNCE A TRANSITION AGREEMENT.
The body of the cable said: "With great fanfare, Venezuela's best
gathered on March 5 to listen to representatives of the Venezuelan
Workers' Union, the Chamber of Commerce and the Catholic Church present
their combined democratic agreement, with ten principles to guide a
transitional government. This accord constitutes an important step for
the opposition, which has never wavered in its condemnation of Chávez,
but until this moment had not offered a comprehensive vision of its
own."
The U.S. government appeared pleased with the agreement reached by the
opposition on March 5, taking into account that it had brought an
investment of nearly two million dollars in an effort to strengthen and
unify the opposition parties. A comment in a cable from the Embassy
revealed this satisfaction: "Another piece in place," wrote Cook, an
embassy staffer, "this agreement could well constitute a reference
point in the code of conduct for a transition government."
The remark "another piece in place" should have caught the attention of
some, more than just a little. If the opposition accord for a
post-Chávez transition government was another "piece" of the plan, then
the overthrow of Chávez should have been the final piece in the
conspiracy. The United States, continually complaining of the lack of
opposition unity, reasoned that this called for an investment of some
two million dollars through the National Endowment for Democracy (NED)
in order to strengthen the political parties and help them unite around
a strategy. The accord of March 5 confirmed that this investment had
brought results: "another piece" had been placed correctly and the day
of the final objective was approaching.
On March 11, 2002, the government of the United States was convinced that the coup had been organized.
The CIA in Venezuela sent another urgent notice to the five
intelligence agencies in Washington, this time in the form of an alert.
The alert was prepared for the Strategic Alert Committee of the
Director of Central Intelligence (DCI), a strictly confidential and
high level group governed by the National Intelligence Office to alert
and integrate the director's representatives in the National Security
Agency, the DIA, and the National Mapping Agency, as well as for the
undersecretary of State for Intelligence and Investigation, and the
vice-director of Intelligence for the CIA. The strictly confidential
alert was more specific: "There are growing signals that the Venezuelan
business leaders and officials are feeling dissatisfied with President
Chávez.the military could try to overthrow him."
Absolutely not!
The American ambassador in Caracas, Charles Shapiro, visited (Pedro)
Carmona several times during the coup. He claimed that his visits on
April 12 were to try to convince him to reinstitute the Congress and
other institutions he had dissolved, but Shapiro's answers to questions
about his relationships with the leaders of the opposition and the
participants in the resulting coup were prefabricated and well planned.
Not by him, however.
April 16, 2002, Shapiro received a cable from the State Department in
Washington, with a Press Guide for Western Hemispheric Affairs,
prepared by an L.S. Hamilton in the State Department, and approved by
Richard Boucher, State Department spokesperson.
If they ask "Did U.S. officials meet with Venezuelan opposition
officials prior to the April 11 removal of President Chávez from
power," he was to memorize the following response: "U.S. officials have
met with a broad spectrum of Venezuelans over the past several months
both in Caracas and in Washington. U.S. officials met with business
community representatives, labor union officials, Catholic church
leaders, opposition political leaders, and a wide array of Venezuelan
government officials."
In reference to questions about the meetings with Carmona, the Press
Guide said: "If asked" - that is, don't offer information if not asked
- the proper response would be: "In the course of normal diplomatic
contacts, U.S. officials met with Pedro Carmona, the President of the
Venezuelan Federation of Chambers of Commerce (Fedecamaras). Our
message to all Venezuelan contacts has been consistent. The political
situation in Venezuela is one for Venezuelans to resolve peacefully,
democratically and constitutionally. We explicitly told all of our
Venezuelan interlocutors on numerous occasions and at many levels that
under no circumstances would the United States support any
unconstitutional, undemocratic effort, such as coup (sic), to remove
President Chávez from power.
A message of "zero coups" was categorically sent, meanwhile the
government of the United States was filling the pockets of coup
conspirators with millions of dollars, and meeting with them from time
to time to discuss their plans.
Hardly surprising then, that the response to the question "Was the
United States involved in the effort to remove Venezuelan President
Chávez from power?" should be "Absolutely not."
[See also the Venezuela Freedom of Information Act web site (www.venezuelafoia.info) where all the documents regarding US meddling in Venezuela are published]