'Way to Go, Hugo! Chavez Cleans House Via NY Transfer News * All the News That Doesn't Fit WAY TO GO, HUGO! CHAVEZ CLEANS HOUSE The Miami Herald - May 19, 2002 http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/3292226.htm Chávez purging military after coup BY JUAN O. TAMAYO jtamayo@herald.com CARACAS - Amid new threats of a military coup, Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez has purged nearly half the armed forces leadership and replaced it with younger officers believed to be loyal to his leftist ideals. Chávez has removed so many generals and admirals since a failed coup last month that he has been obliged to appoint some lower-ranking colonels in their place, further irking proud commanders by bypassing requirements that top officers fill top posts. But the crackdown has not stopped secret groups of mid-level officers from issuing threats, including one last weekend, to topple Chávez unless he amends his populist pro-Cuban course and efforts to politicize the military. Chávez promised there would be no "witch hunt" against the military. Only six senior officers have been officially charged in the coup that saw Chávez deposed and then reinstated. But publicly announced command changes since his April 14 return to power show a massive purge in the 80,000-member armed forces. In the past month, the president has axed 106 of the 260 generals and admirals, leaving them without posts. But he's allowing them to stay in service, at least until new promotions scheduled for July. Another 500 lower-ranking officers were sent home under suspicion of supporting the coup or failing to back the president on April 11, said Fernando Ochoa Antich, a retired army general and staunch Chávez critic. They include the commanders of all five infantry and tank battalions stationed in central Caracas, critical to any potential coup, plus 30 members of the secret police, known as DISIP. POLITICAL FRAGILITY Far from creating stability, the crackdown has increased the political fragility of the world's fourth-largest oil producer, which remains bitterly divided between backers and foes of Chávez's avowed "peaceful revolution" on behalf of poor Venezuelans. "A new coup is the topic of the day because the military see a clear danger to themselves if Chávez keeps turning them into a praetorian guard," said Aníbal Romero, a political analyst who teaches at the Navy War College. DISIP's new head, Lt. Col. Miguel Rodriguez Torres, served on Chávez's staff after his election in 1998. He later served as chief organizer of the Bolivarian Circles, groups of pro-Chávez civilians allegedly armed and trained by the government to help defend the president's revolution. Chávez also gave top posts to three generals who helped return him to power: Alí Uzcátegui as head of Military Intelligence; Luis García Montoya as army chief; and paratrooper brigade chief Raúl Baduel as commander of the 4th Army Division. Gen. Lucas Rincón, who was commander in chief of the armed forces on April 11 but did not join the coup, at least according to Chávez, was promoted to minister of defense and has retained day-to-day command of the military. Chávez has long angered many officers by insisting that they support his "revolution," promoting friends over more qualified candidates, creating the Bolivarian Circles and befriending Cuba and Marxist guerrillas in neighboring Colombia. 'The military is no longer a solid monolithic block. It is split into Chavistas and anti-Chavistas, revolutionaries and "institutionalists' who reject all politics," said retired Vice Admiral Mario Iván Carratú. NO "WOUNDED WING' Chávez said last week that he had information that civilian opponents were "trying to urge on the military" to stage another coup. "For those who may think that Chávez has a wounded wing, they are wrong," he warned. But his purges have only fueled the discontent within the armed forces, Ochoa and Carratú added, especially because Chávez has appointed some colonels to posts traditionally reserved for generals. Gen. Guillermo Rangél, once regarded as a radical Chavista, sparked a standoff last week when he refused to turn over command of the 41st Armored Brigade to a colonel. Eventually, he turned it over to his immediate superior, who then turned it over to the colonel. Chávez, who under his tailor-made 1999 constitution has the power to make all military assignments and promotions, appears to have tried to appoint loyalists to the newly vacant slots. MID-LEVEL THREAT But loyalties are doubtful in today's divided Venezuelan military. Most of the senior officers that Chávez sent home after April 14 had been promoted to their ranks by the president himself since 1998, Carratú said. But the greatest danger of a coup, all analysts said, comes not from unemployed generals but from mid-level officers known as Comacates, a Spanish acronym for Lieutenant Colonels, Majors, Captains and Lieutenants. "A general sees the present. A colonel sees the day after tomorrow. But a lieutenant has to look down 30 years of career," Romero said. "And while generals command big units, Comacates command real troops and tanks." A clandestine Comacate communiqué circulated last week in Caracas branded Chávez a "traitor" for his friendship with Fidel Castro and vowed: "At the next failure of the government it will not be the generals going out. It will be we soldiers of the motherland." Chávez has dismissed that and other similar communiqués as fakes, but journalists who have talked to self-described Comacate leaders say they believe the declarations are the work of secret cells of officers opposed to Chávez. A Comacate coup is likely to be more violent than April 11 because, instead of generals persuading Chávez to resign, it would involve small units such as infantry battalions trying to push him out, and possibly battling pro-Chávez units, Ochoa said. Ironically, Chávez himself, while an army lieutenant colonel in 1992, led a failed coup attempt against President Carlos Andrés Pérez, in which no participant was above the rank of lieutenant colonel. He was jailed and later pardoned. "There's going to be another coup here," predicted Henry Ramos, president of the opposition Democratic Action party, not by generals but by "officers with command posts and troops." ================================================================= NY Transfer News Collective * A Service of Blythe Systems Since 1985 - Information for the Rest of Us 339 Lafayette St., New York, NY 10012 http://www.blythe.org e-mail: nyt@blythe.org ================================================================= nytsa-05.19.02-21:50:47-4341