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http://www.zmag.org/znet/viewArticle/23797


The Challenges of 21st Century Socialism in Venezuela:

February 01, 2010

By William I. Robinson

William I. Robinson's ZSpace Page
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Interview with William I. Robinson,
Professor of Sociology, University of California at Santa Barbara
By Chronis Polychroniou
Editor, Greek daily newspaper Eleftherotypia

There are scare stories coming from Venezuela. The border is heating  
up, infiltration is taking place, a new Colombian military base near  
the border, US access to several new bases on Colombia and constant  
subversion. Is the regime concerned about a possible invasion? If yes,  
who is going to intervene?

The Venezuelan government is concerned about a possible US invasion  
and certainly an outright invasion cannot be ruled out. However I  
think the US is pursuing a more sophisticated strategy of intervention  
that we could call a war of attrition. We have seen this strategy in  
other countries, such as in Nicaragua in the 1980s, or even Chile  
under Allende. It is what in CIA lexicon is known as destabilization,  
and in the Pentagon's language is called political warfare - which  
does not mean there is not a military component. This is a  
counterrevolutionary strategy that combines military threats and  
hostilities with psychological operations, disinformation campaigns,  
black propaganda, economic sabotage, diplomatic pressures, the  
mobilization of political opposition forces inside the country,  
carrying out provocations and sparking violent confrontations in the  
cities, manipulation of disaffected sectors and the exploitation of  
legitimate grievances among the population. The strategy is deft at  
taking advantage of the revolution's own mistakes and limitations,  
such as corruption, clientalism, and opportunism, which we must  
acknowledge are serious problems in Venezuela. It is also deft at  
aggravating and manipulating material problems, such as shortages,  
price inflation, and so forth.

The goal is to destroy the revolution by making it unworkable, by  
exhausting the population's will to continue to struggle to forge a  
new society, and in this way to undermine the revolution's mass social  
base. According to the US strategy the revolution must be destroyed by  
having it collapse it in on itself, by undermining the remarkable  
hegemony that Chavismo and Bolivarianismo has been able to achieve  
within Venezuelan civil society over the past decade. US strategists  
hope to provoke Chavez into a crackdown that transforms the democratic  
socialist process into an authoritarian one. In the view of these  
strategists, Chavez will eventually be removed from power through any  
number of scenarios brought about by constant war of attribution -  
whether through elections, a military putsch from within, an uprising,  
mass defections from the revolutionary camp, or a combination of  
factors that can not be foretold.

In this context the military bases in Colombia provide a crucial  
platform for intelligence and reconnaissance operations against  
Venezuela and also for the infiltration of counterrevolutionary  
military, economic sabotage, and terrorist groups. These infiltrating  
groups are meant to harass, but more specifically, to provoke  
reactions from the revolutionary government and to synchronize armed  
provocation with the whole gamut of political, diplomatic,  
psychological, economic, and ideological aggressions that are part of  
the war of attrition.

Moreover, the mere threat of US military aggression that the bases  
represent in itself constitutes a powerful US psychological operation  
intended to heighten tensions inside Venezuela, force the government  
into extremist positions or into "crying wolf," and to embolden  
internal anti-Chavista and counterrevolutionary forces.

However, it is important to see that the military bases are part of  
the larger U.S. strategy towards all of Latin America. The US and the  
Right in Latin America have launched a counteroffensive to reverse the  
turn to the Left or the so-called "Pink Tide." Venezuela is the  
epicenter of an emergent counter-hegemonic bloc in Latin America. But  
Bolivia and Ecuador, and more generally, the region's burgeoning  
social movements and left political forces are as much targets of this  
counteroffensive as is Venezuela. The coup in Honduras has provided  
impetus to this counteroffensive and emboldened the Right and  
counterrevolutionary forces. Colombia has become the epicenter  
regional counterrevolution - really a bastion of 21st century fascism.


Chavez's "Bolivian revolution" has been very popular with the poor.  
Could you lay out how the Venezuelan society has changed since Chavez  
came to power?


First of all, let us acknowledge that the Bolivarian revolution has  
placed democratic socialism back on the worldwide agenda after we went  
through a period in the 1990s were most were scared to even talk of  
socialism, when it seemed that global capitalism had reached the apex  
of its hegemony and when some on the left even bought into the "end of  
history" thesis.

The Bolivarian revolution has given the poor and largely  
Afro-Caribbean masses their voice for the first time since the war of  
independence from Spanish colonialism. The Chavez government has  
reoriented priorities to the poor majority. It has been able to use  
oil revenues, in particular, to develop health, education, and other  
social programs that have had dramatic results in reducing poverty,  
virtually eliminating illiteracy, and improving the health of the  
population. International organizations and data collecting agencies  
have recognized these remarkable social achievements.

However, as someone who visits Venezuela regularly, I would say that  
the more fundamental change since Chavez came to power is not these  
social indicators but the political and socio-psychological awakening  
of the poor majority - a broad process of popular, grassroots  
mobilization, cultural expression, political participation and  
empowerment. The old elite and the bourgeoisie have been partially  
replaced from the state and from formal political power - although not  
entirely. But the real fear and resentment of the old dominant groups,  
the panic and their hatred for Chavez, is because they have felt slip  
from their grip the facile ability to exercise cultural and  
socio-psychological domination over the popular classes as they have  
for decades, nay centuries. Of course, there other still plenty of  
mechanisms through which the bourgeoisie and the political agents of  
the ancien regime are able to wield their influence, particularly  
through the mass media that is still largely in their hands...and this  
is why the "media battles" in Venezuela play such a prominent role.

That said, there are all kinds of problems and contradictions internal  
to the Bolivarian revolution.

How widespread are nationalization plans under Chavez and is there any  
evidence so far that they bring the desired results?

The obvious major economic change has been the recovery of the  
country's oil for a popular project - and even at that there is still  
a PDVSA bureaucratic oligarchy. Other key enterprises, such as steel,  
have been nationalized. And the cooperative sector - with all its  
problems - has spread. Nonetheless, let's be clear: economic power is  
still largely in the hands of the bourgeoisie.

Let us recall that the Venezuelan revolution is unique in that the old  
reactionary state was not "smashed" as it was in other revolutions.  
The strategy of the revolution has been to set up new parallel  
institutions and to also try to "colonize" the old state. But the  
Venezuelan state is still largely a capitalist state. The key question  
is how can a transformative project move forward while operating  
through a corrupt, clientalist, bureaucratic, and often inert state  
bequeathed by the ancient regime? If revolutionary and socialist  
forces come to power within a capitalist political process how do you  
confront the capitalist state and the brakes it places on  
transformative processes? In fact, in Venezuela, and also in Bolivia  
and elsewhere, prevailing state institutions often act to constrain,  
dilute, and coopt mass struggles from below.

In my view, in Venezuela the biggest threat from the revolution does  
not come from the right-wing political opposition but from the  
so-called "endogenous" or "Chavista" Right, and that chunks of the  
revolutionary bloc, including state elites and party officials, will  
develop a deeper stake in defending global capitalism over socialist  
transformation.


The revolution has been going on for over a decade now. Is it maturing  
or is it reaching a stage of decline and deformation?

I would not say, in answer to your question, that the revolution is in  
"decline" or "deformation". Rather, we need to be more expansive in  
our historical analysis and even theoretical reflection on what is  
going on at this historical juncture of 21st century global capitalism  
and its crisis. The turn to the left in Latin America started out as a  
rebellion against neo-liberalism. The post-neo-liberal regimes  
undertook mild redistributive reform and limited nationalizations,  
particularly of energy resources and public services that had  
previously been privatized. They were able to reactive accumulation.  
But post-neo-liberalism that does not now move towards a deeper  
socialist transformation runs up against limits.

The Bolivarian process faces contradictions, problems, and  
limitations, as do all historic projects! I would say that both the  
Venezuelan revolution and also the Bolivian and Ecuadoran processes,  
may be coming up against the limits of redistributive reform within  
the logic of global capitalism, especially given the crisis of global  
capitalism. Anti-neo-liberalism that does not challenge more  
fundamentally the very logic of capitalism runs up against limitations  
that may now have been reached.

It may be that the best or the only defense of the revolution is to  
radicalize and deepen the revolutionary process, to push forward  
structural transformations that go beyond redistribution. The fact is  
that the Venezuelan bourgeoisie may have been displaced in part from  
political power but it is still very much in economic control.  
Breaking that economic control implies a more significant change in  
property and class relations. This in turn means breaking the  
domination of capital, of global capital and its local agents.  
Naturally this is a Herculian task. There is no clear way forward and  
each step generates complex new contradictions and Gordian knots. Of  
course these are matters the whole Global Left must contemplate.

Let us recall the lessons of the Nicaraguan and other revolutions.  
Multiclass alliances generate contradictions once the honeymoon stage  
of easy redistributive reform and social programs reach their limit.  
Then multiclass alliances begin to collapse because there are  
fundamental contradictions between distinct class projects and  
interests. At that point a revolution must more clearly define its  
class project; not just in discourse or in politics but in actual  
structural transformation.

At a more technical level, we could say that the contradictions  
generated by trying to break the domination of global capital are not  
the fault of the revolution. Venezuela is still a capitalist country  
in which the law of value, of capital accumulation, is operative.  
Efforts to establish a contrary logic - a logic of social need and  
social distribution - run up against the law of value. But in a  
capitalist society violating the law of value throws everything into  
haywire, generating many problems and new disequilibria that the  
counterrevolution is able to take advantage of. This is the challenge  
for any socialist-oriented revolution within global capitalism.
From:   Z Net - The Spirit Of Resistance Lives
URL:    http://www.zmag.org/znet/viewArticle/23797

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-- 
Noah S. Zweig
n...@umail.ucsb.edu


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