<http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/0393C044-9D53-43FB-9B2F-3F15DF88AF91.htm>
Winning Arab hearts and minds
by Dima Khatib, Latin America Correspondent
Friday 18 August 2006 8:18 AM GMT

Chavez of Arabia? [courtesy: the presidential office]
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Billions of dollars spent, tens of thousands of lives lost, hundreds
of hours of televised speeches and press conferences, extensive
diplomatic efforts, political and military plans, years in Iraq, and
much more.

None of this helped the US to achieve its president's announced goal
of "winning the hearts and minds of the Arab people". Instead, George
Bush seems to have lost the hearts and minds of many who had been
supportive of US plans for the Middle East.

Someone else in the Americas seems to have the secret formula for
achieving that goal; much more quickly and cheaply.

Hugo Chavez, the Venezuelan president, found himself at the centre of
Middle Eastern politics when he announced that he was withdrawing his
most senior diplomat from Israel, the Venezuelan charge d'affaires in
Tel Aviv. Not for something Israel did to his country, but for what it
does to Palestinians and Lebanese thousands of miles away.

The action was preceded by Chavez's repeated condemnation of what he
describes as Israel's "aggression" against Lebanese land and its
"genocide" against the Lebanese people. He was the first head of state
to say such harsh words towards Israel after violence broke out on the
Israeli Lebanese border last month, even before that of any Arab or
Muslim country.

"I don't want to be an Arab. From now on I shall be Venezuelan"

Today on many Arabic internet sites one can read comments such as: "I
am Palestinian but my president is Chavez, not Abu Mazen." Or: "I
don't want to be an Arab. From now on I shall be Venezuelan."

In Gaza and Ramallah in the Palestinian Territories I am told that
next to Arafat's and Che Guevara's posters, a new poster of Chavez is
being added.

On world television channels one could even see Venezuelan flags in
demonstrations in Beirut, next to Lebanese and Palestinian flags, and
in many prominent newspapers across the Arab World, columnists
wondered: why can't Arab leaders do what a Latin American non-Arab
non-Muslim leader dared do?

Naturally, some anti-Chavez Venezuelans would rush to warn their
president's Arab fans of what they say is the real Chavez: an
authoritarian who is ruining their country.

But that would still not change much for his Middle Eastern
supporters. When one internet user wrote saying that Chavez was a
"dictator like Fidel Castro", the replies flooded the website one
after the other defending Chavez and insulting the person who had
criticised him.

Chavez's opponents see his position as a mere political manoeuvre to
support his ally, Iran, and to attack his traditional enemy: the US,
or the "empire" as he calls it. They also think that he wants to
increase his popularity worldwide.

That could be true. But what is undoubtedly true is that Chavez's
affinity with Arabs is nothing new. He often mentions them in his
speeches and tells stories of his adventures with Arab leaders in
their faraway lands. He admires the desert. He says he is a Nasserite
(referring to the late nationalist president of Egypt, Gamal Abdul
Nasser). He mentions Iraq more than Arab leaders do and never misses
an opportunity to "salute the Iraqi resistance against imperialist
forces".

This solidarity with Arab causes is widely shared by most Venezuelans,
and also by most Latin Americans, especially the poor. Many marched in
the streets of Caracas and other cities in Venezuela - as well as in
Brazil, Argentina, Uruguay, Colombia and elsewhere - to show
solidarity with the Lebanese and Palestinians in their plight.

Israel reacted slowly and rather indifferently to Chavez's decision to
withdraw his diplomat, as though it was of little importance. Only
after several days did it call its ambassador to Caracas for
consultation.

Then Chavez went further, to say that he was probably going to break
diplomatic relations altogether with Israel, a state with which he is
not interested in sharing any business, offices or anything else.

The state of  relations between the two countries at the moment is
unclear. Nobody knows how long the Venezuelan charge d'affaires will
stay away from Tel Aviv. Nor does anyone really know whether or when
the Israeli ambassador is due back in Venezuela. The Israeli embassy
still operates normally in Caracas.

But none of those details matters any more. What has been said and
done will not be forgotten by any of the parties involved.

Accusations

Jewish people in Venezuela say they have received threats and feel
uneasy about the whole thing. Security was tightened around all Jewish
facilities in Caracas and nobody there was willing to give a comment
to Al Jazeera. Some prominent Jewish figures spoke on local media and
accused Chavez of being an anti-Semite.

At the same time, Chavez may well be accused of harbouring Hezbollah
units. Last week there was talk on Western and Israeli media about
such units abroad.

Whatever the consequence of Chavez's uncompromising position with
Israel, it is evident that it embarrassed Arab leaders, as none of
them cut or even downgraded ties with Israel despite all the massacres
its army has committed in Lebanon and Palestine.

Those leaders whom he always praised and considered as his "brothers"
might not like him as much as they did when he summoned them in
Caracas in 2000 to put the oil prices up within Opec.

They surely do not like his closeness to Iran, which is seen by many
as trying to spread its influence over the Middle East. And they
probably feel that his continuous, provocative anti-Bush statements
are too compromising.

Chavez probably realises all of that. For years he strove to forge
alliances with Arab governments and share projects to break the
current world economic order in which, as he sees it, third-world
countries are all tied to the big powers and not to each other.

But he has seemingly given up on his Arab counterparts, or most of
them at least, now that he has come to realise that they are not
anti-imperialist - not even anti-Israeli - and that some strongly
dislike his ally, Iran.

He and the whole world saw how close and obedient Arab leaders are to
the US and how far and detached from their people they have grown. If
what happened in Iraq, Palestine and Lebanon is not enough to make
them speak out and stand up to defend Arab dignity, then nothing will.

That is where Chavez's talent to communicate with the man on the
street comes in to fill the gap and make him more popular than Arab
leaders in their own countries.

One internet user writes: "I wish there were elections to elect the
leader of the Arab Umma [Islamic Nation] and I am sure 100 per cent
that Chavez will win the elections although he is Venezuelan."

Legendary

It will be interesting to see what course official Venezuelan-Arab
relations will take.

The sure thing is that in the mind of millions of Arabs, Chavez is now
in the same league as Hassan Nasrallah, the leader of Hezbollah, and
other "heroic" Arab figures.

At a time when nationalism in the Arab world is linked to Islamic
movements such as Hamas in Palestine and Hezbollah in Lebanon, both
branded as terrorist movements by Washington, Chavez represents a very
different trend.

He does not belong to or lead a religious movement; he is not - yet -
classified by Washington as terrorist; he is, unlike Arab leaders, a
democratically elected president and an anti-imperialist socialist who
has no equal at the moment in the Arab world.

No wonder some Arab internet users call for cloning him to make sure
they get a copy to replace their own leader.

Would there be a "Chavez of Arabia" just like the legendary "Lawrence
of Arabia", the Englishman who won the trust and sympathy of Arabs in
the desert when they were under English mandate?

History will decide. But for now, to many Arabs online he is "an
honourable man in a world of few men" that many declare they are
"ready to die for".

Aljazeera
By Dima Khatib, Latin America Correspondent

You can find this article at:
http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/0393C044-9D53-43FB-9B2F-3F15DF88AF91.htm
--
Yoshie
<http://montages.blogspot.com/>
<http://mrzine.org>
<http://monthlyreview.org/>

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