April 10, 2005 17:27 |by Larry
Birns and Sarah Schaffer
The United States protests against Spanish arms sale to Venezuela
while they arm Latin America and the world. Larry Birns and Sarah
Schaffer look at one of the contradictions of their country's foreign
policy.
On March 29, Spanish President José Luis Rodríguez
Zapatero and Venezuela's President Hugo Chávez announced
that a $1.7 billion (€1.3 billion) sale of vessels and planes
is currently being negotiated. This deal, which will involve coast
guard boats, frigates and aircraft, had officials in Washington
muttering under their breath. For months, the US has been voicing
concerns over Chávez's successful efforts to acquire weapons
from various sources abroad. Zapatero's decision only has intensified
Washington's apprehension over Caracas' possible long-term intentions.
What particularly frustrates the Bush administration is that it
cannot designate any of the countries which are either already providing
or negotiating weapon deliveries to Venezuela as either terrorist
or "rogue" nations.
When Venezuela revealed plans to buy 100,000 AK-47 assault rifles
and 22 helicopters from Russia in February, the State Department
accused Caracas of embarking on a unilateral arms race, with Secretary
of State Condoleezza Rice insisting that Chávez's actions
threatened the stability of other Latin American nations. Yet she
failed to convincingly cite a single regional country which was
so menaced. However, both Venezuela and Spain insist that the transaction
at hand was not an arms sale at all, with officials maintaining
that the aircraft are strictly for transportation and not for combat,
and even the Spanish daily El País claimed that the frigates
would be unarmed.
While visiting Caracas during his 48-hour-trip to South America,
Zapatero defended his country's pending arrangement with Venezuela
and asked that the U.S. "respect the government of Spain and
Spain as a country." For his part, Chávez has attempted
to mitigate the tense situation with Washington by voicing a willingness
to survey cooperative alternatives with Colombia, Washington's principal
drug war ally in the region. Moreover, he went so far as to proclaim
that assisting in the fight against narco-trafficking and transnational
organized crime-pertaining mainly to Colombia-will account for a
major use for the materials being purchased.
Double Standard: Colombia, No-Venezuela, Sí
Yet Washington-always outspoken in its denouncements of Chávez
and his Bolivarian revolution as well as his confrontational attitude-remains
hostile to the sale, complaining that the weapons could end up in
criminal hands. Meanwhile, the Bush administration does not have
such concerns regarding Colombia, which has benefited from several
billion dollars worth of modern weapons free of charge from the
US arsenal. Perhaps it is because unlike Venezuela, Columbia is
not negotiating oil sales to China that could pose a threat to Washington's
supply chain, opposing the FTAA, nor helping to form a regional
oil cartel with other left-leaning South American countries.
By chance, in February 2004, Spain agreed to sell 46 refitted tanks
to Colombia for $6 million but that deal was later called off after
fears emerged that the sale could spark an arms race between Colombia
and neighbouring Venezuela. Colombia maintained that it wanted the
tanks for use in its fight against drug traffickers and guerrillas,
but critics felt that the 36-ton AMX-30 tanks were practical only
for external wars, and in fact could not function in most of the
country because of their size.
At the time, the Pentagon had nothing to say on the issue, which
suggests that the promotion of arms races is strictly a one-sided
matter. With an army of only 32,000, Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld
speculated during his Latin American tour last week what Venezuela
will do with 100,000 AK-47 automatic weapons-rifles that were first
designed in 1947 and came on the market more than a half-century
ago-or for that matter the 24 Super Tucano light attack aircraft
that it may purchase from Brazil. The answer is that Washington
does not demand clearance from Caracas when it comes to the billions
of dollars in weapons sales that the U.S. annually makes all over
the world.
There are arms races and then there are arms races
While Washington purportedly is distressed that Caracas may be
triggering a new arms race in the region, on March 25 the Bush administration
granted Pakistan permission to purchase U.S.-built F-16 war planes.
As the largest global vendor of arms, with contracts and sales totalling
$66 billion in 2002, according to a State Department official, Washington
obviously does not automatically occupy the moral high ground on
this issue and is ill-positioned to censure the Spanish sale of
unarmed aircraft and vessels to Venezuela. This is particularly
the case as the U.S. provides sophisticated weaponry, as we just
have seen in Pakistan, to scores of other nations around the world,
some of which are of far greater threat to their immediate neighbours
than Venezuela is to Colombia, a country with which it actually
has almost warm commercial ties. For FY2005, U.S. military aid to
Latin America will approach $860 million, only slightly less than
U.S. economic aid of $921 million to the region, according to a
study by the Center for International Policy and several other think-tanks.
The US is arming Latin America with one hand but reprimanding those
chosen for selective indignities for purchasing such weapons with
the other.
In addition to recent negotiations with Pakistan, in 2002 the US
finalised the $500 million sale of ten F-16 war planes to Chile,
a move that has troubled its neighbours and traditional rivals,
Peru and Argentina. Ironically, the chief Lockheed lobbyist for
the sale of F-16s to Chile was Otto Reich, who later became one
of Venezuela's most bitter, if not most controversial, critics.
After he joined the Bush administration as its assistant secretary
of state for inter-American affairs and later as a White House advisor,
Reich became privy to a planned 2002 coup to overthrow the Chávez
government and then enormously embarrassed the Bush administration
by being one of the first hemispheric governments to recognize the
coup regime for the 48 hours that it was in power.
If any country can be accused of igniting local arms races, surely
Washington is a prime candidate for such a distinction.
This analysis was prepared by Larry Birns, Director of the Washington,
DC-based Council on Hemispheric Affairs (COHA) and COHA Research
Associate Sarah Schaffer. Additional research was provided by COHA
Research Associate Tal Bendor and COHA Research Fellow David R.
Kolker. Founded in 1975, COHA is an independent, non-profit, non-partisan,
tax-exempt research and information organization. Find out more
at www.coha.org
See also: http://www.spectrezine.org/global/Venezuela2.htm
and
http://www.spectrezine.org/LatinAmerica/Dupret2.htm