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- <text id=92TT0339>
- <title>
- Feb. 17, 1992: Venezuela:No Time for Colonels
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Feb. 17, 1992 Vanishing Ozone
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 41
- VENEZUELA
- No Time for Colonels
- </hdr><body>
- <p>A coup fails when civilians prove unwilling to trade their
- government, however flawed, for a military dictatorship
- </p>
- <p>By Bruce W. Nelan--Reported by Laura Lopez/Caracas and J.F.O.
- McAllister/Washington
- </p>
- <p> In the darkness just before midnight, columns of tanks
- and troop carriers rumbled into the streets of four Venezuelan
- cities last week, intent on overthrowing the civilian
- government. Paratroops and armord units in Caracas, the capital,
- converged on a nearby air base, the Miraflores presidential
- palace and La Casona, the official residence of President Carlos
- Andres Perez.
- </p>
- <p> But the target of the coup had already left his house and
- slipped through a secret tunnel into the white, hilltop
- Miraflores palace in the center of the city. Miraflores offered
- him no security, however, for tanks lined the surrounding
- streets and the rebels opened fire with mortars and machine
- guns. Perez and an aide dashed back through the tunnel and drove
- to a private television station, where the President made
- several tapes denouncing the rebellion. As they were being
- broadcast to the nation, he telephoned his Defense Minister. "No
- negotiations," he ordered. "Give them lead."
- </p>
- <p> Perez was able to return to his office a few hours later.
- Most of the armed forces had remained loyal, and air force F-16
- jets strafed rebel positions, blocking their movements and
- disrupting their communications. The coup leader, Lieut. Colonel
- Hugo Chavez Frias, 37, dressed in combat gear and a red
- paratrooper's beret, turned himself in 12 hours after the
- shooting began, but warned that the military might find "another
- occasion." More than 1,200 rebel soldiers surrendered, including
- 136 officers. Officials said as many as 7,000 of the 73,000
- troops in the armed forces may have taken part in the uprising,
- in which 80 soldiers and civilians died.
- </p>
- <p> Coups fail more often than they succeed, and this one
- barely got rolling before it was halted. It was organized by a
- tightly knit group of middle-level officers--lieutenant
- colonels, majors and captains--and it gained no significant
- support from the generals or civilian power brokers. The big
- surprise was that it took place in Venezuela, where multiparty
- democracy has been the rule for more than 30 years. The last
- serious coup attempt was in 1962, and most observers thought the
- country had overcome the old habit of military intervention.
- </p>
- <p> President Perez thought so himself. "There will not be a
- coup here," he said when rumors of rebellion swirled last
- December. "It is an offense to Venezuelan society to mention
- such a thing." But danger warnings had been increasingly visible
- since Perez introduced an austerity program two years ago to
- bring the overheated economy under control.
- </p>
- <p> Living standards have been steadily declining since the
- oil-rich days of the 1970s, when government largesse fueled a
- decade-long boom. By February 1989, protests against reduced
- subsidies and higher prices had turned into rioting and looting
- that left 300 dead. Disconhas simmered ever since, with
- occasional regional strikes and violent student demonstrations.
- </p>
- <p> The oil-based economy took a leap forward during the gulf
- war, which boosted GNP 9.2% last year, the highest growth rate
- in Latin America. But the gap between rich and poor only
- widened: there is little trickle-down to the nearly 40% of the
- population living below the poverty line. The pinch is hurting
- the armed forces as well. Though they asked Congress in December
- for $216 million in health and housing benefits over the next
- four years, along with a 50% pay raise, the legislature has not
- responded.
- </p>
- <p> The plotters apparently believed that popular discontent
- was sufficient to swing the citizenry to their side. Over the
- years, the officers had made little secret of their intentions
- or their motives, though no one paid much attention. Calling
- themselves the Bolivarian Military Movement, they pledged
- allegiance to the country's liberator, Simon Bolivar, and
- accused the government of being a corrupt "oligarchy" out of
- touch with the people.
- </p>
- <p> For the coup makers, the shock was that their move
- generated so little support. The military high command stood
- with the government; and the Venezuelan people showed that
- despite their unhappiness with the economy, they were not ready
- to give up on democracy. Still, some Venezuelans were concerned
- that the people did not turn out to demonstrate their support
- for the government or at least their rejection of military
- coups. In a straw poll taken after the coup, the opposition
- paper El Nacional found that most citizens rejected the idea of
- a dictatorship--but thought the country's democratic system
- has lost some of its fundamental values. "What worries me most,"
- says former President Rafael Caldera, who is now a Senator, "is
- that I don't find the same fervor for the defense of democratic
- institutions among the people."
- </p>
- <p> Those who know Perez well say he will continue with his
- austerity program to show he is not intimidated. He might
- encourage Congress to raise army pay, but to counter fears that
- the coup attempt left him entirely too beholden to loyalist
- officers, he will not concede the military a role in politics.
- If the threat of a coup has ended, Perez's real test will
- probably come in next year's presidential elections. After
- showing their passive commitment to democracy, Venezuelans will
- be entitled to register their active discontent with their
- government at the ballot box.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
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