By Emma Roller
WikiLeaks released a State Department cable from 2006 detailing
the efforts of former president George W. Bush's administration to aid
opposition to Venezuela's now-deceased president Hugo Chávez.
According to the WikiLeaks website, the cable was originally
published in 2011, but The Hill reported the cable was leaked Friday afternoon. From The
Hill's report:
The cable, signed by then-Ambassador William Brownfield,
outlines a five-point strategy that includes “penetrating Chavez's political
base,” “dividing Chavismo,” “protecting vital U.S. business” and “isolating
Chavez internationally.” Those goals are to be obtained by strengthening
“democratic institutions,” according to the cable.
The cable goes on to address a wide range of social projects
in Venezuela led by the USAID Office of Transition Initiatives (OTI), from
training women to lobby city government for better working conditions to
improving local garbage collection.
The 2006 cable ends with this prediction about its efforts
to unseat the socialist leader: "Should Chavez win the December 3rd
presidential elections, OTI expects the atmosphere for our work in Venezuela to
become more complicated."
Venezuela will hold elections on April 14 to elect a new
president. Acting President Nicolás Maduro, who was vice president under
Chávez, is expected to win handily.
You can read Slate's obituary about
Chávez, who died on March 5 after battling cancer, or read what
the late Christopher Hitchens learned about Chávez's mental health
when he visited Venezuela with the actor Sean Penn in 2010.
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