Silence of Hugo Chávez Fuels Speculation and Rumors
There have been many articles on the medical condition of Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez. However, beyond reporting that he was hospitalized soon after his arrival in Cuba on June 8 (allegedly for surgical treatment of a pelvic abscess), is still there, and has been uncharacteristically uncommunicative, they have been based mostly on rumors and the speculation they produce. Miami, Florida, has a significant Venezuelan expat community and there have been lively discussions there about Chávez’s condition and what his death would mean. Although they have access to more information than most folks in Venezuela, they seem to be up in the air as well. Chávez may have died in Cuba on the morning of June 25. According to a tweet from WikiLeaks Argentina, “BREAKING NEWS! The president of Venezuela Hugo Chavez died in Cuba this morning. 06/25/2011 08:43AM.” The WikiLeaks report has been received with great skepticism, was discounted in a Business Insider article, and has not generally been picked up by the media, probably for good reasons. There was an article on June 27 (in Spanish) in Periodista Latino — apparently published in Spain principally for Latin American expats and said to be based on reports by an anonymous reporter in Havana — claiming that Chávez has been in a coma for five days due to septicemia and that he is in one of Fidel Castro’s houses under tight security lest there be leaks of information such as might happen were he in the hospital. It is said that European physicians and lots of medical equipment are there to care for him. True? It makes at least as much sense as other claims. The fact is that nobody in a position to make credible, factual, and substantive statements is willing or otherwise able to do so.
Perhaps the most enlightening official statement was reported in the Telegraph, via a reporter in Brazil, that
While other Venezuelan ministers have attempted to dampen speculation by insisting Mr Chavez is recovering well, comments by Nicholas Maduro, the foreign minister, on Friday suggested that the situation may be serious.
“The battle that President Chavez is waging for his health must be everyone’s battle: the battle for life, for the immediate future of our fatherland,” he said. (emphasis added)
Daniel Duquenal (a pseudonym), a highly perceptive Venezuelan blogger who posts in both English and Spanish, on June 23 provided his interpretation of what another respected Venezuelan blogger, Gustavo Coronel, had written in Spanish crediting rumors that Chávez has terminal prostate cancer. According to Daniel’s interpretation of what Gustavo Coronel had written, Chávez had been operated on in Venezuela and problems were found there requiring advanced body scans, not available in Venezuela unless he went to one of the very few private clinics capable of providing them. That would have been a politically unacceptable confession that Chávez’s socialist clinics are incapable of meeting important needs such as his. He flew to Brazil and Ecuador for show and developed a post-operative infection and then a fever while in Cuba, “a convenient excuse to justify Chavez stay while the real stuff was being done, namely the body scans.”
Since his arrival in Cuba, Chávez has had very few publicly disclosed contacts with Venezuela. His vice president, Elias Jaua, a non-charismatic guy lacking Chávez’s “charm” and popular appeal, has been dealing with day-to-day domestic affairs. Things went very badly for Venezuela when Chávez was there and in charge, and for his vice president to make improvements seems unlikely; in the unlikely event that he could he probably wouldn’t, because that could place him even closer to the center of a Chavista power struggle, a dangerous place to be. Nor, at least until Chávez is indisputably dead, might he want to be seen as upstaging him.
The conspiracy theories and absence of reliable sources of non-speculative information speak loudly about political and other conditions in Venezuela. It’s possible that Chávez could be dead for a month or more and the pretense that he remains alive and is recovering would persist. Even an official announcement of this death and the public display of a corpse (not necessarily his) could be viewed with skepticism and be seen as the prelude to his miraculous Lazarus-like restoration to life. There are many who would credit such an occurrence; Chávez is already considered by some to be the reincarnation of Simon Bolivar and his resurrection would not be a giant leap of faith. Education is very poor in Venezuela. Although the literacy rate is about ninety-three percent, that means little because “literacy” has different meanings and because reading with comprehension is by no means the same as reading without comprehension. As noted in the CIA Factbook entry on Venezuela, where the literacy rate is reported,
There are no universal definitions and standards of literacy. Unless otherwise specified, all rates are based on the most common definition — the ability to read and write at a specified age. Detailing the standards that individual countries use to assess the ability to read and write is beyond the scope of the Factbook.
A very well educated Venezuelan friend told me a decade ago that schools in Venezuela had long been designed to discourage critical thinking among the masses, making “literacy” meaningless for evaluating popular perceptions. It seems likely that critical reading and thinking are more discouraged now than then.
The most important questions now, if Chávez is dead or dies soon, are what will happen with Venezuela domestically and what strings its government will be able to pull internationally. Even under Chávez, its power had been in decline internationally and some countries — including even Cuba — have begun to adopt modestly more capitalist economic strategies as Venezuela has become increasingly Communist.
Will the Venezuelan opposition — very divided, with little leadership, charismatic or otherwise, and many in jail on apparently trumped up charges — manage to assume power, or will it fall to a Chavista? Chávez has done a great job of making sure that nobody, Chavista or not, would be in a position to succeed to his office or to his power. He has used both rewards and punishments to that end. That and his popular appeal have been the only specialties of governance at which he has succeeded. He knows about coups, tried one himself, and went to jail rather than into the Presidential Palace. When he eventually became the president, he was briefly ousted by a coup, from which he recovered.
Daniel’s June 23 post linked above as to the impact of the death of Chávez states,
Do I believe it? Not yet but it is awfully tempting. However let me make something perfectly clear: THIS WOULD BE POSSIBLY THE VERY WORST CASE SCENARIO FOR VENEZUELA.
With such an end for Chavez, he will become a hero of sorts, a mythical figure and chavismo will last for decades more. Exactly as it happened in Argentina when after his return Peron died just before things started getting worse and as such peronism could survive Isabelita, Lopez Rega, Videla, the Falklands, etc, etc… as it was, of course, not of Peron’s making. That Peron was at the source of all of this did not matter, he was not alive during these crisis. If Cristina is at it today it is becasue Peron died conveniently 4 decades ago.
To get a chance to be a renewed country Venezuela needs to oust Chavez in such a way that he can go to trial, alive and well to understand the charges, and collapse in nerves on the accused stand.
At any rate, there you have your conspiracy theory du jour, one that could lead us straight into a lot of conflict and economic crisis. NOT that Chavez is indispensable, he is not, but the way he and the Cubans have handled the situation they are, willingly or not, setting the stage for a lot of trouble that could have been avoided if from the start they woudl [sic] have fessed up and name Jaua interim president for, say, three months.
Perceptions may have changed a bit. In an article published on June 26 in TroyMedia, a Canadian paper, Daniel summarizes some of Venezuela’s problems and observes that Chávez is losing power:
The regime promises that Chavez will be back for the bicentennial of July 5th. As there is also a major summit in Margarita Island the following day, Chavez can no longer postpone his public return. If he does, he will need to account for his absence.
But neither option will do him any good at this point. The regime is imploding, which will result either in its demise or a new radicalization and internal purges as the only way to hold to power. As the French say we might be entering a fin de règne … or worse.






Chavez is a ruler with charismatic authority. Without him setting up a system( a successor ) with a clear direction, Vzla will become a chaotic situation with all the wanna be Chavez’ scrapping to the top.
The US would not be welcome. The new powers to be, would and have been shackled by the relationships made with Iran, Russia,Cuba, and China. All those have a leg up on the US.
The only possible positive is that the Vzla people are not prone to violence. So, a transition may not have much bloodshed of the citizens. However, the wanna be leaders may loose a little.
Not prone to violence? You don’t know the million or so “jacales” (jackals) that grew up in the landfills and horrific slums from the century of mismanagement and malfeasance of the ruling elites (the “families”) and their drunken scions?
Chavez, Latin America’s budding Pol Pot, has long militia-ized the jacales and is producting hundreds of thousands of AK47s for them.
These thugs are the “chavistas”, not the useful idiots from the autonomous university. Jacales are beyond violent. Not really ‘human’ in any sense which a western mind could think of the term. Dread the day they’re unleashed.
Exactly correct description of reality-in Venezuela(and other areas of Latin America andUS as well)-This is why I fear greatly for my relatives and friends
in Venezuela and AND why I cannot visit. Chavez has been trying to provoke
PROVOKE a bloodbath against the rich for years.
Thank you, Pelaut for stating what so few people know.It is very saddening
that people in US seem to care so little about this…
Pelaut, you are correct that Chavez has armed to the teeth the “jackals”, and yes dread the day they are unleashed. Chavez version of neighborhood watch.
However, I was stating that the Venezuelan people, “jackals” excluded, are not violent by nature.
An aside, many tell tale signs of Chavez techniques are rearing their ugly heads here in the US.
The civilized world should welcome the early demise of this fat bastard.
“What would a future with a diminished or dead Chávez mean for the rest of Latin America and for the United States?”
Well, for starters, it would mean Michael Moore might need to downgrade his fawning enthusiasm for the Cuban health-care system.
Well, if he was going TO Cuba (Cuba!) for the express purpose of receiving medical treatment … stick a fork in ‘em, he’s done. Just another success story from the island worker’s paradise.
d(^_^)b
http://libertyatstake.blogspot.com/
“Because the Only Good Progressive is a Failed Progressive”
Maybe if we just annexed Venuzuela, we’d save Obama the need to fight another war in our back yard? Besides the peacock bass fishing is great down there.
I smell sulfur…
Dan, as usual-good writing. You mentioned “Coban advisors” who actually have {too much} power over the Venezuelan military-and Venezuelans resenting that..
It is so surprising that Chavez has put so many Cubans in really powerful positions in Venezuela- and not a peep out of the Venezuelan people?>?
Yes, Chavez and his chavistas should be tried in court for so many crimes- but, the US seems to be looking the other way-again -case in point-the hearings now in Congress -re. placing Venezuela on the list of “state sponsor of terrorism”
-this has been repeatedly recommended to the US State Department-Obama Administration-seems to have a hearing-and reading problem-the facts have been
presented over and over. I am very disappointed with US citizens and Venezuelans living here in US- and with the surrender of will by Venezuelans
in Venezuela- doesn’t anyone care anymore about truth. Example-my friends and relatives in Venezuela-now- know nothing about the US Congress having hearings
about placing Venezuela on the list of “state sponsor of terrorism”…
According to this short excerpt from the Wall Street Journal this afternoon,
It’s great to be a confidence inspiring “left-leaning” national leader. El Presidente must be very proud of his great accomplishments for Venezuela.
Hugo Chavez Death Rumor: Another Bad Copy from the Castro tyrant handbook?
from Babalu. Babalu nails it:
“As Venezuela continues its sad spiral down into the abyss of Cubazuela, a Castro-style totalitarianism, one would expect this type of tactic by Chavez as he continues to emulate his mentor and ideological guide: Fidel Castro. This is the behavior of a totalitarian despot not a democratically elected leader.’
There are a number of reasons that both Castro and Chavez would float such rumors. First, it is an opportunity to see how both one’s political enemies and supposed friends react at a perceived moment of weakness. Afterwards purges, summary trials and maneuvering to make ones political opposition look foolish can consolidate the regime. Second, it shifts attention from other news that could be even more damaging than a fictitious death watch were the strong man miraculously recovers or claims never to have been deathly ill with the bonus of discrediting political enemies. Third, it creates enough disinformation when repeated numerous times then when the individual is indeed on deaths door the previous false flags will give news gatherers, adversaries and enemies pause before trying to report or capitalize on the situation.”
In other news, Generalíssimo Francisco Franco is still valiantly holding on in his fight to remains dead
Isn’t it time to send Jimmy Carter on a fact finding mission?
Jimmy is the one the gave Hugo’s first election his blessing. Jimmy has already done his job.
Whatever happens in Venezuela, I expect the Obama administration to muck up the US’s reaction to it.
The speculation continues. Chávez was shown yesterday in a brief video chatting with Fidel Castro. It was bit strange, because there was no audio with Chávez speaking; he is usually abnormally loquacious. It was noted in The Devil’s Excrement, a blog about Venezuela,
The comments following the article are interesting, some a bit off the wall and others suggesting reasonable explanations. I find it particularly interesting that Chávez’ track suit had only seven stars. As I noted here, the current Venezuelan symbolism features eight stars. “Many Venezuelans view the eight-star flag as representing Chávez rather than Venezuela, and don’t like it even a little bit.” Maybe no eight star Venezuela suit was available in Cuba. Or something.
“Determined to show that reports that Chávez was in grave condition were false, Izarra held up million-dollar contracts reportedly signed by the president, for things like tractor purchases”–People in Venezuela have been hypnotized by Chavez for too long- wake up. Take your country back- chase those scoundrels out. It can be done-if everyone wakes up!
As for now- there is no Venezuela. Reality is “Cubazuela”-until UNTIL everyone
wakes up.