Los Angeles Times

U.s.-venezuela ties may now thaw

Chavez’s immediate successors appear a lot less hungry for regional leadership.

- By Paul Richter and Chris Kraul paul.richter@latimes.com Times staff writer Richter reported from Washington and special correspond­ent Kraul from Caracas.

WASHINGTON — Even though the U.S. Embassy’s military attache was expelled from Venezuela shortly before the death of President Hugo Chavez was announced Tuesday, the country could still be headed for a change that would have infuriated the fiery populist: better relations with the United States.

For 14 years, Chavez sought to build a role as a regional leader by flamboyant­ly defying what he called the “Yankee empire.” He cultivated ties with Iran, a leading U.S. adversary, and assembled a bloc of leftleanin­g Latin American countries to challenge Washington’s political and economic dominance in the Western Hemisphere.

Though Chavez’s immediate successors probably won’t jettison his socialist domestic policy, those in position to take over don’t appear to have the same hunger for regional leadership or the skill to take on such a role, say current and former U.S. officials and other analysts. That could make the relationsh­ip with Washington less rancorous, if not exactly warm.

“Chavez had a map in his mind of how he wanted to pursue his revolution­ary project around the world,” said Stephen Johnson, a top Pentagon policymake­r on Latin America during the George W. Bush administra­tion. “It’s hard to imagine that his successor is going to have the same determinat­ion or self-confidence in those areas.”

On Tuesday, the first indication of the future was not particular­ly comforting. Nicolas Maduro, Chavez’s vice president and designated heir, announced on TV that U.S. military attache David Delmonaco must leave Venezuela within 24 hours for “proposing destabiliz­ing plans” to members of its armed forces. Maduro also implied that the U.S. was at fault for Chavez’s illness and said he would set up a scientific commission to investigat­e. Later, a U.S. Air Force assistant attache was also expelled.

But over time, analysts say, Maduro’s track record has not reflected the same fiery nature as that of Chavez.

Though Maduro, as foreign minister, worked to separate Venezuela further from the United States, building stronger ties with Cuba, Russia and China, he doesn’t have Chavez’s forceful personalit­y, analysts say.

He echoes Chavez’s hardline views about U.S. inf luence worldwide as well as other key points of Venezuela’s foreign policy, but U.S. officials see him as a deal maker rather than an antagonist, and some have even praised his affability. Apparently with Chavez’s blessing, Maduro recently showed signs of wanting to explore what might be gained by better relations with the U.S.: In November, he began talks with Roberta Jacobson, assistant secretary of State for Latin America.

That contact, which has continued between lowerlevel officials, reinforces analysts’ view that Chavez’s battle with cancer left Maduro and others in the elite trying to assess whether they would be better off neutralizi­ng what they perceive as a threat from the U.S.

“Chavez was the revolution, and without him they’re probably feeling pretty vulnerable,” said a diplomat from the region who asked to remain unidentifi­ed because of the sensitivit­y of the issue. “Their main concern is going to be, how do we hang on to power?”

Diosdado Cabello, president of the Venezuelan National Assembly and a contender for the presidency, has shown little sign that he aspires to an internatio­nal role as Chavez did. There is also a chance — probably small — that the post-Cha- vez jockeying could lead to the ascent of the opposition leader Henrique Capriles, a regional governor who is considered a moderate and might try to improve ties with Washington.

The next leader’s chief preoccupat­ion will be the economy, which is straining under huge debt, surging inflation, food shortages and a collapse of the oil industry, the country’s most important revenue source.

A de-emphasis of the regime’s internatio­nal agenda would be a setback for the Bolivarian Alliance for the Peoples of Our America, known by its Spanish acronym, ALBA, a bloc of eight left-leaning Latin American and Caribbean countries that Chavez sought to lead as an alternativ­e to trade efforts led by the United States, and which he helped prop up with billions of petrodolla­rs. In addition to Venezuela, the members are Antigua and Barbuda, Bolivia, Cuba, Dominica, Ecuador, Nicaragua and St. Vincent and the Grenadines.

U.S. officials acknowledg­e that relations with Venezuela are at a low point, es- pecially since each country rejected the other’s ambassador in 2010.

Chavez and President Obama famously were photograph­ed shaking hands and smiling broadly in Trinidad and Tobago in 2009 at the Summit of the Americas, a gathering of 34 democratic­ally elected leaders in the hemisphere.

“We have for some time made it clear that we were willing and open to trying to improve our ties with Venezuela,” State Department spokeswoma­n Victoria Nuland said in January.

The U.S. is most eager for cooperatio­n with Venezuela on three issues: the fight against drug traffickin­g, an end to Venezuela’s ties to Iran and Islamic militant groups, and the release of billions of dollars in assets seized from U.S. corporatio­ns such as Exxon Mobil and Hilton Hotels.

Venezuela has become a major drug hub since Chavez took power, and is considered by analysts to be the source of as much as a quarter of the cocaine reaching the United States.

And though Venezuela has recently cooperated some on drug-related issues — such as the extraditio­n to Colombia of several drug kingpins — significan­t cooperatio­n is unlikely. Some high-level Venezuelan officials are suspected of making millions on the trade.

The U.S. Treasury Department has blackliste­d seven current and former Venezuelan officials, including former Defense Minister Henry Rangel Silva, for suspected ties to drug-dealing Colombian insurgents. The allegation­s arose in 2008 after Colombian authoritie­s found a computer hard drive used by a guerrilla leader.

Some senior Venezuelan officials are concerned that drug corruption is weakening the government. “People in very important positions in government are getting rich, so if change comes, it’s probably going to be very, very gradual,” said Michael Shifter, president of the Inter-American Dialogue think tank in Washington.

A new administra­tion might welcome the opportunit­y to put some distance between itself and the authoritar­ianism of Chavez’s rule. But any new leader would resist ceding much power, analysts said.

U.S. officials have made it clear they’re not about to take any action, such as returning the U.S. ambassador, unless Venezuela also makes concession­s.

“It’s going to take two to tango,” Nuland said. “It’s going to take action on the Venezuelan side.”

It may be difficult for the Obama administra­tion to move toward better relations with Venezuela without a major step from Caracas, partly because it would open the administra­tion to attacks from congressio­nal Republican­s. They consider the White House too soft on the regime.

An important wild card in future U.S.-Venezuela relations is whether the new leaders will continue Chavez’s strong political and economic ties with Cuba, which shares Caracas’ antiAmeric­an stance. Cuba receives 60% of its energy in the form of heavily subsidized Venezuelan oil.

Maduro described the ties between the two countries in January as “the most profound brotherhoo­d.”

Yet whoever takes over may decide that with Venezuela’s oil industry collapsing and its economy in a downward spiral, it’s simply too expensive to continue offering cheap oil to Havana, rather than selling it on the open market.

“Without Chavez,” Shifter said, “the Cubans may find it very hard to keep that going.”

 ?? Ariana Cubillos
Associated Press ?? CHAVEZ SUPPORTERS after learning that he had died. Venezuela’s new leaders probably won’t abandon socialism, but they’re expected to be less polarizing.
Ariana Cubillos Associated Press CHAVEZ SUPPORTERS after learning that he had died. Venezuela’s new leaders probably won’t abandon socialism, but they’re expected to be less polarizing.

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