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Friday, November 09, 2007
Oliver North :: Townhall.com Columnist
A Tale of Two Coups
by Oliver North
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WASHINGTON -- It's been a tough week for democracy and American diplomacy. In Pakistan, President Pervez Musharraf pulled a coup against himself, and U.S. diplomats apparently were stunned. In Venezuela, President Hugo Chavez pulled a coup against his countrymen, and U.S. diplomats once again, well were stunned. The difference in political attention and media coverage accorded these two affairs has been -- for lack of a better word -- stunning.

Print and broadcast coverage of events nearly half the world away in Pakistan has been ubiquitous since Musharraf declared a "state of emergency" and fired his self-appointed Supreme Court last Saturday. Photos and footage of protesting, out-of-work, Pakistani lawyers being dragged away in handcuffs by police in Islamabad have produced breathless coverage from correspondents who also freely reported that there is now no freedom of the press in Pakistan.

These images were apparently enough to give liberals in the U.S. Congress post-traumatic stress disorder, causing a number of members to muse about cutting off economic, military and intelligence assistance -- and of course, to blame George W. Bush. On Wednesday, while President Bush was giving French President Nicolas Sarkozy a guided tour of Mount Vernon, Deputy Secretary of State John Negroponte was on Capitol Hill begging the solons not to pull the plug on Pakistan and abandon an indispensable ally in the "war on terror."

Meanwhile, the potentates of the press and the powerful on the Potomac have all but ignored the coup in Caracas, just 1,400 miles south of Miami. Last week, Venezuela's rubber-stamp legislature approved 69 constitutional changes drafted by their party boss, Hugo Chavez. If affirmed by referendum on Dec. 2, the amendments would dramatically expand the powers of Venezuela's chief executive, permit the government to seize private property without court approval, virtually eliminate civil liberties and allow Chavez to serve -- like Kim Jong Il in North Korea -- as president for life. To make this deal attractive to the people, the Venezuelan workday officially would be shortened to six hours.

On Wednesday this week, while Presidents Bush and Sarkozy toured George Washington's gardens and Congress mulled the means of tightening the screws on Pakistan, more than 80,000 people took to the streets of Caracas to protest the Chavez coup. When students gathered on the campus of Central University and refused to disperse as ordered by police, the cops and National Guard troops pulled back allowing goons from Chavez's United Socialist Party, many wearing ski masks, to open fire on the student gathering.

Despite numerous accounts of the Caracas clashes in the Latin American and European media -- even the BBC -- there has been scant coverage in the U.S. media -- and almost no mention of Chavez's machinations by our diplomats. The protests in Pakistan, including pitiful pictures of jailed lawyers, have gotten almost as much ink and airtime in the U.S. as the Hollywood writers strike. President Bush even called Musharraf to tell him to take off his uniform and hold elections as promised. Yet official Washington has been practically mute in criticizing Chavez. Why the difference?

Part of the answer is, of course, that Pakistan has nuclear weapons and Venezuela doesn't -- yet. Interestingly, in his prepared remarks before the House Foreign Affairs Committee, Negroponte made only one elliptical mention of Islamabad's nukes -- and focused instead on the need to keep Pakistan with us in the fight against radical Islamic terrorism. Notably, while everyone was busy bashing Musharraf, he quietly was moving a full division of Pakistan's army from the border with India to the Federally Administered Tribal Areas along the Pakistani-Afghan frontier -- long a Taliban and al-Qaida stronghold.

For skeptics -- and I confess to being one when it comes to the press and politicians -- there may be other explanations for the disparity in how the two coups have been covered and commented upon.

First, Musharraf has been an ally of the United States in our war against radical Islam since 1981. America's allies are second only to the U.S. military as whipping boys for the American media. Conversely, Chavez has proclaimed himself to be America's enemy since he came to power in 1998. His promise of spreading a 21st-century Socialist Revolution resonates favorably with the U.S. left. Last May, when Chavez seized control of Venezuela's most popular radio and TV stations, it created barely a blip in the U.S. media.

Second, Venezuela is the fourth-leading supplier of crude oil and petroleum products to the United States. With oil soon to be at $125 per barrel or more, is it too cynical to ask whether the Chavez coup has been buried by our political and media elites because they are worried about finding fuel for their limos?

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About The Author

Oliver North is the founder and honorary chairman of Freedom Alliance and author of The Assassins .

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©Creators Syndicate
trughes
i did notice you ignored my statement about how flight 93 could have disappeared but that is ok i am just giving you a hard time about that one.

on the plus side you seemed to have recoved a little bit from the ealier name calling. You have used facts and logical resaoning. The problem that a lot of you truthers have is you will never be satisified untill the conclusion you came up with has been proven weither or not it actually happened even now you have dismissed sveral valid explinations because you want to believe a conseriousy (not spelled right grrr) occured.

one of the favorite lines i read in a book is that people will believe a lie either because they want it to be true or because they are afraid that it might be true. As far as i can tell the evidence indicates that 19 terrorists crashed 4 air planes on 9/11 2 hit each of the world trade towers, one hit the pentagon, and one crashed in a field in pennslyvannia (again not spelled right).

The problem i have with a vast goverment cover up is the sheer number of people that would have had to be in on this if it was a cover up. Seeing as our goverment has trouble with classified info leaking out all the time how the heck could they keep something as big as 9/11 a secert for as long as they have. And dont tell me money all you need to counter that is more money.

chr3354
I admire your persistance. The reason I doubt the official story is that it is like believing a man sprouted wings and flew to the moon and back. And what if that man comes back from the moon and tells us he brought a message from the man in the moon that says we have to give all his money to him? I tend not to believe such stories.

The U.S. Government has done exactly that. They say the buildings fell down and that proves that we have to give all our money and our children's money so we can go to war against the terrible new enemy: islamo-terrorism. But it's all a lie because buildings don't, never have, fallen down, because they were hit by airplanes or had a fire in them, and these buildings in particular were designed to resist that very thing. Buildings are brought down by explosives.

As far as some people surviving, many odd things can happen in explosions. People survived in buildings bombed in every war. It disproves no theory to say some people survived.

Of course people have privately investigated, physisists have analysed the available videos and the dust they collected. But the official investigation, with supoena power, that should happen after every single murder, not to mention mass murder, was prevented. The mission statement of the 9-11 Commission included the words: This is not an investigation, more or less.

The most complete report on the subject, carried out by a branch of the department of COMMERCE, National Institute for Standards and Technology, specifically said, it would not try to describe anything after the "initiation of collapse". They said everything that followed was "inevitable". That is exactly like saying they have explained the man's flight to the moon but stopped just after the "initiation of his flight".

That is not an investigation. And lying about a murder is a crime, because it can be seen as a cover-up, and therefore complicity.
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