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The Chavez Code
Cracking US Intervention in Venezuela
Eva Golinger

6” x 9” • 256 pages
ISBN 1566566479 • paperback • $17.95

"George Bush wants you to hate Venezuela's President Hugo Chavez -- he's a dictator, he's in love with Fidel Castro, he's a desperate demagogue who's destroyed Venezuela's economy. Eva Golinger's book is the antidote to this poisonous propaganda. And she's got the facts; a lawyer who has declassified the key US documents that show Venezuela as the victim of a subterranean cold war against the new progressive wave in Latin America. With the American public distracted by Iraq, the real target of Bush's wrath is in South America -- not surprisingly, the oil-rich nation that controls the swing vote in OPEC. Golinger reveals the hidden story of how millions of US taxpayer dollars went down the sink-hole to back opponents of the elected president, Chavez. Well written, with the solid evidence, this is the political survival guide to the land of the next oil war."
-- Greg Palast, author of the New York Times bestseller, The Best Democracy Money Can Buy


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Perhaps no world leader is better placed to challenge the global authority of the United States than Hugo Chavez, the populist leader of Venezuela. As the head of one of the world’s largest oil-producing countries, Chavez has been instrumental in raising world oil prices, undermining the control and profits of the multinational oil companies, and introducing innovative plans to use the wealth from this natural resource to help the impoverished—rather than the already powerful—in his own country and around the world. As the popularly elected president of one of South America’s largest democracies, his strong resistance to the Bush administration’s Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA) has severely set back, if not derailed entirely, the US’s long-held hemispheric agenda.

When in 2005 Bush ally and Christian fundamentalist Pat Robertson called for Chavez’s assassination (“It’s a whole lot cheaper than starting a war”), public outcry forced some questions: Was that, in fact, a CIA goal? Did the US have plans to invade Venezuela (as Chavez alluded to receiving intelligence about on Nightline in September 2005)? And exactly what was the extent of US knowledge of or involvement in the April 2002 coup against Chavez? (He was back in power within two days, after 250,000 took to the streets in Venezuela to protest.)

Venezuelan-American attorney Eva Golinger and journalist Jeremy Bigwood have used the US Freedom of Information Act to obtain government documents about US intervention in Venezuela. The Chavez Code contains this irrefutable evidence that, at the very least, the US knew about the plot to overthrow Chavez before it happened. The history of US interventions across Latin America, the suspicious blacked-out lines and pages, and the ongoing investigation suggest an even darker tale.


Eva Golinger was educated at Sarah Lawrence College and the City University of New York Law School. Her investigation into US involvement in the coup against Chavez has been covered by major media throughout the US and in Venezuela. She divides her time between New York and Caracas. The Chavez Code is her first book.


Media Reviews

“Venezuelan president Hugo Chávez has seized the anti-U.S. mantle much as Fidel Castro did in the 1950s. A former military man himself, he uses his country's oil as a diplomatic tool in his unrelenting attacks on U.S. interests generally and President Bush specifically. Focusing on the issue of U.S. involvement in the April 2002 coup aimed at ousting Chávez, this blatantly pro-Chávez polemic by a Venezuelan American lawyer is important reading if only because it presents an alternate view regarding America's attempts to influence regional politics and economics…Written in English but first published in translation in Cuba and Venezuela, this book…does encapsulate Chávez's position. As libraries owe their readers arguments on both sides of current issues, this book is recommended….”
-- Library Journal



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Of Related Interest:
Imperial Skirmishes
Altered States
Challenging Empire
A Taste of Latin America
Cuba in Focus