Christopher Toothaker, Associated Press, Caracas, Venezuela | Thu, 02/23/2012 6:29 AM
A shadow is cast on a wall covered by a mural of Venezuela's President Hugo Chavez in military uniform on a street in Caracas, Venezuela, on Wednesday. Chavez told Venezuelans on Tuesday that doctors in Cuba had over the weekend found a lesion in the same place where they removed a cancerous tumor last year. (AP/Ariana Cubillos)
President Hugo Chavez has never been one to share decision-making
authority. Now, the voluble socialist strongman and acerbic critic of the U.S.
may have no choice but to designate a successor.
His announcement that he will go to Cuba within a week to remove a
growth that he says is likely malignant could not come at a worse moment for
the leader who is working to transform Venezuela with what he calls "21st
century socialism."
With a tight re-election campaign brewing for the president, analysts
said Wednesday that Venezuela could be thrown into turmoil because Chavez has
resisted grooming a successor during his 13 years in power.
The result is a power vacuum that his camp will be hard-pressed to
fill, especially if he is unable to campaign for the Oct. 7 elections or wins
and then becomes physically incapable of governing.
"Venezuela is living with the unsettling effects of prolonged,
one-man rule," said Michael Shifter, president of the Washington-based
Inter-American Dialogue think tank. "Anything can happen."
Shifter said "a fierce power struggle and jockeying for
position" is nearly inevitable for Chavez's ruling Socialist Party of
Venezuela.
"I promise I will fight without respite for my life," the
57-year-old Chavez tweeted Wednesday.
A day earlier, he conceded in sharing his bad news that he could be
out of action for weeks. Under the circumstances, it would be Herculean to be
able to simultaneously run a government, fight to stay in office and battle
cancer.
"I'm not going to be able to continue with the same rhythm,"
he told state TV by telephone late Tuesday. He said he would need to
"rethink my personal agenda and take care of myself, confront what must be
confronted."
Chavez did not mention who might replace him during an absence that
cancer specialists say could last weeks if the leader has to undergo radiation
treatment, as he himself said he expected. Chavez said the same doctors who
removed a baseball-size cancerous tumor from his pelvic region in June would be
operating on him.
He denied rumors the cancer had spread aggressively, but also said his
doctors don't know if the new two-centimeter (one-inch) lesion they found over
the weekend is malignant.
The former paratrooper met Wednesday with his inner circle, with a
central topic bound to be how to combat the opposition's presidential candidate
- Henrique Capriles, an athletic 39-year-old state governor.
The president of the Chavez-controlled National Assembly, Diosdado
Cabello, told reporters that Chavez remained the ruling party's candidate.
"There is a false belief that associates cancer with death,"
he said. "That's not how it is, because you can overcome it with love, and
the president has a bounty of that."
Chavez is expected to travel to Cuba on Friday or Saturday, Cabello said.
Javier Corrales, a political science professor at Amherst College in
the United States, said Chavez is now, finally, heeding medical advice after
insisting on maintaining a physically demanding schedule of travel and marathon
speeches.
But is he also listening to political advice about naming a successor?
"The key question is whether he is beginning to pay attention to
advice from all those forces, ranging from family members to political
operators, telling him to come forward with a succession plan," Corrales
said.
There are no obvious choices, since Chavez has constantly demoted
anyone who could outshine him, Corrales added.
During his periods of convalescence last year, Chavez delegated some
administrative duties to Vice President Elias Jaua and to his planning and
finance minister, Jorge Giordani.
But Jaua apparently has lost favor since then, along with another
longtime member of Chavez's inner circle, Foreign Minister Nicolas Maduro. Both
still hold their posts, but Chavez recently demoted them by choosing them as
his party's candidates in gubernatorial elections next year.
One possible stand-for the president is his older brother, Adan, who
is governor in Chavez' home state of Barinas. He appeared at Chavez's side
Tuesday.
The military, from which Chavez sprung, also could provide someone to
fill in for the president.
"It could very well be that this is going to be a
military-brokered succession, not unlike Egypt," said Corrales. "At
the first sign of chaos we could see the military indirectly or even explicitly
playing a big role."
One powerful close confidant of Chavez likely to play a leading role
is Gen. Henry Rangel Silva, a former intelligence chief named as defense
minister last month by the president.
The United States, which has not had an ambassador n Venezuela since
2010, takes a dim view of Rangel Silva. He is one of four members of Chavez's
inner circle who Washington put on its Foreign Narcotics Kingpins list in 2008,
accusing them of helping drug gangs and supplying leftist Colombian rebels with
arms.
Still, even many fervent supporters of Chavez, whose political
backbone is Venezuela's poor majority, have doubts that he would choose a
successor, even if his health significantly deteriorated.
"My 'comandante' isn't going to delegate, even if he were in a
wheelchair," Maria Teresa Diaz, 65, said of Chavez.
Physicians consulted by The Associated Press said it was impossible to
offer an assessment of Chavez's health based on the limited information
provided Tuesday by the leader, who had four rounds chemotherapy from July to
September.
But some said finding a malignant tumor in the same place one was
removed less than a year ago was not a good sign.
"A relapse within a year means the tumor is very
aggressive," said Dr. Sebastian Quintero, a leading Colombian oncologist.