So begins another death watch. Whenever it happens, it will be soon if not
very soon. The body can handle only so
much and none of this is realistically a cure.
Chavez is a consummate populist who
kept the electorate onside with grandstanding and targeted vote buying and policies
that came right out of the old leftist playbook with the usual results.
Unbalanced political systems do
throw up these types. Unfortunately South America is famous for gamed political structures
and the inevitable will happen.
Perhaps the example of Lulu will
shake this out in the surrounding states.
Success sometimes does that sooner or later.
Hugo Chavez: Sick in Mind and Body
In a Havana
cancer ward, as Hugo Chávez contemplates his final days, the truth about his
medical condition — mental and physical — is coming out.
His face grotesquely bloated, Hugo Chávez has been fighting the biggest
battle of his life: cancer. But the prognosis for Venezuela ’s increasingly reclusive
president remains a highly guarded state secret. Besides distorting his
features, the chemotherapy he’s receiving has rendered him bald.
Several unconfirmed reports – all from anonymous sources — have claimed
in recent months that Chávez’s cancer is very bad. Yet during his increasingly
irregular and brief public appearances, the leftist 57-year-old leader has
remained upbeat — seemingly defying the worst-case scenarios put forth about
his health.
Now, Chávez’s former Venezuelan physician has dropped a bombshell:
Chávez’s cancer is terminal and he has “no more than two years left.”
“President Chávez has a tumor in the pelvis called sarcoma,” said Dr.
Salvador Navarrete, during a lengthy interview published Sunday in Mexican
newspaperMilenio Semanal. He
added: “The information I have from the family is that he has a sarcoma, an
aggressive tumor with a poor prognosis and I’m pretty sure that’s the reality.”
Navarrete’s revelations offer the most intriguing information yet about
Chávez’s health — and perhaps the most credible. So why is the prominent
Venezuelan surgeon breaking a hallowed oath of doctor-patient
confidentiality? It’s a question many Venezuelans are asking.
“Traitor or Good Citizen?” That was the title of an article published
Monday atanalitica.com by
Gustavo Coronel — a Chávez opponent and former top Venezuelan executive in the
South American country’s state oil company. Coronel’s conclusion regarding
Navarrete’s “complex ethical situation”: He’s a good citizen, because knowing
the truth about Chávez is vital to Venezuela ’s future political
health.
Interestingly, Navarrete described himself as a former Chávez
supporter, the only “ideological” member of a Venezuelan team of physicians who
started treating Chávez in 2002. Months ago, however, Chávez dismissed his
circle of Venezuelan physicians, having grown increasingly suspicious of
everybody around him, he said. “In Venezuela , President Chávez does
not trust anyone, only Cubans,” he added. Navarrete, for his part, said he’s
finished with militant leftist politics.
Citing information provided by Chávez’s family – but not naming
specific family members – Navarrete said Chávez’s cancer is being treated
with “aggressive chemotherapy.”
Asked if Chavez had prostrate cancer, he replied: “It’s not a
tumor of the prostate. It is a tumor that is very close to the prostate and
probably invading the bladder. Or it’s a tumor that originates in the bladder
that is invading the pelvis. In any case, it’s a tumor that originates in the
bottom of the pelvis, which is considered the anatomical region that is within
the hips.”
Chavez is Bipolar
In revealing information he’d obtained from Chávez’s family members,
Navarrete may not have been violating patient-physician confidentiality,
Coronel noted. That surely wasn’t the case, on the other hand, in respect to
intriguing details Navarrete revealed about Chávez’s precarious mental health
in early 2002 — a period of seething political turmoil in Venezuela that was
taking an emotional toll on Chávez.
Chávez at the time was “very distressed,” Navarrete said, and “under
intense pressure and physical exhaustion.” Accordingly, a team of psychiatrists
began treating him.
Chávez had reason to be anxious, for his grip on power was becoming
increasingly tenuous. At the time, tens of thousands of anti-Chávez protesters
– on the eve of a March coup against him — marched regularly in the streets,
demonstrating against Chávez’s autocratic style and leftist agenda.
Yet it wasn’t political turmoil alone that was provoking stress-related
problems in Chávez. It was much more serious: Chávez is a “manic-depressive,”
Navarrete said. He explained that Chávez’s “unstable mental states turn from
euphoria to sadness — states in which the personality becomes dissociated and
has episodes of loosing contact with reality. It is a very common disease in
today’s world, described as bipolar disorder.
President Chávez oscillates
between these poles, more prone to euphoria, to hyperactivity and mania.”
Interestingly, Navarrete noted that Chávez’s psychiatric team was led
by Dr.
Edmundo Chirinos, now serving a 20-year prison
sentence for murdering a patient in 2008.
Over the years, Chávez has been described as a narcissist by many, an
observation reflecting his desire to be the center of attention. When he was in
good health, he regularly gave rambling speeches on the radio and TV that went
on for three or more hours. But the diagnosis of bipolar disorder gives
physiological underpinnings to Chávez’s high-energy and rambling monologues and
governance.
Regarding Chávez’s personal habits, Navarrete said Chávez pays a great
deal of attention to his personal appearance, keeping himself “very, very clean,”
and this includes careful “nail care for his hands and feet.” He noted: “He
thought he was not going to get sick — ever.”
As for health-related vices, Navarrete said Chávez “drinks too much
coffee, a lot, consuming countless cups of coffee a day.” He also smokes “under
stress or pleasure, in private, never in public.”
He added: “He works late into the night every day, is a night owl, and
makes his ministers work at the same rhythm. He rises at six-thirty or seven
o’clock, sleeping an average of three or four hours a day, no more than
that, and sleeps very little. He’s a strong man, although he’s now deformed by
the effects of chemotherapy.”
A recent article in El Nuevo Herald (sister publication of The
Miami Herald)
described Chávez as being in grave condition when he was recently rushed to a
military hospital. But Navarrete said Chávez underwent kidney dialysis
treatment due to complications associated with his chemotherapy and its
negative effect on his kidneys. The kidneys cleanse the body of toxins.
Navarrete’s remarks about Chávez’s prognosis echo those of Roger F.
Noriega, assistant secretary of state under George W. Bush and a former
ambassador to the Organization of the American States. In a column last
July in The Miami Herald, he wrote: “Doctors treating Venezuelan
leader Hugo Chávez for cancer told him weeks ago that he has only a 50 percent
chance of living another 18 months, according to sources close to his medical
team in Cuba.”
Venezuela’s Future
It was a little over two-and-a-half months ago that Chávez, during a
national television address, told stunned Venezuelans that he’d undergone two
surgeries in Cuba to remove a pelvic abscess and cancerous tumor. Speculation
has been rife since then about what a post-Chávez Venezuela will look like. Last
month,early
elections for next year were called for October as opposed to
December.
To date, however, Chávez has no credible successor. But he does have
his fanatic supporters, Chavistas, along with plenty of help from Cuba . Large
numbers of Cuban intelligence
agents now operate in Venezuela
in support of Chávez’s regime.
Venezuela has provided Cuba with economic largess and regular shipments
of oil; accordingly, Cuba
can be counted on to do all it can to make sure Venezuela remains an ideological
and economic ally.
Unfortunately, Chávez has so completely polarized his country that it
will be difficult for Venezuelans to repair the damage he has done. He has
taken three bad ideas from Venezuela ’s
past – statism, authoritarianism, and populism – and taken them to epic levels.
Anti-Americanism has become more prevalent than ever. Large swaths of Venezuela ’s
economy have been nationalized. And hundreds of thousands of middle-class
Venezuelans – including many of the country’s best and brightest – have
immigrated to the U.S.
and overseas. They could have been part of the solution to Venezuela ’s economic development, but Chávez
viewed them as part of Venezuela ’s
problems.
The opposition will have much work to do to find a candidate to appeal
to Venezuela’s poor majority; and even if an opposition candidate prevails, a
new government will face an epic task to undo Chávez’s damage — soaring levels
of corruption, crime, and dysfunctional governance. Venezuela’s state oil
company, critical to government revenues, is a shadow of itself thanks to
Chávez’s mismanagement.
Even without Chávez (or a Chávez clone) Venezuela will take years to
recover from the damage Chávez has done with his leftist and anti-American
agenda.
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