Rubrick Biegon
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Containing Hugo Chávez
Insights from the WikiLeaks cables
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Leaked documents can function as an excellent means of contextualising the Official Record. This chapter makes use of diplomatic cables published by WikiLeaks to analyse the United States’ foreign and security policy toward Venezuela during the tenure of President Hugo Chávez (1999–2013). The talisman of Latin America’s Pink Tide of leftist leaders who gained international prominence in the 2000s, Chávez sought to spearhead a regional movement against US hegemony. Acknowledging the methodological limitations of working with leaked materials, the chapter argues that the detail found in the cables strengthens scholarly accounts of the United States’ response to Chávez, providing an important internal perspective on the decisions underpinning US diplomacy and foreign policy-making. Efforts to contain Chávez and his regional movement can be traced through the Public Record, including the leaked cables, providing a critical and nuanced understanding of Washington’s aims and strategic approach. This chapter begins with a discussion of the WikiLeaks archive, explores the methodology adopted for the chapter, and notes some troubling actions of WikiLeaks as an organisation. Next it explores US foreign policy towards Chávez. In the final section it traces the relationship between Chávez and chavismo as shown in the leaked diplomatic cables released by WikiLeaks. Particularly in the final section, there are discussions of the broader politics and diplomacy of Latin America.

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The Official Record

Oversight, national security and democracy

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