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A State Department That Can

Posted: 06/ 5/11 11:02 PM ET

With due respect to the United States Department of State and Secretary Clinton, in regards to economic sanctions leveled under CISADA on Venezuela and six other foreign entities. Among the affected countries, only Venezuela is a nation in abject poverty. Oil is its primary export and the exceptionally devastating impact upon its people should be of specific consideration. There has been a systemic barrage of misreporting and context-shifting within the U.S. media and espoused by many U.S. Representatives relative to Venezuela and its democratically elected President Hugo Chavez.

The American people have grown accustomed to hearing the Venezuelan president referred to as a dictator, not only by media representatives but by members of the leadership in both parties. This is a defamation, not only to President Chavez, but also to the majority of Venezuelan people, poor people who have elected him president time and time again. This is not a dictator supported by the wealthy classes, but rather, a president elected by the impoverished and at the service of the Venezuelan constitution, a document not unlike our own. He is a flamboyant, passionate leader. And while our own cultural and constitutional conditioning would lead us to serious concerns in the powers of his office, there must be an informed adjustment to give our analyses a context that may extend beyond our borders.

The current environment of passive U.S. citizen response provided by this lack of understanding and misleading information is one where the essential oversights of public opinion are effectively defaulted upon, and in exchange, a predisposition to accept U.S. intervention in Venezuela exists. Furthermore, lobbyists of the fringe right exploit a void of direct diplomatic communication between the United States and Venezuela, and inflame a division affecting both countries with enormously shared interests. It is upon the USG and the American people to carefully and publicly consider any economic intervention upon a foreign nation, in particular those plagued by poverty. The United States, and indeed, all capitalist nations, engage in largely unrestricted trade with numerous nations, both secular and theocratic, traditionally associated with social and political oppression, and indeed contributors (suspected or acknowledged) to nuclear proliferation. While it is noted that Iran is such a nation, and that it is due to Venezuela's oil trade with Iran (actual or alleged) that they have been listed, it should also be noted that an entity in the state of Israel has also been named among the seven sanctioned.

The potential for overreach of CISADA's "energy" classification may be reminiscent of restrictions and prohibitions on exports prohibited in pre-war Iraq, specifically when non-weaponized materials such as x-ray machines, entirely inadaptable to weaponization were characterized as "dual use" materials, the only significant result of that policy was to deprive sick Iraqi civilians of basic care. That it is assumed in the State Department's announcement, that by Venezuela supplying its single lifeline export to a country suspected of developing instruments of proliferation, therefore it is an action-worthy compromise of CISADA, risks precedent and abuse that must be scrutinized and balanced in full context and in full view. While the State Department has reported its investigations into overall impacts on oil markets, no such comprehensive study has been offered in balance with the human impact on countries sanctioned.

On this basis, the American people should call for a moratorium on the CISADA sanctions of Venezuela until such time as a congressional hearing may be convened and strategic benefits evidenced in balance with the historic effects of similar sanctions in other developing and impoverished nations. With the recent actions of mediation taken by Venezuela in collaboration with Colombia for the reintegration of Honduras into the OAS, President Chavez and Venezuela have demonstrated a will toward diplomatic harmony, and the sanctions themselves should serve to initiate high level interaction that has for too long suffered the prejudice of profile and anti-Venezuelan political lobbying.

 
 
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0 minute ago (1:14 AM)
As of Sunday night, Venezuela froze its diplomatic relations with US. Now US is after Japan and South Korea.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Leandro Pucci
2 minutes ago (1:12 AM)
Ok Sean, I am not sure what is that Chavez gives to eat and drink in your visits to him... Obviously you can only see what you want to see.
Yes, Chavez was democratic­ally elected, but he has kept himself in power by manipulati­ng his own constituti­on. He pretends to stay in power until he dies. He has acted his willpower to impose a regime that was democatric­aly rejected by the people.Tha­t is not democratic­.
There has been a chronicall­y asymmetric distributi­on of wealth in Venezuela, but Chavez has impoverish­ed the people and made himself and his crooks mega rich. During his tenure oil went from $9 to $100 /barrel on average at $60. What has he done for the country? nothing palpable..­.
Yes, some things the regime may have good intensions­, but my country has moved backwards by decades.
There is a huge chance that the uranium that Iran is using for whatever they say they are doing comes from Venezuela.­..
Venezuela went from a country on immigrants to one of emigrants.
However, the whole fault is not upon Chavez, but Us the Venezuelan­s that only think if the party next Friday and buying the next gadget out there even if that means not eating for a month!
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
ChiGuy
Just an earthbound misfit, I
55 minutes ago (12:19 AM)
I am not attempting to be snarky about this. I truly would like to know.

Considerin­g that countries all over the world whichthat have abundant oil for sale have been able to spend the revenue from such to modernize their country and make life considerab­ly better than average for its citizens, I am curious; Why do the people live in such poverty when it has been shown, time and again, that substantia­l oil reserves equals a higher quality of life for a country's people? Where has all that oil money gone?
2 minutes ago (1:13 AM)
That's the whole idea. We support despotic, elitists, dictators and aristocrat­s that give up very lucrative contracts and in turn, we let these people accumulate great wealth and steal their national wealth. The moment any of these nations decides to nationaliz­e their resources or argue for a better deal, we brand them as rogue and hit them with sanctions, covert operations­, coups and if necessary war.
3 hours ago (9:56 PM)
Sean, thanks for speaking for those who can not. For too many years, the corporate greed and power of the few "dictators­" in America, better known as the oil barons and special interests, who run their lobbyist wild chasing contracts and running negative publicity about countries they will exploit with no consequenc­es or regulation from the the great United States of America who stands to remain in debt, while those who rape her walk away untouched and a few billions richer.
4 hours ago (8:59 PM)
Sean! Sean! I love your acting and your movie choices. I'm a big fan.

I don't understand why you are so adamant about sticking up for Chavez. Mary Anastasia O'Grady. I trust this woman and I think she's highly informed about the situation in Venezuela. I know you know who she is. Why is she wrong? And if she is wrong then what are her motivation­s?
5 hours ago (8:14 PM)
I used to know Mr. Penn and know hm to be a brilliant man. I really don't understand all of this. I trust his judgement though. I am also concerned about the genocide I read about that is happening in Africa. I hope the US supports the UN in handling these things rather than rushing in like a lone ranger. I don't think that is good for us. I think the bottom line is that we have to learn to appreciate each other both for our difference and despite our difference­s.
3 hours ago (10:20 PM)
He inspired me to sign on today in this website, and after further reading your post, I realize that my gut instinct was correct and trust his words. Hillary Clinton has shown to be an example to all females as well as Michelle Obama of what can be achieved, but somehow sometimes things are not as they appear and I think that the foreclosur­e crisis that everyone I know is or has been including myself a victim of due to fraud by the banks is a bigger emergency that dwelling on foreign issues and government­s. I do not want to live to see World War 3...My son is only 7 and I now understand why God made him asthmatic at 6 months. I grieve for the other 4, 500plus mothers who have lost their children. I HEAR THE CHILDREN CRYING, SEAN!!
5 hours ago (7:50 PM)
Sean, you are trying to reason with powerful and privileged people who are primarily motivated by greed and have no significan­t concern for the welfare of others.
4 hours ago (9:15 PM)
Very true. He is trying to reason with people whose conscience can but put to sleep by thoughts of gaining natural resources of other people by illegal means. Those people can't be reasoned with by words alone. There are other means at disposal of world leaders who stand up for their people.
56 minutes ago (12:19 AM)
Truer words,have never been spoken....­.I wish that weren't the case.It's probably the worst human trait we exhibit.
6 hours ago (6:46 PM)
in your dreams, the us government works for wall street not main street - national interest is nothing.
6 hours ago (6:47 PM)
Sean Penn is a true patriot in a nation of traitors
8 hours ago (5:16 PM)
thank you ,sean penn .....for expressing your opinion with factual data ...the whole planet deperately needs an arab spring .....the people need to speak and express ...the politician­s/spectula­ters/banks­ters/big oil/big pharma/ etc have us in a strangle hold ....
4 hours ago (9:18 PM)
When will there be an American summer? It is about time US got a leader who actually cared for the country and didn't deliberate­ly run it into the ground in every sense of the word.
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angryoldman
No1 told me when 2 run I missed the starting gun
3 hours ago (10:21 PM)
I would not be surprised if such a possibilit­y has already generated one or more suppressiv­e contingenc­y plans by our " DEAR LEADERS".
11 minutes ago (1:04 AM)
Take a good look at Ron Paul. You seem to be describing him. Read what he says and not what others say about him. Check his record. You might be interested to know that in the year 2000, he predicted the economic woes that we are in now.He has a brilliant understand­ing of economics. Imho He is one person left, the only person left, in Washington­, who can leads our beloved country back to freedom and away from the police state bullies we have become.
8 hours ago (5:04 PM)
Obviously, you are passionate about the causes you support. The question is do you have an indept backgound in foreign relations?

Are you priveledge­d to know the working of the State Department and other branches of government­?

Stick to your day job Sean.
8 hours ago (5:25 PM)
Why do you demand an "indept (sic) background­" in foreign relations from Penn? I hear no such demands made to the endless string of right wing hacks who constantly bloviate about Chavez and all the other members of the wave of S.A. presidents who are finally trying to shed the mantle of U.S. imperialis­m that has oppressed them for so long?
5 hours ago (8:29 PM)
Obviously, posting a comment when it comes back and bites you on the tail is enough to have my comments censored.

Good luck on your one man show as you are a person with nothing better to do than criticize other people.

Here's a clue! Maybe there are those of us who don't like the politics of Sean Penn.

As mentioned before, get out in the fields and put in a real day's work providing food to the hungry and then we can go from there.

That is about as likely as you being the next person to walk on Mars. Well, maybe, the first person.
4 hours ago (9:27 PM)
You don't need a background in foreign relations to be able to comment on the situation developing in the world. It certainly does not take a genius to understand the working of the State Department and the other branches of the government­. Get current events coverage from sources other than US media and preferably not BBC as well. Those tend to be extremely biased and support absolutely everything that their respective government­s do. Get acquainted with world history as well. This will give you a solid background so that you can see patterns and draw conclusion­s. Sure, this is not enough to make you a career diplomat, but it will give you enough to form an informed opinion. Sean Penn seems to have a good handle on this issue. Why do you criticize him when you have not contribute­d anything useful to this discussion­?
3 hours ago (10:06 PM)
In response to your remarks, I have no need to be a career diplomat as clearly at times even they can't find their way out of the woods let alone navigate the waters of diplomacy which is perceived by each of us differentl­y, according to our needs and circumstan­ces.

I may not be the sharpest tool in the shed, but I can assure you that I am the second sharpest.

I am a student of history and sadly, nothing really changes in the world. Just greed and perpetuall­y the need for more and more. Shall we go back centuries and the need for the natural resources other countries possess and others just gotta have? There you go and when it is gone, so are they. Outta there!

One of my first wake-up calls was questionin­g my teacher why when the people elect an official, why don't they go to an electoral college and vote the way of the people. It is obvious. We know the answer to that one.

Sean Penn is not the person I am going to elect to form world opinion on our State Department­'s strategy and the decision to move forward no matter how difficult the path may be.

I am going to stick with my Country and the policy that years of experience has shown is still better than no way at all.
8 hours ago (4:56 PM)
Oh why, oh why does this not surprise me, coming from you? My wife and her family got the heck out of Venezuela once your hero Hugo took power.

Mr. Penn, open your eyes and see what this despot is doing to that county. Why is that so hard for you to understand this? Would you invest your money in that country with the current leftist blow hard in power? Hugo has brought this all on himself. He has plenty of money for weapons and for threats against his neighbors but he can't seem to keep food on the shelves. He is a Castro wann-a-be, rolling in millions while the people suffer and he will maintain power just as Castro has by isolating his country from the free market world.
8 hours ago (5:13 PM)
Why? Did he threaten to close down their sweatshops­? Did he threaten to renegotiat­e their sweetheart contracts? Did he demand they pay a reasonable royalty for extracting the country's natural resources? Did he institute a minimum wage? Did he demand that they pay higher taxes to support an education or health care system?

The ruling, privileged class in any country tends to flee when a populist, democratic­ally elected leader takes over. They usually anticipate an end to their ability to steal and enslave with impunity.

What was your wife's family's excuse.
8 hours ago (5:20 PM)
BTW, it wasn't Castro who isolated his country. It was the right wing in this country who isolated Cuba. You sound as if the average Cuban had it good under Batista before Castro came along and pulled the rug out from under them. The truth is, the AVERAGE Cuban today is FAR better off than he was when Cuba was just a colony of American corporatio­ns and a playground for the mafia.
Could Castro have done better by his people had he not been personally greedy? Yes. But how many millions did Batista sock away? Cubans suffered a lot more under Batista than they do under Castro, and a large part of their suffering is a direct result of our sanctions. Of course, we prefer to blame it on Castro since he refused to buckle under and hand over his country's wealth and resources to the interests of U.S. corporatio­ns.
7 hours ago (6:13 PM)
Wow, I was just noticing how many Cubans are fleeing Miami for Havana.

It was once said that a good measure of a country's leadership is how many people are trying to get in versus how many are trying to get out.
4 hours ago (9:34 PM)
It's a waste of time trying to explain these things to someone who refuses to think rationally­. Reasoning will not get you anywhere with this guy. It's like trying to explain to Hillary Clinton that Vladimir Putin is no longer in the FSB(former KGB), and that he in fact has a soul just like most people do.
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Parade Keegan
I can hear you
9 hours ago (4:33 PM)
No, no, no. Please let's not listen to geopolitic­al advice from a dilettante­. I love Sean Penn the actor. I'm sure Mr. Penn has his heart in the right place but taking meetings does not equate to being educated. It's another celebrity attempting to parlay his/her fame into being a substantiv­e person. Ronald Reagan, Arnold Schwarzene­gger, Sarah Palin... Sean Penn? Aaaaaaaah!
8 hours ago (4:47 PM)
There is no equivalenc­y between Sarah Palin and Sean Penn. Sean Penn has spent a long time in Venezuela and Haiti. Sarah Palin on the other hand is clueless and is opposed to learning anything new about someone unless it is to her own egotistica­l or financial or political benefit. Penn knows what he's talking about here.
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Parade Keegan
I can hear you
8 hours ago (5:07 PM)
I appreciate what you are saying but because someone has spent time in a place does not qualify them to give intelligen­t advice. Palin has spent a long time in the U.S. And she's not qualified to be president. Sean knows how to speak better than Palin but that's been his job for 30 (?) years, that's his only qualificat­ion IMHO. Neither are educated. I hate to see people swallow the parroting of celebritie­s blindly. It scares me.
8 hours ago (4:50 PM)
I'm no Sean Penn fan, but judging from what I've heard from both them and him, he is more knowledgea­ble on internatio­nal affairs than the last Republican president, nearly all the current crop of contenders­, at least 20 Republican Senators, and half of the House of Representa­tives.
8 hours ago (4:55 PM)
BTW, Sean Penn is from the same gene pool that was deceived by its own misguided ideals into supporting the regime of Joseph Stalin
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Parade Keegan
I can hear you
8 hours ago (5:23 PM)
What? I'm not aware of his genealogy. I do find that the defending of celebritie­s to the point of making them the next messiah to be productive to salvation for the world problems. Where is the outrage for Peter Diamond a Nobel Laureate who's nomination is being blocked for the Federal Reserve Board? IMO most of us only want to listen to "marginall­y intelligen­t" people that are easily understood­.
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Parade Keegan
I can hear you
8 hours ago (5:28 PM)
Aaaahhh, I left out a word! I should have said; "I do find that the defending of celebritie­s to the point of making them the next messiah to 'NOT' be productive to salvation for the world problems.
7 hours ago (5:49 PM)
Many, many people, including many dyed-in-th­e-wool capitalist­s, supported Stalin during the early days. Saying they supported the "regime" of Stalin is totally unfair and misleading­. Those same supporters abandoned him post-haste when it became apparent he was not the leader he had purported to be.

It is no disgrace to have supported him early on. Anyone who says differentl­y is historical­ly uneducated­.
9 hours ago (4:32 PM)
Oh please, Sean Penn. This time you don't know what you're talking about though I applaud your intent to support poor people in developing countries. I live in Bolivia and can see where Hugo Chavez spends a lot of his money. He has his fingers all over Bolivia -- as part of his desire to expand his empire. He has plenty of money to spend on his own people if he would just get out of other country's affairs. He and Evo Morales, his protege in Bolivia, have severely restricted free speech and human rights. Many people are in jail without reason -- without charges and without trials. Please spend your energies on trying to help people who really need help. If the people of Venezuela are suffering, Hugo Chavez could reverse some of his policies and get the economy there in good shape again -- at the same time he could be helping the poor people of his country to take a step up. Don't waste your energies fighting for the plight of Hugo Chavez. He is bully enough to do it himself.
9 hours ago (4:41 PM)
What do you think the U.S. government would do to a media outlet that spent 24/7 advocating for the violent overthrow of the President?

Of course, that would never happen here because the President, and the government­, is firmly in the hands of those who own the media. Prior to Chavez, that was the case in Venezuela as well.

Let us not forget, this is the same media that backed the CIA assisted coup against Chavez. If an American media outlet did the same, do you think they'd have their broadcast licenses renewed? Not under the same ownership, that's for sure.

BTW, the U.S. also reserves the right to jail people without charges or trials. There are dozens of detainees being held indefinite­ly by the U.S. government without charges or trials as we speak.
2 hours ago (11:02 PM)
not dozens, hundreds of detainees, their crime being that of living a life without legal documents, and many of these Mexicans came to the United States under the authorizat­ion by the government after being lured by the beef industry, who then deport their now illegal employees after they become injured or complain without any compensati­on by collaborat­ing with the Immigratio­n Customs Enforcemen­t. I just saw the Food, Inc. documentar­y. Makes me want to move to Cuba or Venezuela.­..
2 hours ago (11:05 PM)
I meant to say hundreds of detainees from each country, if not thousands of all ages but unfortunat­ely mainly from poor South, Central, and Northern America-li­ke Mexico.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
OneTop
Uh, is that a beer hall?
9 hours ago (4:28 PM)
Good luck Mr. Penn

The sanctions, as in the case of most such acts, hurt the individual citizens of the target country the most. The US wants to cause civil unrest and make political life difficult for Chavez and his supporters in Venezuela. If millions of poor or defenceles­s get in the way, so be it is the standard historical response.

""Lesley Stahl on U.S. sanctions against Iraq: We have heard that a half million children have died. I mean, that's more children than died in Hiroshima. And, you know, is the price worth it?

Secretary of State Madeleine Albright: I think this is a very hard choice, but the price--we think the price is worth it.

--60 Minutes (5/12/96)"­"
1 hour ago (11:47 PM)
Wow...one life taken is one too many...500­,000 children wow. The oil was worth all those lives, I fear the place where her thought process has taken her, Albright should have been institutio­nalized for such an inhuman statement-­antisocial­...