CARACAS—Venezuela's ailing President Hugo Chávez says he is praying to 
Jesus Christ, the Blessed Virgin and the spirits of the Venezuelan 
savannah to help him beat his cancer. Mr. Chávez  with 
chinareplicawholesale hasn't mentioned it, but probably no one is 
praying harder for his health than Fidel and Raúl Castro in Cuba. Their 
ossified regime now largely depends on help from their ally in Caracas 
and they will do everything possible—short of an invasion—to keep Mr. 
Chávez or a like-minded ally in power, say U.S. officials, Venezuelan 
opposition leaders and analysts. Venezuela ships about 115,000 barrels 
per day of oil at cut rate prices to Cuba, meeting about 60% of the 
island's oil needs, according to a recent Brookings Institution paper, 
which calculates the value of the oil and other Venezuelan aid at about 
$5 billion a year, a major portion of Cuba's hard-currency earnings.
In exchange, Cuba has sent to Venezuela tens of thousands of Cuban 
doctors, sports technicians, and intelligence and security experts, 
helping Mr. Chávez stay in power. Havana's relationship to Venezuela is 
akin to its economic dependence on the former Soviet Union in the 30 
years before the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, which led to a 
35% fall in Cuba's economy. "To save Chávez is to conserve [Raúl's] 
presidential seat," wrote Yoani Sánchez, a well-known Cuban blogger and 
critic of the regime. "To lose him could lead to [Raúl's] own downfall." 
Were Mr. Chávez to become gravely ill—he arrived in Havana Saturday to 
undergo chemotherapy after doctors recently removed a "baseball-sized" 
tumor—the Cuban government is likely to use its sway to try to shape 
events. Analysts say the Cuban leadership has significant clout, owing 
to its relationship with Mr. Chávez and top Venezuelan officials. The 
Cubans could also deploy their intelligence services to help one faction 
at the expense of another.
"Cuba is the most important foreign power with a stake in Venezuela," 
said Moisés Naím, a former Venezuelan cabinet minister and an analyst at 
the Washington-based Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. "They 
are not going to be passive bystanders. They will be players." There is 
no political relationship in the Americas quite like the tie between 
Fidel Castro and Mr. Chávez. Mr. Castro, who officially handed power to 
his younger brother Raúl in 2008, has been a mentor, spiritual and 
political father, savior, psychiatrist, and even bedside doctor to Mr. 
Chávez. In return, Mr. Chávez has bankrolled Cuba's government and given 
Mr. Castro occasion to dream again of a Latin America united against his 
bëte noire, the U.S., or as both men sometimes call it, "the empire." At 
times, Mr. Chávez and top Cuban officials have talked of melding the two 
countries into a single confederated state—an unpopular idea among most 
Venezuelans.
"Cuba has two presidents, Fidel and Chávez," said then Cuban with soccer 
jersey vice president Carlos Lage on a visit to Caracas in 2005. Two 
years later, the Venezuelan president said virtually the same thing. 
"Deep down, we are one government," said Mr. Chávez during a visit to 
the island. During his tenure, Mr. Chávez has tried to indoctrinate the 
Venezuelan military, bringing on thousands of advisers to replicate 
Cuban military doctrine, and to deal with security and intelligence 
issues. Cuban officers are deeply involved in intelligence and security 
matters in Venezuela, from the acquisition of military equipment to 
overall military strategy, according to people with knowledge of the 
matter. One source estimates the number of Cuban intelligence experts 
working in Venezuela at 3,000."
http://chinareplicawholesale.com/in-cuba-a-prayer-for-chavez/
 
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