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The Crisis in Venezuelan Civil-Military Relations: From Punto Fijo to the Fifth Republic
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 October 2022
Abstract
For many who thought of Venezuela as a consolidated democracy, the 1992 coup attempts came as a complete surprise. Those familiar with the deterioration of its democratic regime, in contrast, were more surprised that the coups did not succeed. This article provides an institution-centered explanation of the puzzle of why the 1992 coup attempts occurred, why they failed, and why the Venezuelan military has remained quiescent in the years that followed. Institutions of civilian control created during the post-1958 “Punto Fijo” period, particularly those based on fragmenting the officer corps, prevented the collapse of the democratic regime in 1992. These same institutions allowed civilians to regain authority over the armed forces during the Rafael Caldera administration and have ensured the subordination of the armed forces to elected authorities to the present. It is also argued that the institutional basis for civilian control has been dismantled during the Fifth Republic, heightening the likelihood of future civil-military conflict and threatening regime stability.
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- Copyright © 2002 by the University of Texas Press
Footnotes
Research funding and support for this article were provided by the Center for Latin American Studies of Stanford University and by the Research Office of the Naval Postgraduate School. I wish to thank Terry Karl, Thomas Bruneau, David Myers, Jennifer McCoy and the anonymous LARR reviewers for their helpful comments on earlier drafts. Any remaining errors are entirely my responsibility.
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