VENEZUELA |
Surprise reshuffle of military high command. On 4 July President Hugo Chávez surprised almost everybody in Caracas by replacing General-in-Chief Jorge García Carneiro as defence minister and keeping the man most touted as his successor, General Raúl Baduel, in his post as commander of the army. Many local analysts, including former high-ranking officers, had expected Chávez to elevate Baduel to the defence ministry as García Carneiro stepped down upon reaching retirement age. One retired admiral, Iván Carratú, went as far as to state that it would be 'difficult' for Chávez to appoint a defence minister drawn from either the navy or the airforce, due to the degree of support enjoyed by García Carneiro in the army, by far the largest of the services, and the one in which Chávez himself served. However, Chávez did pick a new defence minister from outside the army: he appointed Rear Admiral Orlando Maniglia, hitherto inspector-general of the armed forces, promoting him full admiral a rank which had not been held by any naval officer for at least a century. Maniglia, like García Carneiro, was also due to retire this year.
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