Venezuela - U.S. Again Tries Regime Change...

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Re: Venezuela - U.S. Again Tries Regime Change...

Postby JackRiddler » Wed Feb 06, 2019 5:35 pm

.

I was more right about the domestic function than I wanted to be. Trump's SOTU attack on Venezuela directly tied its terrible "socialism" to the fight against ever allowing "socialism" in the US. "THE US WILL NEVER BE SOCIALIST!!!" The cameras focused on Sanders! THIS is the Trump 2020 campaign!

Venezuela is supposed to be put under a real dictatorship. Tens of thousands may be murdered by the death squads there. Of course regime change in VZ is a central goal for the empire, for the MIC, the neocons, the US oil companies, and the sociopathic think-tank geostrategists.

But for the present US regime, the main thing is that they want to ride the "failure of socialism" for the next presidential election. Many of the Democrats were applauding both the Venezuela and the anti "socialism" tirades, including Pelosi, whether or not she was including irony or "shade." This part of the speech was followed by his defense of "realism" in the Middle East. So we don't care what evil happens in Riyadh and keep sending the arms, because they pay dollars and they fit into the strategy. They can keep chopping heads and bombing millions of starving Yemenis. But Caracas? Anything they do is intolerable! It's SOCIALISM!!!

JackRiddler » Tue Jan 29, 2019 1:40 pm wrote:...foreign policy is also a means for imposing new domestic ideological hegemonies. It's the outside lever allowing the state to rewrite the meaning of "unity." Attacking Venezuela now has a clear domestic function: to unite parties in a battle against "socialism." It's like a Trump campaign move, but the Democrats don't care, they go along with this one. He drops the nuclear threats and tries a Korean peace process, or suspends the annual wargames, it's treason. All the Democratic PR machinery howls it. He merely talks to Putin: treason. Ditto. But he bombs Syria, it's presidential, the same Trump-Always-Wrongers go along with it. Saudi Arabia, thanks to the Khasshoggi effect, briefly went otherwise, and anyway that alliance allows its degree of dissent. But this? They're all like, YEAH DO IT! Their preferred good-looking presidents, Macron and Trudeau, are on board. Get those socialists! Boo, Bernie! Boo, AOC! Once the Mueller thing is over, there can even be Get Russia Unity (GRU).

This decade has seen a roaring comeback for political economy and the associated antagonist ideologies, class consciousness, and explicit class war. Capitalism, imperialism and nationalism are again primary and socialism is the specter - however "real" it may be.

.
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Re: Venezuela - U.S. Again Tries Regime Change...

Postby conniption » Thu Feb 07, 2019 9:47 pm

MoA
(embedded links)

February 07, 2019

Venezuela - U.S. Aid Gambit Fails - War Plans Lack Support

A day after the U.S. coup attempt in Venezuela the U.S. game plan was already quite obvious:

The opposition in Venezuela will probably use access to that 'frozen' money to buy weapons and to create an army of mercenaries to fight a 'civil' war against the government and its followers. Like in Syria U.S. special forces or some CIA 'contractors' will be eager to help. The supply line for such a war would most likely run through Colombia. If, like 2011 in Syria, a war on the ground is planned it will likely begin in the cities near that border.


Image
bigger

The U.S. is using the pretext of 'delivering humanitarian aid' from Columbia to Venezuela to undermine the government and to establish a supply line for further operations. It is another attempt to pull the military onto the coup plotter's side:

[i]f the trucks do get across, the opposition can present itself as an answer to Venezuela’s chronic suffering, while Mr. Maduro will appear to have lost control of the country’s borders. That could accelerate defections from the ruling party and the military.

Dimitris Pantoulas, a political scientist in Caracas, called the opposition’s aid delivery plan a high-stakes gamble.
...
“This is 99 percent about the military and one percent about the humanitarian aspects,” he said. “The opposition is testing the military’s loyalty, raising their cost of supporting Maduro. Are they with Maduro, or no? Will they reject the aid? If the answer is no, then Maduro’s hours are numbered.”


A New York Times op-ed by a right-wing former foreign minister of Mexico, Jorge G. Castañeda, details the escalation potential:

According to Mr. Guaidó and other sources, $20 million in American medicines and food will be unloaded this week just outside Venezuelan territory in Cúcuta, Colombia; Brazil, and on a Caribbean island — either Aruba or Curaçao — near the Venezuelan coast.

Venezuelan military officials and troops in exile will then move these supplies into Venezuela, where if all goes well, army troops still loyal to Mr. Maduro will not stop their passage nor fire upon them. If they do, the Brazilian and Colombian governments may be willing to back the anti-Maduro soldiers. The threat of a firefight with their neighbors might just be the incentive the Venezuelan military need to jettison Mr. Maduro, making the reality of combat unnecessary.


This escalation strategy is unlikely to work unless some additional provocation is involved. The Venezuelan government blocked the border bridge between Cúcuta in Colombia and San Cristobal in Venezuela. Its military stands ready to stop any violation of the country's border.

The U.S. responded to the blocking of the road with a sanctimonious tweet:

Secretary Pompeo @SecPompeo - 16:55 utc - 6 Feb 2019

The Venezuelan people desperately need humanitarian aid. The U.S. & other countries are trying to help, but #Venezuela’s military under Maduro's orders is blocking aid with trucks and shipping tankers. The Maduro regime must LET THE AID REACH THE STARVING PEOPLE. #EstamosUnidosVE


The U.S. government, which actively helps to starve the people of Yemen into submission, is concerned about Venezuela where so far no one has died of starvation? The lady ain't gonna believe that.

Image

The Venezuelan military has shown no sign of interest to change its loyalty. The fake aid will be rejected.

The government of Venezuela does not reject aid that comes without political interference. Last year it accepted modest UN aid which consisted mostly of medical supplies from which Venezuela had been cut off due to U.S. sanctions. The UN claimed that around 12 percent of Venezuelans are undernourished. But such claims have been made for years while reports from Venezuela (vid) confirmed only some scarcity of specific products. There is no famine in Venezuela that would require immediate intervention.

The International Red Cross, the Catholic church's aid organization Caritas and the United Nations rejected U.S. requests to help deliver the currently planned 'aid' because it is so obviously politicized:

"Humanitarian action needs to be independent of political, military or other objectives," UN spokesman Stephane Dujarric told reporters in New York on Wednesday.
...
"What is important is that humanitarian aid be depoliticised and that the needs of the people should lead in terms of when and how humanitarian aid is used," Dujarric added.


Rejecting aid out of political reasons is not unusual. When the hurricane Katrina in 2005 caused huge damage along the U.S. gulf coast, a number of countries offered humanitarian and technical aid. U.S. President Bush accepted help from some countries, but rejected aid from other ones:

An offer of aid from the Venezuelan president, Hugo Chávez, which included two mobile hospital units, 120 rescue and first aid experts and 50 tonnes of food, has been rejected, according to the civil rights leader, Jesse Jackson.

Mr Jackson said the offer from the Venezuelan leader, whom he recently met, included 10 water purification plants, 18 power generation plants and 20 tonnes of bottled water.


The U.S. intent to establish a 'humanitarian aid' supply line into Venezuela has a secondary purpose. Such aid is the ideal cover for weapon supplies. In the 1980s designated 'humanitarian aid' flights for Nicaragua were filled with weapons. The orders for those flights were given by Elliot Abrams who is now Trump's special envoy for Venezuela.

While the trucks from Colombia are blocked at the border other 'humanitarian aid' from the United States reached the country.

Officials in Venezuela have accused the US of sending a cache of high-powered rifles and ammunition on a commercial cargo flight from Miami so they would get into the hands of President Nicolás Maduro's opponents.

Members with the Venezuelan National Guard [GNB] and the National Integrated Service of Customs and Tax Administration [SENIAT] made the shocking discovery just two days after the plane arrived at Arturo Michelena International Airport in Valencia.

Inspectors found 19 rifles, 118 magazines and 90 wireless radios while investigating the flight which they said arrived Sunday afternoon. Monday's bust also netted four rifle stands, three rifle scopes and six iPhones.


The pictures show sufficient equipment for an infantry squad. Fifteen AR-15 assault rifles (5.56), one squad automatic weapon (7.62) with a drum magazine, and a Colt 7.62 sniper gun as well as accessory equipment. What is missing is the ammunition.

Where one such weapon transport is caught multiple are likely to go through. But to run a war against the government pure weapon supplies are not enough. The U.S. will have to establish a continuous supply line for heavy and bulky ammunition. That is where 'humanitarian aid' convoys come in.

Unless a large part of the Venezuelan military changes sides, any attempt to overthrow the Venezuelan government by force is likely doomed to fail. The U.S. could use its full military might to destroy the Venezuelan army. But the U.S. Senate is already quarreling about the potential use of U.S. forces in Venezuela. The Democrats strongly reject that.

A Senate resolution to back Venezuelan opposition leader Juan Guaido, once expected to get unanimous support, has been torpedoed by a disagreement over the use of military force, according to aides and senators working on the issue.
...
“I think it’s important for the Senate to express itself on democracy in Venezuela, supporting interim President Guaido and supporting humanitarian assistance. But I also think it should be very clear in fact that support stops short of any type of military intervention,” [Sen. Bob Menendez, D-N.J.] told NBC News.


It is unlikely that Trump would order a military intervention without bipartisan support.

The a clandestine insertion of a mercenary 'guerrilla' force into Venezuela is surely possible. Minor supply lines can be established by secret means. But, as the war on Syria demonstrates, such plans can not be successful unless the people welcome the anti-government force.

Under the current government most people in Venezuela are still better off than under the pre-Chavez governments. This lecture and this thread explain the economic history of Venezuela and the enormous progress that was made under Chavez and Maduro. The people will not forget that even when the economic situation will become more difficult. They know who is pulling the strings behind the Random Guy Guaido who now claims the presidency. They know well that these rich people are unlikely to better their plight.

U.S. politicians are making the same mistakes with regards to Venezuela as they made with the regime change wars on Iraq and Syria. They believes that all people are as corrupt and nihilistic as they are. They believe that others will not fight for their own believes and their own style of life. They will again be proven wrong.

https://www.moonofalabama.org/2019/02/v ... pport.html

Posted by b on February 7, 2019

comments


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consortium news

PATRICK LAWRENCE: In Venezuela, US Forgets What Century It Is
February 5, 2019 • 77 Comments

Destabilizing other nations in gross violation of international law will no longer go unopposed, writes Patrick Lawrence.

By Patrick Lawrence
Special to Consortium News

The Venezuela crisis worsens by the day. Early last week the U.S. sanctioned PdVSA, the state-owned oil company, by sequestering income from U.S. sales in a blocked bank account. On Sunday President Donald Trump confirmed in a television interview that deploying American troops is “an option.”

Little of what Washington has done in the weeks since it recognized an opposition legislator, Juan Guaidó, as Venezuela’s “interim president” has any basis in international law. But there is much worse to come and much more at risk if the U.S. follows through with its recently disclosed plans to reshape Latin American politics to its neoliberal liking.

Administration officials now advertise the effort to depose the government of Nicolás Maduro as merely the first step in a plan to reassert American influence among our southerly neighbors. The next two targets, Cuba and Nicaragua, are what John Bolton, Trump’s national security adviser, calls the continent’s “troika of tyranny.”

“The United States looks forward to watching each corner of the triangle fall—in Havana, in Caracas, in Managua,” Bolton said in a not-much-noted speech in Miami late last year. “The troika will crumble.” There is cold comfort to derive from knowing this forecast reflects the single most deranged worldview of anyone now active in the Trump White House...

continues... https://consortiumnews.com/2019/02/05/p ... ury-it-is/

one of many comments:
bevin
February 6, 2019 at 8:08 pm

One of the most interesting aspects of the Venezuelan crisis is the role that Canada is playing in it.

The US is in the position of a Frankenstein monster trying, unsuccessfully, to hide behind a dwarf making a fool of himself. The dwarf being played by Chrystia Freeland, Stepan Bandera’s, last blow against the democracy he so despised.

As one might expect the Canadian effort-putting together a ‘coalition’ of Latin American governments to call, in unison, for democracy and human rights in Venezuela- is amateurish: there are a dozen such governments and every one of them is at the bottom of the international league table for…just about everything.

There is Honduras, where last year’s Presidential election was publicly stolen, in front of the entire, and clearly embarrassed, international community. Honduras is very dubious about last year’s Presidential election in Venezuela-observers might call it the fairest election they have ever seen but the Hondurans (who keep their disgusting prisons full of angry voters who protested, non-violently, more than a year ago) are sticklers. They are with Canada on this one.

Then there are the Brazilians, Paraguayans, and Peruvians all of whose governments, signing up to the Canadian Lima Group, were unelected beneficiaries of judicial coups. As of course was the Honduran President- I forgot to mention that.

Who else is there?

Colombia, ruled by narco-paramilitaries for decades. Last year they signed a peace agreement to bring an end to the Civil War. This year they have been systematically assassinating the FARC militants that they promised amnesty. Colombia is the worst place on earth to be a Trade Unionist. A union card is a death warrant,this has been the case for decades now. It is why, until recently, no North American government dared sign a free trade agreement with Bogota. Now Colombia is actually part of NATO. And stands together with Canada to call for an end to the violence that it is paying for in Venezuela.

Then there is Guatemala, where there has not been a coup. Where the President- described by the UN appointed Corruption Prosecutor as the head of a crime syndicate- refuses to resign. Guatemala is internationally famous for its genocidal massacres: successive Presidents have used the army to massacre Mayan populations.

Since 1954 when the US rescued Guatemala from the threat of communism in the form of a democratic government promising landless (and how did that happen?) peasants with uncultivated estates controlled by the New York based United Fruit Company, Guatemala has been ‘governed’ by a series of military dictators sponsored by the United States. The current one is no pacifist but he is best known for corruption which is on a monumental scale.

And yet, Guatemala stands along side Canada calling for the Venezuelan government to resign.

And then there is Argentina where power from left wing reformers to neo-liberals was facilitated by the US not through spurious charges of corruption as in Brazil, or straight coups as in Honduras and Paraguay but through Wall Street vulture funds financing election campaigns which led to their being able to collect enormous pay outs when their selected government, headed by Macri, paid them dollars for the few cents the expired debt was picked up for. It is a clever trick that Argentinians in the street are paying through their noses for in the form of austerity, unemployment, tumbling living standards , homelessness and hunger.
Macri won’t last long but in the meantime he is very troubled by Venezuela’s economy, worried so much that he, his Lima Group colleagues, Canada, John Bolton, Vice President Pence (formerly governor of Indiana), Elliott Abrams, of El Salvador massacre fame and President Trump, have imposed a ban on imports of food and medicine to Venezuela out of their affection for the poor.

You couldn’t make this stuff up, because nobody would believe it . The wonder is not that the Canadian government is involved, it will do anything for a buck (and both of its principals will soon be looking for work elsewhere) but that the other countries, members of the Lima Group can’t see that this sort of thing just draws attention to their failings.

Maybe that is why Mexico and Uruguay have decided to have nothing more to do with it.



__________


RT

EU states fold like cheap tents to US demands on Venezuela, Italy one of few to stay independent

George Galloway
Published time: 6 Feb, 2019


As the former British prime minister Harold Macmillan would have put it, "It's not one damned thing, it's one damned thing after another."

For the European Union, Italy has become that turbulent priest of whom they wish they could be rid, the fly in the ointment, the spanner in the works of neo-liberalism and war. If this is what they mean by "populism," it's little wonder that all roads increasingly lead to Rome...

continues... https://www.rt.com/op-ed/450794-italy-s ... ezuela-eu/
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Re: Venezuela - U.S. Again Tries Regime Change...

Postby Grizzly » Fri Feb 08, 2019 12:56 am

I don't agree w/everything Galloway says, but goddamn, why can't we have a true statesman like him?


"Lawless 'Twitter Coup' "...lol

Whose this guy with George, he's got moxy, too...Adam Garrie?
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Re: Venezuela - U.S. Again Tries Regime Change...

Postby JackRiddler » Fri Feb 08, 2019 5:22 am

Good stuff, though he loses me a few minutes before the end when he describes the epic (capitalist) corruption in Venezuela and the extremely high rates of violent street-crime, and then endorses what he calls the Cuban but also Taiwanese, Chinese, and Singaporean ways of dealing with both political corruption and street crime - he says they just shoot the miscreants, to uphold law and order. Shoot the drug dealer, he even says! Yeah, nothing could go wrong with that idea, or has gone wrong in these very same countries. This is nothing US Republicans and in fact Donald Trump himself have ever endorsed. Wait, actually, it is. And the US has the highest rate of imprisonment globally and, within the West, hands-down the highest rate of executions (and deals with political corruption by having completely legalized it). I doubt he endorses US law and order policy. The whole point of due process is that enforcement can be and often is applied in completely wrong ways. And regarding Cuba, I think Galloway in this bit of bloodthirst is provably wrong. They don't imprison or execute at higher rates than the US or China or Iran (another famously corrupt economy), and Galloway is almost feeding (unintentionally) into the myths of Cuba as some kind of exceptional police state.
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Re: Venezuela - U.S. Again Tries Regime Change...

Postby Grizzly » Fri Feb 08, 2019 1:09 pm

As I sd, I don't agree with everything but man, he's a breath of fresh air compared to our pimped out and whore "statesmen"
“The more we do to you, the less you seem to believe we are doing it.”

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Re: Venezuela - U.S. Again Tries Regime Change...

Postby JackRiddler » Sat Feb 09, 2019 5:06 am

JackRiddler » Fri Feb 08, 2019 2:03 pm wrote:.

It may not seem that way from day to day, given a political culture and media ecology that are so blind to the rest of the world and obsessed mostly with trivialities and making up non-existent menaces, but the foreign policy consensus is a) where most of the action is and b) where the domestic consensus ultimately is spawned and manufactured. It is the external leverage point for influence. First of all, it designates the enemies that are supposed to unite all Americans regardless of their differences. This disciplines the media narratives and gives readymade explanations for disasters. This is especially important for a system that so reliably produces endogenous disasters, ecological and economic. The designated enemies are always associated with an enemy ideology that is also to be combatted at home, again to justify the whole system.

For most of the 21st century, the designated enemy has of course been a coalition of vague enemies and a few countries headlined as Islam, or radical Islamic terrorism, or Middle Easterners, with the term "Iranians" usually preferred as a placeholder nomenclature for supposed threat organizations that actually mostly consist of Sunni Arabs. The associated ideology is "terrorism," simultaneously justifying pretty much every military action, and boosting of the domestic sureveillance state. That remains but has worn thin. A turn to Russia has been given a very strong try since 2014, especially since the Trump election. The associated enemy ideology is confusing, which is one of the problems, but it includes "intolerance," "divisiveness" and "populism." This just hasn't found traction with the majority, who for some reason want their health care and free tuition even more than before. Now it looks like a consensus is being attempted around Venezuela & Co. and "Socialism."

.
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Re: Venezuela - U.S. Again Tries Regime Change...

Postby JackRiddler » Sat Feb 09, 2019 2:12 pm

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Useful on the opposition parties. Guaido's, Popular Will, has been a minority within the opposition.

https://www.counterpunch.org/2019/02/08 ... -stand-on/

Juan Guaidó: The Man Who Would Be President of Venezuela Doesn’t Have a Constitutional Leg to Stand On

by ROGER HARRIS
FEBRUARY 8, 2019


Donald Trump imagines Juan Guaidó is the rightful president of Venezuela. Mr. Guaidó, a man of impeccable illegitimacy, was exposed by Cohen and Blumenthal as “a product of a decade-long project overseen by Washington’s elite regime change trainers.” Argentinian sociologist Marco Teruggi described Guaidó in the same article as “a character that has been created for this circumstance” of regime change. Here, his constitutional credentials to be interim president of Venezuela are deconstructed.

Educated at George Washington University in DC, Guaidó was virtually unknown in his native Venezuela before being thrust on to the world stage in a rapidly unfolding series of events. In a poll conducted a little more than a week before Guaidó appointed himself president of the country, 81% of Venezuelans had never even heard of the 35-year-old.

To make a short story shorter, US Vice President Pence phoned Guaidó on the evening of January 22rd and presumably asked him how’d he like to be made president of Venezuela. The next day, Guaidó announced that he considered himself president of Venezuela, followed within minutes by US President Trump confirming the self-appointment.

A few weeks before on January 5, Guaidó had been installed as president of Venezuela’s National Assembly, their unicameral legislature. He had been elected to the assembly from a coastal district with 26% of the vote. It was his party’s turn for the presidency of the body, and he was hand-picked for the position. Guaidó, even within his own party, was not in the top leadership.

Guaidó’s party, Popular Will, is a far-right marginal group whose most enthusiastic boosters are John Bolton, Elliott Abrams, and Mike Pompeo. Popular Will had adopted a strategy of regime change by extra-parliamentary means rather than engage in the democratic electoral process and had not participated in recent Venezuelan elections.

Although anointed by Trump and company, Guaidó’s Popular Will Party is not representative of the “Venezuelan opposition,” which is a fractious bunch whose hatred of Maduro is only matched by their abhorrence of each other. Leading opposition candidate Henri Falcón, who ran against Maduro in 2018 on a neoliberal austerity platform, had been vehemently opposed by Popular Will who demanded that he join their US-backed boycott of the election.

The Venezuelan news outlet, Ultimas Noticias, reported that prominent opposition politician Henrique Capriles, who had run against Maduro in 2013, “affirmed during an interview that the majority of opposition parties did not agree with the self-swearing in of Juan Guaidó as interim president of the country.” Claudio Fermin, president of the party Solutions for Venezuela, wrote “we believe in the vote, in dialogue, we believe in coming to an understanding, we believe Venezuelans need to part ways with the extremist sectors that only offer hatred, revenge, lynching.” Key opposition governor of the State of Táchira, Laidy Gómez, has rejected Guaidó’s support of intervention by the US, warning that it “would generate death of Venezuelans.”

The Guaidó/Trump cabal does not reflect the democratic consensus in Venezuela, where polls consistently show super majorities oppose outside intervention. Popular opinion in Venezuela supports negotiations between the government and the opposition as proposed by Mexico, Uruguay, and the Vatican. The Maduro administration has embraced the negotiations as a peaceful solution to the crisis facing Venezuela.

The US government rejects a negotiated solution, in the words of Vice President Pence: “This is no time for dialogue; this is time for action.” This intransigent position is faithfully echoed by Guaidó. So while most Venezuelans want peace, the self-appointed president, backed by the full force of US military power, wrote in a New York Times op-ed that it was possible to “end the Maduro regime with a minimum of bloodshed.”

The Guaidó/Trump cabal’s fig leaf for legitimacy is based on the bogus argument that Article 233 of the Venezuelan constitution gives the National Assembly the power to declare a national president’s “abandonment” of the office. In which case, the president of the National Assembly can serve as an interim national president, until presidential elections are held. The inconvenient truth is that Maduro has shown no inclination to abandon his post, and the constitution says no such thing.

In fact, the grounds for replacing a president are very clearly laid out in the first paragraph of Article 233 of the Venezuelan constitution and do not include fraudulent or illegitimate election, which is what the cabal has been claiming. In the convoluted logic of the US government and its epigones, if the people elect someone the cabal doesn’t like, the election is by definition fraudulent and the democratically elected winner is ipso facto a dictator.

The function of adjudicating the validity of an election, as in any country, is to be dealt with through court challenges, not by turning to Donald Trump for his approval. And certainly not by anointing an individual from a party that could have run in the 2018 election but decided to boycott.

The Supreme Tribunal of Justice (TSJ), which is the separate supreme court branch of the Venezuelan government has certified Maduro’s reelection, as have independent international observers. Further, no appeal was filed by any of the boycotting parties, while all participating parties – including opposition ones – signed off on the validity of the election after the polls closed.

The far-right opposition has boycotted the high court as well as the electoral process. They contest the legitimacy of the TSJ because some members of the TSJ were appointed by a lame duck National Assembly favorable to Maduro, after a new National Assembly with a majority in opposition had been elected in December 2015 but not yet seated.

Even if President Maduro were somehow deemed to have experienced what is termed a falta absoluta (i.e., some sort of void in the presidency due to death, insanity, absence, etc.), the National Assembly president is only authorized to take over if the falta absoluta occurs before the lawful president “takes possession.” However, Maduro was already “in possession” before the January 10, 2019 presidential inauguration and even before the May 10, 2018 presidential election. Maduro had won the presidency in the 2013 election and ran and won reelection last May.

If the falta absoluta is deemed to have occurred during the first four years of the presidential term, the vice president takes over. Then the constitution decrees that a snap election for the presidency must be held within 30 days. This is what happened when President Hugo Chávez died while in office in 2013. Then Vice President Nicolás Maduro succeeded to the presidency, called for new elections, and was elected by the people of Venezuela.

If it is deemed that the falta absoluta occurred during the last two years of the six-year presidential term, the vice president serves until the end of the term, according to the Venezuelan constitution. And if the time of the alleged falta absoluta is unclear – when Maduro presided over “illegitimate” elections in 2018, as is claimed by the far-right opposition – it is up to the TSJ to decide, not the head of the National Assembly or even such an august authority as US Senator Marco Rubio. Or the craven US press (too numerous to cite), which without bothering to read the plain language of the Bolivarian Constitution, repeatedly refers to Guaidó as the “constitutionally authorized” or “legitimate” president.

As Alfred de Zayas, United Nations independent expert on the promotion of a democratic and equitable international order, tweeted: “Article 233 of the Venezuelan constitution is inapplicable and cannot be twisted into legitimizing Guaidó’s self-proclamation as interim President. A coup is a coup.”

More articles by:ROGER HARRIS
Roger Harris is on the board of the Task Force on the Americas, a 32-year-old anti-imperialist human rights organization.
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Re: Venezuela - U.S. Again Tries Regime Change...

Postby Belligerent Savant » Sat Feb 09, 2019 2:25 pm

.

Meanwhile, over at the EU..

https://www.strategic-culture.org/news/ ... zuela.html



Italy Saves Europe’s Dignity over US Bullying of Venezuela

It’s comically ironic. France has now recalled its ambassador from Rome in a mounting row over Italy’s alleged “interference” in French internal political affairs. This is at the same that France and other European states are joining in a brazen campaign by the United States to overthrow the elected president of Venezuela, Nicolas Maduro. Irony doesn’t come much thicker than that.

The row between France and Italy is but the latest in a long-running spat between French President Emmanuel Macron and the newly elected coalition government in Rome. The Italian government is an unlikely coalition between the left-leaning Five Star Movement (5SM) and a rightwing party, La Lega (The League).

Both parties are highly critical of the EU establishment and neoliberal capitalist polices which France’s former Rothschild banker-turned-president Macron embodies.

Rome has also slammed France for its responsibility in fomenting massive immigration problems for Europe and Italy in particular through Paris’ criminal military interventions, along with the US and other NATO powers, in the Middle East and North Africa.

Things came to a head this week when it emerged that Italian deputy Prime Minister Luigi Di Maio (and 5SM leader) had met with members of the Yellow Vest protest movement in France. The Yellow Vest movement has been holding nationwide demonstrations for the past 12 weeks protesting against Macron’s economic policies and what they call his elitist style of government. Di Maio and the other Italian deputy premier Matteo Salvini (leader of The League) have been openly supporting the French protesters, whom they identify with as part of a popular revolt across Europe against neoliberal austerity.

Reacting to reports of Italian government contact with the French protesters, France’s Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian said it was “outrageous interference” in his country’s internal affairs. The row has further escalated after France recalled its ambassador from Rome. The last time that happened was in 1940 during the Second World War. This is a major breakdown in relations between two of the EU’s founding members.

Here is where the irony descends into farce. France is blustering with rage at Italy’s alleged meddling in its sovereign affairs while at the very same time the French government is party to an international effort led by the US to bring about regime change in Venezuela. The hypocritical arrogance is priceless.

This week France and several other EU members, including Germany, Britain, Spain and the Netherlands, announced that they were “recognizing” a self-proclaimed president in Venezuela. Marginal opposition figure Juan Guaido declared himself the “interim president” of the South American country on January 23. There are well-documented links between Guaido and his far-right opposition party to the American CIA. The move to delegitimize the elected president, Nicolas Maduro, has been orchestrated by the Trump administration. It is a blatant illegal regime-change maneuver that violates the UN Charter and international law. Maduro’s socialist government and the nation’s natural oil wealth – the largest known reserves on the planet – are obvious targets for Washington and European capital.

Russia, China, Iran, Turkey, as well as some Latin American countries, including Mexico, Nicaragua, Bolivia and Cuba, have rightly denounced the interference in Venezuela’s sovereign affairs. Washington’s demand for Maduro to step down under the threat of US military invasion is a staggering display of imperialist aggression. But the international gangsterism is being indulged by certain European states, primarily France, which are bestowing a veneer of legitimacy to the whole disgraceful business.

Italy is one of the few EU states that has refused to go along with the US-led criminal campaign for regime change in Venezuela. The Italian government reportedly blocked the EU from issuing a joint policy statement calling for the recognition of Guaido as “president” in place of Maduro. Those European powers that are engaging in the Washington’s violation of Venezuela are doing so on their own complicity, not in the name of the EU.

Italy’s principled stand, along with Russia and China, in defense of Venezuela’s sovereignty is a commendable adherence to international law. By not allowing the EU to be associated with the US skulduggery, that is a vital setback to Washington’s machinations.

Thus, the Italian government has saved the EU from descending into total disrepute. It is bad enough that certain members like France are engaging in the US-led gangsterism against Venezuela, but at least Italy’s blocking action has prevented the EU as a bloc from being complicit.

If the fundamental principle of non-interference in the sovereign affairs of nation states is not respected, then the entire system of international law unravels. The principle has been violated many times in recent years, most notably with illegal wars conducted by the US and its NATO partners in the Middle East and North Africa. But the latest episode of regime change in Venezuela is perhaps the most audacious yet. Washington and its European lackeys are intent on abolishing the democratic mandate of President Maduro and the ruling of Venezuela’s Supreme Court.

Washington and its pathetic European accomplices are opening a Pandora Box of global lawlessness if they get away with their criminal bullying of Venezuela.

Russia, China, Italy and other nations are essentially holding the line between a semblance of order and unfettered chaos.

We may consider the Italian deputy premier’s contact with French protesters as ill-advised politics. But whatever mistake Italy may have done in that regard, it is negligible compared with the astounding arrogance and criminality of France and other European states in their violation of Venezuela’s sovereignty. The arrogance of France’s reaction to Italy’s alleged interference this week is a spectacle to behold.

If anything, Italy deserves applause and respect for exposing the hypocrisy of France and other European would-be Neo-colonialists.

A bitter aspect of the irony is this: the French president and others are contemptuous of democracy and international law, not just in Venezuela, but towards their very own people.


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Re: Venezuela - U.S. Again Tries Regime Change...

Postby JackRiddler » Mon Feb 11, 2019 3:46 pm

Sample.

And this is for the weak sauce they put out.

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Left-wing Democrats who parrot dictator Maduro’s propaganda are doing Trump a huge favor
BY ANDRES OPPENHEIMER

FEBRUARY 01, 2019 06:52 PM,

UPDATED FEBRUARY 01, 2019 06:52 PM


Shame on you, Bernie Sanders! And on you, too, Alexandra Ocasio-Cortez!


Their statements about Venezuela reflect an incredible ignorance and may help President Trump win Florida — and perhaps even the presidential election — in 2020.

While the Democratic Party leadership is rightly supporting U.S. diplomatic and economic measures against Venezuela’s dictator Nicolás Maduro, Sanders and other members of his party’s Jurassic left wing are on the wrong side of the defense of democracy and human rights.

In a Jan. 24 response to Trump’s recognition of Venezuela’s National Assembly President Juan Guaidó as the country’s legitimate leader, Sanders echoed the Maduro propaganda line by warning that, “The United States has a long history of inappropriately intervening in Latin American countries. We must not go down that road again.”

Sanders accurately noted that Maduro has violated Venezuela’s Constitution several times. But his statement criticized America’s support for Guaidó, and was much closer to Russia, China and Cuba’s stands on Venezuela than to that of virtually all Western democracies.

Other left-wing Democratic legislators didn’t even mention Maduro’s break of democratic rule. Ocasio-Cortez retweeted a statement criticizing Democratic Sen. Dick Durbin for his hard line against the Maduro regime and saying that, “The United States should not anoint the leader of the opposition in Venezuela during an internal, politicized conflict.”

Even worse, freshman U.S. Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minnesota, denounced an alleged U.S.-backed “coup” in Venezuela, and called for a “dialogue” with the Maduro dictatorship.

To be sure, the vast majority of Democrats in Congress support Guaidó. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi tweeted Jan. 24 that, “America stands by the people of Venezuela as they rise up against authoritarian rule.” Democratic Sens. Durbin and Bob Menendez have been among the most active supporters of the pro-democracy movement in Venezuela.

But the Sanders/Ocasio-Cortez wing of the Democratic Party’s refusal to back Guaidó as Venezuela’s constitutional leader is both morally repugnant — and politically foolish.

It’s morally repugnant because Guaidó was legally elected interim president by the National Assembly, which is the only democratic institution left in Venezuela. It was elected in a December 2015, election that — despite government intimidation, censorship and massive state propaganda — the opposition won by a landslide.

Under Venezuela’s Constitution, the National Assembly has the right to elect its president as the country’s interim leader when the government is taken over by an illegitimate leader. That’s exactly what happened in Venezuela.

Maduro broke the rule of law in 2016 when he single-handedly stripped the democratically elected National Assembly of most of its powers. He did it again in 2018, when he proclaimed himself winner of shamelessly fraudulent presidential elections. So there is an illegitimate leader in Venezuela — Maduro

That’s why virtually all major Western democracies — including the United States, Canada, Great Britain, Germany, France, Brazil, and Argentina, with the unfortunate exception of Mexico — are recognizing Guaidó as Venezuela’s legitimate president. Even Spain’s socialist government and the Socialist International group of democratic socialist political parties are backing Guaidó.

The left-wing Democrats’ statements echoing Maduro’s propaganda line could also badly damage the party’s chances to recover the White House in 2020, as the Venezuela conflict increasingly becomes a domestic political issue.

The Trump administration is increasingly using its Venezuela policy as an electoral strategy to win Cuban-American votes in Florida, a key swing state. About 17 percent of registered Florida voters are Hispanic, and the vast majority of them are Cuban Americans and other Latinos who strongly oppose to the Cuba-backed Maduro regime.

That’s why Vice President Mike Pence came to Miami on Friday, accompanied by a big entourage of Florida Republican leaders, to meet with Venezuelan exiles. Pence and other top administration officials are also constantly tweeting against Maduro. White House political strategists smell a political opportunity in Florida, and they are making the most of it.

Will the Democrats react in kind? Will Democratic congressional leaders and presidential candidates come to Florida to stress their full support for Guaidó?

They should do it as soon as possible. It’s the right thing to do — and it’s the politically smart thing to do. Otherwise, Cuban-American voters will vote in even greater numbers for Republicans in 2020, and help re-elect Trump in 2020.

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Re: Venezuela - U.S. Again Tries Regime Change...

Postby conniption » Tue Feb 12, 2019 5:44 am

mint press news

Image
A boy runs past symbolic caskets on the National Day of Victims of Violence, at Bolivar square in Bogota, Colombia, April 9, 2018. Human rights activists and victims’ relatives marched through the capital and placed the coffins in honor of those who have died or disappeared. Fernando Vergara | AP

As US Laments Human Rights in Venezuela, US-Allied Colombia Descends into Drug-fueled Humanitarian Crisis

The dichotomy between Washington’s relationship with Venezuela and Colombia is yet another clear example that the public justifications for the U.S.’s Latin America policy are little more than window dressing for the U.S.-backed expansion of neo-fascist governments throughout Latin America.

by Whitney Webb
February 08th, 2019

BOGOTÁ, COLOMBIA (Analysis) — Several troubling situations are currently playing out across Colombia, yet the country’s continuing downward spiral into drug-fueled and politically-motivated violence has caused little concern in Washington, offering yet another clear indication that the U.S.’ current posturing on Venezuela is hardly motivated by concerns about “democracy,” “human rights,” or the welfare of the Venezuelan people.

This, of course, can hardly be considered surprising, given that Colombia is a top U.S. ally whose government has long been closely aligned with Washington’s interests. However, although the lack of U.S. government or media attention to Colombia may effectively hide it from the American public, the country is becoming increasingly lawless, with cocaine production reaching new record levels and the government sanctioning the mass murder of the country’s largest indigenous group. Not only that but since Colombia’s new president, Iván Duque, came to power late last year, the number of indigenous social leaders who have been murdered has spiked to the highest levels in over a decade.

Ultimately, the lack of media coverage of Colombia’s humanitarian crises, which have large implications for the Americas as a whole, is a telling example of how such crises are regularly weaponized by governments and media to exclusively target governments it wishes to pressure or overthrow, while turning a blind eye to those same or worse acts when committed by an allied nation.

An absurdly double standard

Though it was Barack Obama who first deemed Venezuela a “national security threat” and reinitiated draconian sanctions against the oil-rich nation, the Trump administration has greatly increased the sanctions targeting Venezuela, often citing its government’s alleged participation in illegal drug trafficking as justification for doing so. However, the U.S. has offered little in the way of concrete evidence to back up those allegations.

During this same period, moreover, the Trump administration has expressed little concern for the booming illicit drug trade in neighboring Colombia, which has broken records for cocaine production for the last two years in a row. Though the Colombian government and military have been repeatedly tied to the country’s drug trade, the Trump administration – like previous U.S. administrations – hasn’t lifted a finger.

According to UN figures released last September, Colombia’s cocaine production has again broken records, with the country producing an estimated 1,379 tons of cocaine in 2017, the latest year for which such statistics exist. That figure is a 31 percent increase in cocaine production from 2016. 2016 itself was a record-breaking year with cocaine production gaining by 50 percent over 2015 levels.

Though Trump had threatened to decertify former Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos’ government over the rapid growth of cocaine production, he ultimately gave Colombia a pass in the U.S.’ annual determination of countries considered to be “major drug transit or major drug producing” areas “because the Colombian National Police and Armed Forces are close law enforcement and security partners of the United States in the Western Hemisphere.”

The document also described Venezuela, along with its regional ally Bolivia, as “countries that have failed demonstrably during the previous 12 months to adhere to their obligations under international counternarcotics agreements” despite the fact that Bolivia had the fewest illegal coca crops of any South American country that year.

Image
Police officers walk among packages of seized cocaine at the pacific port of Buenaventura, Colombia, Aug. 10, 2017. Fernando Vergara | AP

Since getting a free pass from the Trump administration, Colombia’s current president, Iván Duque, has signaled his hopes to revive a failed, U.S.-backed program to indiscriminately spray suspected coca fields with the infamous Monsanto product glyphosate to reduce cocaine production.

Though the U.S. government and Western media have traditionally placed the blame on leftist guerillas in Colombia, like the FARC, the 2016 peace deal that saw the FARC abandon the drug trade has removed this convenient scapegoat and highlighted the long-standing role of the Colombian military and prominent right-wing politicians in cocaine production.

In fact, the United Nations Drug Control Program (UNDCP) has described the Colombian military — which has been armed and trained for decades by the U.S. under the Clinton era policy known as “Plan Colombia” — as being among “the biggest heroin and cocaine trading institutions.”

The Colombian government has also been intimately involved, particularly during the presidency of Álvaro Uribe, who allegedly served as the “head of Colombia’s paramilitary groups” both before and while in office. Uribe was once ranked by the U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency “on a list of 104 important narco-traffickers contracted by the Colombian narcotics cartels.”

There are also indications of the U.S. government’s own involvement in the Colombian cocaine trade. For example, Colombia’s most notorious drug trafficker, Pablo Escobar, at one point worked for the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency, according to Escobar’s own children. Escobar allegedly sold cocaine for the CIA to help the U.S. government finance its fight against communism and left-wing governments in Latin America.

As pointed out in the book Cocaine, Death Squads and the War on Terror: U.S. Imperialism and Class Struggle in Colombia, the U.S.’ anti-drug efforts in Colombia were never intended to eradicate cocaine, but instead alter the market share by ensuring that allies of the U.S. in Colombia – the Colombian government, paramilitaries and the wealthy elite who are favorable to U.S. business interests – could monopolize the drug trade with no competition from outsiders. Thus, it should hardly shock anyone that the U.S. continues to turn a blind eye to the country’s booming illegal drug trade and its associated violence, even as it continues to break records year after year.

Erasing the erasure of the Wayuú

As the long-standing, U.S.-backed plan to oust the Chavista regime in Venezuela has unfolded, Maduro’s government has been called out in Western media for “starving his own people,” despite the fact that U.S. sanctions imposed on Venezuela are a driving factor behind the country’s economic crisis. However, since 2011, Colombia has been the site of ongoing genocide against the country’s largest indigenous group – the Wayuú – in the country’s Guajira region, after the Colombian government diverted their only source of water to support the operations of the country’s – and continent’s – largest coal mine.

The suffering of the Wayuú, who have reported the deaths of at least 14,000 children due to the lack of clean water, has gone unreported by the same outlets that routinely raise concern about lack of essential goods in Venezuela. The Wayuú, who comprise around 20 percent of Colombia’s entire indigenous population and 48 percent of the Guajira region’s total inhabitants, are now on the brink of dying out completely seven years after the Ranchería river – their community’s only freshwater source – was diverted by the government-constructed Cercado dam in order to service the water needs of the Cerrejón coal mine.

An estimated 37,000 Wayuú now suffer from severe malnutrition, as they can no longer grow crops or raise livestock without a freshwater source. Each person in the community now lives off of less than 0.7 liters (24 oz.) of water a day while the Cerrejón mine guzzles more than 2.7 million liters of water in a 24-hour period – most of which is used to improve mine “visibility” by minimizing dust pollution. Despite the clear impact of the dam and mine on the humanitarian crisis facing the Wayuú, the Colombian government and supportive Western media have blamed “climate change” and weather patterns like El Niño for the situation.

The most likely reason for the erasure of the slow genocide of the Wayuú from Western media is the fact that the Cerrejón mine is largely a U.S.-backed operation, as the mine was originally founded by ExxonMobil and is now owned by a consortium of largely Western mining companies such as Anglo American and BHP Billiton. These same mining companies often work with right-wing paramilitary groups — who are also closely connected to the Colombian government — and who repeatedly threaten the lives of Wayuú who speak up about their people’s suffering, including their chief legal advocate, Javier Rojas Uriana.

Notably, the Colombian Wayuú have been immigrating to the Wayuú community in Venezuela in order to avoid the slow death caused by malnutrition, lack of water, and waterborne illnesses from the polluted water from the community’s remaining wells. The Venezuelan Wayuú have been largely supportive of Chavismo and have backed the Maduro-led government, referring to U.S.-backed opposition protests as violent riots “intended to create chaos.” The Huffington Post noted in 2017 that the Wayuú’s support for Maduro had largely been erased by the Western media because it “does not match up with the media’s anti-Venezuelan government narrative.”

Liquidating social leaders, activists, human-rights advocates

While the fate of the Wayuú (and thus 20 percent of the country’s entire indigenous population) continues to hang in the balance, the plight of Colombia’s indigenous peoples has grown even worse since the recent inauguration of Colombian President Iván Duque.

Despite Duque’s having come to power just last August, El Tiempo recently reported that the murders of indigenous leaders in the country have spiked to levels unseen in over a decade since Duque became Colombia’s president. According to data cited by El Tiempo, 120 indigenous social leaders – as well as human-rights defenders — have been murdered in cold blood during Duque’s first 100 days in office.

Though the murder of social leaders by right-wing paramilitary groups has been a long standing problem in Colombia’s recent history, this level of targeted murder represents a spike over recent years — in which 226, 159, and 97 such murders occurred over the course of the entire years of 2018, 2017 and 2016, respectively. Notably, the Venezuelan government of Nicolás Maduro has been routinely accused by Western media of murdering opposition activists; yet, those same outlets have been silent on Colombia’s recent spike in activist murders.

Image
Protesters attend a candlelight vigil for activists killed since the signing of the peace accords in Bogota, Colombia, July 6, 2018. Fernando Vergara | AP

Despite the jump, Duque’s government has expressed little concern. This is hardly surprising when one considers that Duque is the hand-picked successor and protégé of Álvaro Uribe, the former Colombian president who was once “the head of Colombia’s paramilitary groups,” according to former paramilitary group commanders of the right-wing death squad AUC, which has been funded by several prominent U.S. corporations.

Uribe, who was Colombia’s president from 2002 to 2010, and was a close ally of George W. Bush, was also personally implicated in organizing a massacre conducted by a right-wing paramilitary group; and his cousin, Colombian politician Mario Uribe, was charged with mobilizing right-wing death squads in the country to help secure Uribe’s presidential victory in 2002. Uribe’s brother was also arrested for founding a right-wing paramilitary group in 2016.

Under Uribe’s presidency, the Colombian military massacred thousands of civilians — such as in the “false positives” scandal, where the Colombian military dressed up an estimated 5,000 civilians in guerilla clothing and killed them in cold blood, subsequently gaining a bonus from Uribe’s government for the sinister act. It should be no surprise then that, under Uribe, the murder rate of indigenous leaders and human-rights activists reached its all-time high at 1,912 murders in 2003.

Given Duque’s close relationship to Uribe, it is also little surprise that paramilitary groups have endorsed Duque following his election and have vowed to “exterminate” Duque’s opposition, calling prominent Colombian progressives “military targets.”

What to expect if US gets its way in Venezuela

If Washington’s publicly stated concerns about “human rights” and the welfare of a country’s people in Venezuela were genuine, it would be equally critical of Colombia’s government, given the numerous troubling situations currently unfolding in that country. Instead, the dichotomy between Washington’s relationship with Venezuela and Colombia is yet another clear example that the public justifications for the U.S.’s Latin America policy are little more than window dressing for the U.S.-backed expansion of neo-fascist governments throughout Latin America.

Indeed, if Juan Guaidó – the self-declared, U.S.-backed “president” of Venezuela – manages to seize power in the country, the current state of affairs in Colombia is a telling harbinger of what would likely manifest should Nicolás Maduro be overthrown and replaced with the same type of government that the U.S. has either backed or installed in several Latin American countries over the last few decades, and particularly in recent years.
__________

Whitney Webb is a staff writer for MintPress News and has contributed to several other independent, alternative outlets. Her work has appeared on sites such as Global Research, the Ron Paul Institute and 21st Century Wire among others. She also makes guest appearances to discuss politics on radio and television. She currently lives with her family in southern Chile.

https://www.mintpressnews.com/as-us-lam ... es/254882/


__________

https://thesaker.is/reporters-diary-from-venezuela/

Reporter’s Diary from Venezuela
February 08, 2019 32 Comments

Georgy Zotov (author of AIF weekly)
This is the personal view of the correspondent on today’s life of Caracas.
Translated by Scott

Day one…


__________

https://thesaker.is/president-nicolas-m ... ed-states/

President Nicolas Maduro: An Open Letter to the People of the United States
February 09, 2019 31 Comments


__________
Axis of Logic

In Venezuela, White Supremacy is a Key to Trump’s Coup

By Greg Palast
Information Clearing House
Monday, Feb 11, 2019

On January 23, right after a phone call from Donald Trump, Juan Guaidó, former speaker of Venezuela’s National Assembly, declared himself president. No voting. When you have official recognition from The Donald, who needs elections?

Say what?

I can explain what’s going on in Venezuela in three photos:

First, we have Juan Guaidó, self-proclaimed (and Trump-proclaimed) president of the nation, with his wife and child, a photo prominently placed in The New York Times.

Image

Next, the class photo of Guaidó’s party members in the National Assembly, white as snow…

Image

…especially when compared to their political opposites in the third photo, the congress members who support the elected President Nicolás Maduro. The Maduro supporters are nearly all of a darker hue.

Image

This is the story of Venezuela in black and white, the story not told in The New York Times nor the rest of our establishment media. This year’s so-called popular uprising is, at its heart, a furious backlash of the whiter (and wealthier) Venezuelans against their replacement by the larger Mestizo (mixed-race) poor.

Four centuries of white supremacy in Venezuela by those who identify their ancestors as European came to an end with the 1998 election of Hugo Chavez who won with the overwhelming support of the Mestizo majority. This turn away from white supremacy continues under Maduro, Chavez’ chosen successor.

In my interviews with Chavez for BBC beginning in 2002, he talked with humor about the fury of a white ruling class finding itself displaced by dark-skinned man who was so visibly “Negro e Indio,” a label he wore loudly and proudly.

Why did the poor love Chavez? (And love is not too strong a word.) As even the US CIA’s surprisingly honest Fact Book states:

“Social investment in Venezuela during the Chavez administration reduced poverty from nearly 50% in 1999 to about 27% in 2011, increased school enrollment, substantially decreased infant and child mortality, and improved access to potable water and sanitation through social investment.”


What should be added is that, even more than the USA, race and poverty are linked.

But just as Maduro took office in 2013, the price of oil began its collapse, and the vast social programs that oil paid for were now paid for by borrowing money and printing it, causing wild inflation. The economic slide is now made impossibly worse by what the UN rapporteur for Venezuela compared to “medieval sieges.” The Trump administration cut off Venezuela from the oil sale proceeds from its biggest customer, the USA.

Everyone has been hurt economically, but the privileged class’s bank accounts have become nearly worthless. So, knowing that the Mestizo majority would not elect their Great White Hope Guidó, the angry white rich simply took to the streets — often armed. (And yes, both sides are armed.)

I’ve seen this movie before. When I look at today’s news reports of massive demonstrations against the so-called “dictatorship” of Venezuela’s left government, it looks awfully like 2002, when I was first in Caracas reporting for BBC Television.

Then, The New York Times, NPR and other mainstream outlets in the US reported on marches against the Chavez government, showing the tens of thousands of Venezuelans calling for Chavez’s removal. But when I took my BBC camera crews to march with these protesters, they were clearly from the light-skinned minority. They were also the wealthy — and they wanted you to know it. Many of the women marched in high heels, the men peacocking in business suits, proudly displayed in the uniforms of their privileged class.

The Chavistas wore patriotic yellow, blue and red T-shirts, sneaks, jeans.

Race was an issue as much as political philosophy. When I marched alongside the opposition demonstrators, they shouted “Chavez, Monkey!” and worse.

Many in the US have never heard this story of race war in Venezuela (and war is what it is), as the US press does not recognize its own racial bias. In 2002, as today, the massive demonstrations of the whiter Venezuelans were reported as evidence that Chavez was wildly unpopular. Yet, the day after each anti-Chavez march, I would witness and film the pro-Chavez demonstrations that flooded Caracas with an ocean of nearly half a million marchers, overwhelmingly poor Mestizos, that received little or no coverage in the US press.

The bias continues. The New York Times did not run a photo of this past week’s pro-Maduro demonstrations. But in hard-to-find photos and reports from my colleagues on the ground, the Chavista demonstrations are bigger, involving mass turnouts in several cities, not just wealthy neighborhoods in Caracas

How many western news outlets showed the massive marches in Venezuela protesting the US-backed coup today? #HandsOffVenezuela pic.twitter.com/YBQpqbdEfl

— Abby Martin (@AbbyMartin)
February 2, 2019


Why do the poor march for Maduro? Even though the Mestizo majority suffers today, they will not turn back to the pre-Chavez days of de facto apartheid.

And we must remember this is not the first time the US government has tried to overthrow the elected government in Venezuela.

In 2002, George W. Bush’s State Department cheer-led the coup. The plotters kidnapped Chavez and held him hostage. The coup was led by an oil industry leader and head of the Chamber of Commerce, Pedro Carmona, who had seized the nation’s White House, and, like Guaidó today, declared himself president. Carmona told me proudly about the fancy inaugural ball held by the nation’s elite and attended by Bush’s ambassador.

But the Bush/Carmona coup collapsed when a million darker-skinned Venezuelans flooded the capital and forced the plotters to return their hero, the supposedly unpopular Chavez, to Miraflores, the Presidential Palace. “Presidente” Carmona fled.

Today, Guaidó’s supporters, like Carmona’s, know they can’t win an election given the overwhelming fact of the newly empowered Mestizo majority. So Guaidó has skipped the idea of an election altogether, simply replacing running for office with the “recognition” from Trump and allies which Guaidó can’t get from Venezuelans.

When I see the images and hear the chants of the anti-Chavista demonstrators now, I’m also reminded of what I saw at a Trump rally in Macon, Georgia, this past November. The president slid out of Air Force One to tell the crowd — heavily weighted with white supremacists — that they needed to take back their country from those “invading” the border. Trump told them to fear gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams, who is Black, saying she would “turn Georgia into Venezuela.”

I don’t think Trump was talking about Abrams’ program to bring universal health care to Georgia, as Chavez did for Venezuela.

The US press is quick to condemn the racial hatred on display at Trump rallies. But I have yet to hear or read in the US press what our eyes can see in the three photos from Venezuela: an uprising of white people wanting to “take back their country.”

And take note: The Venezuela putsch by the wealthy, internationally connected minority is operating by a regime-change plan designed by neo-con re-tread John Bolton, Trump’s national security adviser. And take further note: It is a plan to control Venezuela and its oil, as Bolton proudly proclaims in the open.

Ah, yes, the oil. It’s always the oil. And Venezuela has plenty to seize: the world’s largest reserves.

We’ll get to that in Part II.
____

Note: Greg Palast covered Venezuela during the Chavez presidency for BBC Television Newsnight and The Guardian. Download the film of Palast’s BBC reports, The Assassination of Hugo Chavez, for FREE or with a donation to the Palast Investigative Fund. This article incorporates additional reporting by William Camacaro in Caracas.

http://axisoflogic.com/artman/publish/A ... 3186.shtml
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Re: Venezuela - U.S. Again Tries Regime Change...

Postby MacCruiskeen » Tue Feb 12, 2019 2:57 pm

christ, it's like magic. Trump just has to rattle that saber and, abracadabra, suddenly everyone is totally in awe of his totally awesome Presidentialness again.

USA! USA! USA! Is Congress fucking bipartisan as fuck, or what?.

Clinton and Biden and Pelosi et al, those people are just loathsome.

Never mind, we got @AOC and Ilhan Omar and all them exciting freshfaced young radicals™ coming up! Renewers of the Democratic Party, yay! Stunning and brave, listening and learning, standing strong, cleaning out the DC swamp and making America great again.

So what about them? Having just found their freshfaced young voices, have they already lost them? Maybe the dog ate their voices, who knows. So what's with Kamala Harris or whatever the fuck her name is? No objections from her, from any of them, to years of sanctions, years of subversion, years of economic torture, complete disregard for international law, and now the outright barefaced theft of Venezuela's gold deposits? Not a peep against Pompeo, or Bolton, or Elliot fucking Abrams? Cat got their tongues?

Who bought their silence?
"Ich kann gar nicht so viel fressen, wie ich kotzen möchte." - Max Liebermann,, Berlin, 1933

"Science is the belief in the ignorance of experts." - Richard Feynman, NYC, 1966

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Re: Venezuela - U.S. Again Tries Regime Change...

Postby conniption » Wed Feb 13, 2019 8:46 pm

https://off-guardian.org/2019/02/14/han ... s-go-home/

Published on Feb, 14, 2019

Hands Off Venezuela, Canada and US Go Home!
David William Pear

Image
Photo via VenezuelAnalysis

https://off-guardian.org/2019/02/14/han ... s-go-home/
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Re: Venezuela - U.S. Again Tries Regime Change...

Postby conniption » Thu Feb 14, 2019 2:15 am

esquire
(actually found this article via https://caucus99percent.com/content/eve ... es-2-13-19 )

Ilhan Omar's Cross-Examination of Elliot Abrams Honored Thousands of Central American Dead

By Charles P. Pierce
Feb 13, 2019


I just had a moment that I've been waiting for since the early 1980s, because I am an old guy who remembers things. Of all the bloodthirsty think-tank Rambos that were wandering around the Reagan Administration, none of them were so bone-deep inhumanely repulsive as Elliot Abrams, whose main job was to enable death squads and cover up massacres committed by our plucky cutthroats-for-hire in Central America, most notably in Guatemala. His portfolio also included lying to Congress and Trolling Around For A Pardon. (Thanks, Poppy!)

Anyway, Abrams came before the House Foreign Relations Committee. It came time for Rep. Ilhan Omar to ask him questions. ... Abrams didn't seem to enjoy having his bona fides as a war criminal discussed by this...person. ...

I think I speak for thousands of dead people in Central America when I thank Rep. Omar for allowing us to say, together, once again, and to the skull-like face of Elliott Abrams, "Man, fck that guy."

Ilhan Omar and Elliott Abrams have fiery exchange at House Foreign Affairs hearing

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4Mutu-P7_NA
Washington Free Beacon
Published on Feb 13, 2019


one of many comments:
Mo Senpai
9 hours ago (edited)
Before you criticise Ilhan for not respecting Abrams, look up his track record. He's a literal war criminal that allowed and supported multiple massacres.

All she did was remind him of that fact, since he's again been appointed to uphold US policy in Venuzuela. Her questions weren't asinine in the slightest, it's asinine Abrams still has power.
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Re: Venezuela - U.S. Again Tries Regime Change...

Postby MacCruiskeen » Thu Feb 14, 2019 6:56 pm

cross-posting:

MacCruiskeen » Thu Feb 14, 2019 5:39 pm wrote:Ffs, is anyone really convinced by this embarrassingly bad theatre, this Triumph of the Crap Spectacle?



https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=4Mutu-P7_NA

It's an appalling performance. Ilhan Omar carries on like a foolish giggly 14-year-old, reading clumsily off a script, stammering, stumbling over her words (she clearly has not the slightest clue what Abrams was actually responsible for, nor even what Iran-Contra actually was; she can hardly even pronounce it), smiling at him ingratiatingly, pretending he was only responsible for one massacre, and -- worst of all, really inexcusably -- not only letting him off the hook ("Thank you, I give up my time." :ohno:) but AGREEING WITH HIM that the USA has the best interests of Latin America at heart.

Ilhan Omar is 37/1/3. Thirty-fucking-seven (and one-third). Check it out. She's three years older than Martin Luther King was when he led the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom.

Image

Could Elliot Abrams himself possibly have chosen a more feeble and incompetent "opponent"? She whacked him good and hard on the shin with her teddybear. Ouch. How can he possibly recover from such a blow?

Maybe he did choose her.

- What else is on TV?
Last edited by MacCruiskeen on Thu Feb 14, 2019 9:40 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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