US meddling has ensured Maduro stays in power
By: Rachel Marsden
Washington demands proof that the Venezuelan president really won the election – why should he bother?
The West wants recently re-elected Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro to
prove that he actually won. He doesn’t have to prove anything; endless Western
interventionist shenanigans in Venezuelan domestic affairs have virtually
guaranteed that to be the case.
“If Maduro insists on saying he has won and does not want to understand that,
for the international community, without verification, there is no assumption of
results, Venezuela could enter a serious crisis – we are all trying to prevent
this from happening,” said European Union chief diplomat Josep Borrell. The US
State Department, meanwhile, said that the international community was running
out of patience in waiting for the electoral proof. They’re all demanding
answers now, as in-country opposition protests persist. Or what? You’ll threaten
to regime change Maduro? You’ll rally government-linked NGO fronts against him?
You’ll send some proxies over to do your dirty work for you? You’ll name some
random dude as your chosen president and demand that your allies around the
world treat him like he’s the real leader of the country?
All these things have been tried already. And the very fact that they have is
precisely why it’s virtually impossible for the West to mount a credible case
against Maduro. There has been enough blatantly overt foreign intervention to
plant reasonable doubt in the minds of a critical mass of Venezuelans about the
motives and connections of any opposition.
Even if they don’t particularly like Maduro, let’s face it – what’s even more
off-putting is foreigners mucking around and telling them what to do. It’s like
when you’re dating a bit of a douchebag and your friends and family keep telling
you to dump him. Who do they think they are? You’ll dump him on your own terms
when you’re good and ready.
If Maduro is going to face off against opposition protests, he needs to do it
alone for the sake of all involved. Because any foreign involvement –
rhetorical, military, economic, or otherwise – is just going to lead to a result
that lacks any credibility in the eyes of Venezuelans.
It’s not like anyone in Washington would give a toss about Venezuela if it
wasn’t a target for resource plundering. It’s all so predictable. Since Maduro
hasn’t made that plundering sufficiently Western-friendly, they’d like to
replace him with someone who would.
Oh, and spare me the human rights and economic suffering arguments. If that was
the real concern, then there are a lot of other countries without resources that
Washington could obsess about “saving”. If they really cared about the people,
they wouldn’t impose endless sanctions in an attempt to make the average
Venezuelan so desperate as to resort to regime change.
It was thanks to former US President Donald Trump – whose theme song for his
former TV show, The Apprentice, had just a single word in its chorus: “money” –
that the intentions were laid bare. Trump says that he hates foreign wars. He
loves other countries’ resources though. Which is why he pulled US troops out of
Syria while still maintaining enough of a presence to keep the oil. Trump said
recently in an interview with Elon Musk on the X Platform that he was miffed
about Biden lifting sanctions on the Nord Stream pipeline of cheap Russian gas
into Europe because the Trump administration had plans to make a fortune for the
US selling gas to Europe instead.
Trump’s former National Security Advisor John Bolton wrote in his memoir, “The
Room Where It Happened”, that Trump told him to “get it done,” referring to
ousting Maduro, adding that it was the fifth time that he had asked for it —
like a butler who hadn’t yet brought him his Diet Coke. The US “should take the
oil in Venezuela after ousting Maduro,” Trump said, according to Bolton.
Over the course of Trump’s term, the administration had a bounty of up to $15
million placed on Maduro for “narco-terrorism, conspiracy to import cocaine,
possession of machine guns and destructive devices, and conspiracy to possess
machine guns and destructive devices” – a profile far more aligned with FARC
actors in US-allied Colombia, which also hosted the handpicked fake “President”
named by the West, Juan Guaido, and his acolytes.
Colombia was also the launching pad for mercenaries plotting incursions into
Venezuela during the Trump administration. One of them was an ex-Venezuelan
general who also supplied the FARC with weapons. Just last month, a former US
Green Beret, Jordan Goudreau, owner of a Florida-based private security outfit
called Silvercorp USA, was federally charged with violating US arms control laws
for allegedly bringing American weapons to Colombia to stage a mercenary
incursion to oust Maduro in 2020 — a plan called “Operation Guideon”, which
ultimately failed and landed him in a Venezuelan prison. Surely it’s just a
coincidence that he also accompanied Trump’s longtime bodyguard, Keith Schiller,
to a meeting with Guaido’s reps in Miami, according to the Associated Press. If
he had been successful at regime change and not an embarrassment for the US and
tied to Trump’s mandate, would the Biden administration have charged him?
Earlier this month, Erik Prince, the founder of the former US private military
contractor Blackwater and an overt Trump supporter, popped up in a video on the
X Platform with an intro that looks like the product of about five minutes of
Duolingo Spanish. Sitting in front of a cross and sporting a shirt emblazoned
with “Venezuelan Resistance”, with Venezuela pictured in red crosshairs, Prince
said that the opposition’s “friends from the North” were “coming soon.” That’s
great for low-cost personal branding and buzz; not so great for actual covert
action. But it’s just more evidence that Venezuela has become a trendy backdrop
for neocon interventionist tourism in the same way that influencers flock to
Dubai for bikini shots.
Team Biden doesn’t seem any less determined than Trump was to oust Maduro – the
offer of the cash reward for his capture is still posted on the State
Department’s website – but since every trick has seemingly already been tried
unsuccessfully, they seem to be at a loss for options. The White House even had
to deny reports of an offer not to pursue Maduro criminally for those
“narco-terrorism” charges if he just quietly bails out of power. Even if there
was any truth to it, outright public blackmail or bribery by the White House of
a non-bootlicking president of a resource-rich country probably wouldn’t be a
great look.
Thanks to Washington and its allies, it’s now virtually impossible to ascertain
what’s really going on in Venezuela, or how much of the opposition to Maduro is
organic. Why would Maduro even bother trying to prove anything to his Western
critics, on demand? As if there’s anything that he could provide to them to
which they’d just say, “Yeah, ok. Fair enough. Carry on, then.” If anything, the
West has guaranteed Maduro a longevity that he may not have enjoyed had they not
muddied the waters so badly for the average Venezuelan voter under the eyes of
the entire world.
COPYRIGHT 2024 RACHEL MARSDEN