After Middle East defeats, neocon retreads look to Venezuela for an easy win
By: Rachel Marsden
PARIS -- Breaking with his predecessors, U.S. President Donald Trump has
shown a consistent distaste for Middle Eastern wars. Complex, messy, tribal --
it really makes a neocon long for the good old days of Latin America
interventionism, which made regime change look relatively easy by comparison. As
luck would have it, there just happens to be a country that has now been baked
long enough by socialism and punishing economic sanctions that it's ready to be
served up hot: Venezuela. So long, jihadis ... and buenos dias, amigos!
The shining light of perpetual interventionist war is growing dimmer across the
Middle East. Absent any signs that Trump is shifting from an overt war footing
to a covert one, warmongers hoping to cash in on the action -- and the sweet
taxpayer funding -- have reason to be pessimistic.
Middle Eastern conflicts have been going on for so long that they've basically
turned into ATMs for those involved. Trump keeps bragging that he's breaking the
bank on the military budget, which is an oddly inconsistent boast for someone
who seems to pride himself on his tightfistedness when it comes to tax dollars.
Why the discrepancy? Any U.S. president who cuts the military budget soon gets
more side-eye from the establishment than someone who passes the collection
plate on Sunday without coughing up an offering.
Fortunately for those looking to justify military spending, Venezuela is
currently on the ropes. It has been in the final throes of socialism for a
while. Apparently not enough, though, to have voted out Nicolas Maduro -- the
head socialist running the show -- last May. Perhaps the locals really haven't
reached their breaking point yet. Or maybe they place more blame on the economic
sanctions imposed on their country than they do on the socialist practices of
their government.
Or maybe they blame the signs of foreign meddling. Maduro has accused the United
States of training Colombian mercenaries who have subsequently been sent into
Venezuela to foment regime change. It wouldn't be out of the realm of
possibility, given that Colombian mercenaries were reportedly already hired via
American entities to serve as cannon fodder for the Emiratis in Yemen. If they
can be sent halfway around the world, then they can certainly be sent next door.
In any case, here comes Uncle Sam now to give the situation a more overt shove.
Venezuelan National Assembly President, Juan Guaido, who has been in the role
for not even a month, has declared himself president of Venezuela.
Now where would a 35-year-old guy get an idea like that? Hey, I'm president of
France (a country, which for the last couple of months, has also faced weekly
tear-gassing of local protesters). Any takers? No? Well then why does this guy
get away with it -- and with the explicit backing of the U.S. and six
American-allied U.S. and Latin American allies?
The same people who refuse to recognize last May's election of Maduro as
legitimate are now insisting that the world recognize the legitimacy of an
individual who has never even been a candidate in a Venezuelan presidential
election.
In the meantime, Trump's national security adviser, John Bolton, was seen at a
press briefing this week with a yellow notepad on which was written the words:
"5,000 troops to Colombia." Hey, it's the '80s all over again. And guess who
else is back? Secretary of State Mike Pompeo also just announced the appointment
of diplomat Elliott Abrams as special envoy for Venezuela. "This crisis in
Venezuela is deep and difficult and dangerous, and I can't wait to get to work
on it," Abrams said.
Abrams was last seen "at work" in the George W. Bush White House during a failed
military coup to overthrow former Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez in 2002 and,
previously, pleading guilty to withholding information from Congress in the
Iran-Contra affair. Some have also accused Abrams of whitewashing a massacre of
civilians by death squads in El Salvador.
Perhaps Trump figures that in order to properly drain the swamp, you first have
to fill it with a bunch of recycled neocons? Venezuela was on the verge of
toppling itself without the U.S. ever having to lift a finger. The remaining key
element for any successful revolt is the loss of military support by the
incumbent leader. There is no indication thus far that Maduro suffers from such
a phenomenon.
If there's one thing America has proven it can't execute it is regime change --
particularly with any sort of lasting stability. Ukraine, Libya, Syria,
Afghanistan, Iraq, and others should be more than enough proof. However,
Venezuela represents a return to old stomping grounds for the neocons, who seem
desperate not only for a military make-work/money project, but also to get a few
scratches in the win column.
COPYRIGHT 2019 RACHEL MARSDEN