The U.S. government's
work-in-progress of removing a democratically elected president of a
developing country, Venezuela in this case, and replacing him with a
“president” that will comply with whatever the U.S. wants
is a story as old as the U.S. as superpower after World War II.
Nicholas
Maduro, the duly elected president has committed the crime of moving
to keep the natural resources of the country, especially oil, for the
use and benefit of the people of Venezuela, and at the same time,
carrying on the Bolivarian Revolution of the late president, Hugo
Chavez.
Venezuela
has one of the largest reserves (some estimate that it's the largest)
of oil in the world and that appeals to the avarice of the
fossil-fuel gluttons of America, who never have seen a pool of oil
that they did not covet and prepare to do anything to make that oil
come “home,” to the U.S. It has happened time after time
and the motivation is likely only second to the frantic attempts to
stop communism in nations around the world. Now, however, the
communist threat has been replaced with the threat of socialism, the
buzzword for right-wingers in the U.S.
As
the U.S. government continues its worldwide propaganda campign
against Maduro and his government, it recently recognized on Jan. 23,
the president of Venezuela’s National Assembly, Juan Guaido, as
“interim president.” His “administration” was
quickly recognized by the U.S. and many of its allies, but the
reality in Venezuela itself is different from what is being portrayed
in U.S. media. Maduro has a core of support among the people that may
constitute 30 percent of the country's electorate, a large number and
a very politically active part of Venezuela's society and economy.
Under Chavez' administration, this core became active in determining
the country's direction. But, all the while, the world's oil powers
went into gear to thwart the intentions of Chavez, as is happening
with Maduro today.
The
U.S. game plan for Venezuela is pretty much the same as in other
countries, except in the current campaign against Maduro, the prize
is oil, which is much favored as an energy source and, incidentally,
a source of great wealth, by the president of the U.S., Donald Trump.
He has explained how he would make deals with people like Guaido who
he says would be happy to be made president and give a large
percentage of his country's oil to the U.S. and its biggest
corporations, especially the oil (or “energy”) companies.
For
the poor countries in the Western Hemisphere, the U.S. has acted like
a Monroe Doctrine predator on steroids, interfering in the democratic
processes of a number of countries as if they were colonies to be
used for their resources, whether natural or human. Particularly,
though, the threat of socialism and communism have always weighed
heavily on the minds of the America's colonial powers. No matter
what, they thought and acted upon the fear that some leader of some
nation would take to socialism: the idea that the resources of the
nation should be a benefit to the people, not to oligarchs or foreign
powers.
In
viewing what's happening to Venezuela today, it is instructive to
review what happened in Chile in 1973. Sept. 11, 1973, to be
specific. It was not particularly for oil that Salvador Allende was
overthrown as president, but that he was a Marxist and had the
socialist instincts of one and wished to begin spreading the wealth
of the nation among the people. He, like Maduro, would not be a
puppet of the U.S. government and its corporate masters, so he needed
to be eliminated. The U.S. campaign against him and his ideas started
long before he was elected president. The CIA had been at work there
for several years, since Allende came within a 3 percent margin of
becoming president in 1958. The U.S. campaign over the years involved
tens of millions of dollars spent on propaganda of every description:
newspapers, broadcast outlets, posters, and outreach to peasants,
students, labor unions, and other groups.
In
his well-researched book, The CIA: Forgotten History,”
published in 1986, William Blum wrote about the 1964 election in
Chile: “After channelling funds to several non-leftist parties,
the electoral (CIA) team eventually settled on a man of the centre,
Eduardo Frei, the candidate of the Christian Democratic Party, as the
one most likely to block Allende's rise to power. The CIA underwrote
more than half the party's total campaign costs, one of the reasons
that the Agency's overall electoral operation reduced the American
treasury by an estimated $20 million, much more per voter than that
spent by the Johnson and Goldwater campaigns combined in the same
year in the United States. The bulk of the expenditures went toward
propaganda.”
The
fear of Allende may sound familiar, as explained by Blum: “What
threat did he represent, this man against whom the great technical
and economic resources of the world's most powerful nation were
brought to bear? Allende was a man whose political programme, as
described by the (Senate) committee report was to 'redistribute
income (two percent of the population received 46 percent of the
income) and reshape the Chilean economy, beginning with the
nationalization of major industries, especially the copper companies;
greatly expand agrarian reforms; and expand relations with socialist
and communist countries.'”
U.S.
intervention around the world, but especially in this hemisphere,
goes on without interruption. There are those who are opposed to
these constant interventions, including this one in Venezuela, but
their voices are not much heard either in the U.S. or in the selected
country, amid the cacophony of propaganda which demonizes the target
leader or party. For example, U.S. Labor Against the War (USLAW)
issued a statement this month, saying in part: “The U.S. has no
legitimate claim to intervene in the internal affairs of other
countries, to take sides in internal political disputes, or to
undermine governments elected by the people. We have seen the
disastrous consequences of recent U.S. interventions in Iraq,
Afghanistan, Syria, and, through its alliance with Saudi Arabia, in
Yemen. U.S. intervention in Venezuela can only bring further hardship
and suffering, as followed U.S. support for the 2009 coup in Honduras
that overthrew the elected government there and contributed to the
stream of asylum-seekers now on our southern border seeking relief
from that disaster.”
When
the U.S. puts sanctions on a country and forces its allies and other
countries to adhere to the sanctions, it can bring most functions of
the government in question to a virtual halt. In the two years run-up
to the coup in 1973, every effort was made to destabilize Chile and
delegitimize Allende. Blum quoted then-American Ambassador Edward
Korry, who warned Chileans and the world: “Not a nut or bolt
(will) be allowed to reach Chile under Allende.” Such was the
power of the U.S. over other countries, just as it is with Maduro and
Venezuela. It doesn't take much imagination to determine what happens
to a country when it is shut off from the world by such powerful
sanctions. Of course, there are problems in Venezuela and people are
leaving, but some credence has to be given to the idea of intentional
destruction of that country's economy.
Oil
was the main economic driver for Chavez' Bolivarian Revolution. Some
of the difficulty with the oil economy has something to do with Saudi
Arabia's overproduction of oil that has driven down the prices of oil
from around $100 a barrel, to less than $30 a barrel. Saudi Arabia is
an “ally” of the U.S. and has been largely protected from
international criticism by Trump. Again, USLAW: “It reveals the
deep cynicism of U.S. policy makers that they denounce what they call
a dictatorial regime in Venezuela while providing unlimited support
to the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and its murderous absolute
dictatorship of the royal family. The U.S. also supports a host of
other autocrats, authoritarians, absolute monarchs and dictators in
Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Bahrain, Qatar,
Oman, United Arab Emirates, Egypt, to name a few.”
The
suffering of Venezuelans is far from over, as every effort is being
made to place in the position of highest power in that country a man
whom few Venezuelans know, but Trump, the U.S. right wing, and some
democrats and neoliberals are sure that he will do the their bidding,
including giving up most of the oil under their soil to the world
market. That is, to the giant transnational oil companies and their
beneficiaries in Congress and other deliberative bodies.
How
is it that such aggression can be perpetrated time after time,
without the slightest recognition that the rich and powerful are
hypocrites, through and through? It's said that “to the victor
go the spoils” and, as well, they get to write the history. The
arrogance of the powerful, which has caused so much suffering in the
world, perhaps can be summed up in one statement by Henry Kissinger,
in June 1970, advisor to the U.S. president, at a meeting of the
National Security Council's Forty Committee. He stated, according to
Blum: “I don't see why we need to stand by and watch a country
go communist because of the irresponsibility of its own people.”
What
followed in a short time was the overthrow of Allende and 17 years of
the brutal and bloody dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet, who was
placed under house arrest in Britain, but released on medical grounds
in March 2000. Although the charges against him numbered in the
hundreds, he escaped trial. He died in Santiago in 2006 of a heart
attack. The people of Chile were the ones who suffered most, as will
the people of Venezuela when the rich countries, led by Trump's U.S.,
are finished with them.
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