Why must Venezuela be destroyed?
By Dmitry Orlov
February 01, 2019 "Information
Clearing House"
- Last
week Trump, his VP Mike Pence, US State
Dept. director Mike Pompeo and Trump’s
national security advisor John Bolton, plus
a bunch of Central American countries that
are pretty much US colonies and don’t have
foreign policies of their own, synchronously
announced that Venezuela has a new
president: a virtual non-entity named Juan
Guaidó, who was never even a candidate for
that office, but who was sorta-kinda trained
for this job in the US. Guaidó appeared at a
rally in Caracas, flanked by a tiny claque
of highly compensated sycophants. He looked
very frightened as he self-appointed himself
president of Venezuela and set about
discharging his presidential duties by
immediately going into hiding.
His whereabouts remained unknown until much
later, when he surfaced at a press
conference, at which he gave a wishy-washy
non-answer to the question of whether he had
been pressured to declare himself president
or had done so of his own volition. There is
much to this story that is at once tragic
and comic, so let’s take it apart piece by
piece. Then we’ll move on to answering the
question of Why Venezuela must be destroyed
(from the US establishment’s perspective).
What stands out immediately is the
combination of incompetence and desperation
exhibited by all of the above-mentioned
public and not-so-public figures. Pompeo, in
voicing his recognition of Guaidó, called
him “guido,” which is an ethnic slur against
Italians, while Bolton did one better and
called him “guiado” which could be Spanish
for “remote-controlled.” (Was that a
Freudian slip or just another one of
Bolton’s senior moments?) Not to be outdone,
Pence gave an entire little speech on
Venezuela—a sort of address to the
Venezuelan people—which was laced with some
truly atrocious pseudo-Spanish gibberish and
ended with an utterly incongruous “¡Vaya con
Dios!” straight out of a hammy 1950s
Western.
Some more entertainment was provided at the
UN Security Council, where the
ever-redoubtable Russian representative
Vasily Nebenzya pointed out that the
situation in Venezuela did not pose a threat
to international security and was therefore
not within the purview of the Security
Council. He then proceeded to ask Pompeo,
who was present at the meeting, a pointed
question: “Is the US planning to yet again
violate the UN Charter?”
Are You Tired Of The Lies And Non-Stop Propaganda? |
Pompeo failed to give an answer. He sat
there looking like a cat that’s pretending
that it isn’t chewing on a canary, then
quickly fled the scene. But then most
recently Bolton, as he was presumably
exiting a national security meeting and
walking to a White House press briefing,
accidentally flashed his notepad before
reporters’ cameras. On it were written the
words “5000 troops to Colombia” (that’s a US
military base/narco-colony on Venezuela’s
northern border). Was this another one of
Bolton’s senior moments? In any case, it
does seem to answer Nebenzya’s question in
the affirmative. The appointment as special
envoy to Venezuela of Elliott Abrams, a
convicted criminal who was complicit in the
previous, failed Venezuelan coup attempt
against Hugo Chávez, automatically making
him persona non grata in Venezuela, is also
indicative of hostile intent.
It would be quite forgivable for you to
mistake this regime change operation for
some sort of absurdist performance art. It
is certainly a bit too abstract for the
real-world complexities of the international
order. Some poor frightened minion is thrust
in front of a camera and declares himself
President of Narnia, and then three stooges
(Pence, Pompeo and Bolton) plus Bozo the
Trump all jump up and yell “Yes-yes-yes,
that’s surely him!” And a pensioned-off
failure is pulled off the bench, dusted off
and dispatched on a mission to a country
that won’t have him.
Meanwhile, back in the real world, the
Venezuelan army and the Venezuelan courts
remains squarely behind the elected
president Nicolas Maduro and a list of
countries that comprise the vast majority of
the world’s population, including China,
Russia, India, Mexico, Turkey, South Africa
and quite a few others speak out in Maduro’s
support. Even the people in the
remote-controlled Central American countries
know full well what a dangerous precedent
such a regime change operation would set if
it were to succeed, and are thinking: “¡Hoy
Venezuela, mañana nosotros!”
To be thorough, let’s look at the arguments
being used to advance this regime change
operation. There is the contention that
Nicolas Maduro is not a legitimate president
because last year’s elections, where he was
supported by 68% of those who turned out,
lacked transparency and were boycotted by
certain opposition parties, whereas Juan
Guaidó is 100% legit in spite of him and his
inconsequential National Assembly being
opposed by 70% of Venezuelans according to
the opposition’s own polling numbers. There
were also some unfounded allegations of
“ballot-box stuffing”—except that the
Venezuelans do not use paper ballots, while
according to international election-watcher
and former US president Jimmy Carter, “the
election process in Venezuela is the best in
the world.”
There is the contention that Maduro has
badly mismanaged Venezuela’s economy,
leading to hyperinflation, high
unemployment, shortages of basic goods
(medicines especially) and a refugee crisis.
There is some merit to this contention, but
we must also note that some of Venezuela’s
neighbors are doing even worse in many
respects in spite of Maduro not being their
president. Also, many of Venezuela’s
economic difficulties have been caused by US
sanctions against it. For instance, right
now around 8 billion dollars of Venezuela’s
money is being held hostage and is intended
to be used to finance a mercenary army which
would invade and attempt to destroy
Venezuela just as was done with Syria.
Finally, a lot of Venezuela’s predicament
has to do with the oil curse. Venezuela has
the largest oil reserves in the world, but
its oil is very viscous and therefore
expensive to produce. During a period of
high oil prices Venezuelans became addicted
to the oil largess, which the government
used to lift millions of people out of
abject poverty and to move them out of slums
and into government housing. And now low oil
prices have caused a crisis. If Venezuela
manages to survive this period, it will be
able to recover once oil prices recover
(which they will once the fracking Ponzi
scheme in the US has run its course). We
will return to the topic of Venezuelan oil
later.
As a side comment, a lot of people have been
voicing the opinion that Venezuela’s woes
are due to socialism. According to them,
it’s fine if lots of people are suffering as
long as their government is capitalist, but
if it is socialist then that’s the wrong
kind of suffering and their government
deserves to be overthrown even if they all
voted for it. For example, the site
ZeroHedge, which often publishes useful
information and analysis, has been pushing
this line of thinking ad nauseam. It is
unfortunate that some people imagine that
they are being principled and right-thinking
whereas they are just being dumb jerks at
best and somebody’s useful idiots at worst.
The politics of other nations are not for
them to decide and they should stop wasting
our time with their nonsense.
This naked attempt at regime change would
set a very dangerous precedent for the US
itself. The doctrine of legal precedent is
by no means universal. It comes to us from
the dim dark ages of tribal English common
law and is only followed in former British
colonies. To the rest of the world it is a
barbaric form of injustice because it grants
arbitrary power to judges and lawyers. The
courts must not be allowed to write or alter
laws, only to follow them. If your case can
be decided on the basis of some other case
that has nothing to do with you—well then,
why not let somebody else pay your legal
fees and your fines and serve out your
sentence for you? But there is an
overarching principle of international law,
which is that sovereign nations have a right
to keep to their own laws and legal
traditions. Therefore, the US will be bound
by the precedents which it establishes.
Let’s see how that would work.
The precedent established by the US
government’s recognition of Juan Guaidó
allows Nicolas Maduro to declare Donald
Trump’s presidency as illegitimate for
virtually all of the same reasons. Trump
failed to win the popular vote but only
gained the presidency because of a corrupt,
gerrymandered electoral system. Also,
certain opposition candidates were unfairly
treated within the electoral process. Trump
is also a disgrace and a failure: 43 million
people are on food stamps; close to 100
million are among the long-term unemployed
(circularly referred to as “not in labor
force”); homelessness is rampant and there
are entire tent cities springing up in
various US cities; numerous US companies are
on the verge of bankruptcy; and Trump can’t
even seem to be able to keep the federal
government open! He is a disaster for his
country! Maduro therefore recognizes Bernie
Sanders as the legitimate president of the
United States.
Vladimir Putin could then build on these two
precedents by also recognizing Bernie
Sanders as the rightful US president. In a
public speech, he could say the following:
“I freely admit that we installed Donald
Trump as US president as was our right based
on the numerous precedents established by
the US itself. Unfortunately, Trump didn’t
work out as planned. Mueller can retire,
because this flash drive contains everything
that’s necessary to nullify Trump’s
inauguration. Donny, sorry it didn’t work
out! Your Russian passport is ready for
pick-up at our embassy, as are your keys to
a one-bedroom in Rostov, right next door to
the Ukraine’s former president Viktor
Yanukovich who was violently regime-changed
by your predecessor Obama.”
Why the unseemly haste to blow up Venezuela?
The explanation is a simple one: it has to
do with oil. “It will make a big difference
to the United States economically if we
could have American oil companies invest in
and produce the oil capabilities in
Venezuela.” said John Bolton on Fox News.
You see, Venezuelan oil cannot be produced
profitably without high oil prices—so high
that many oil consumers would go
bankrupt—but it can certainly be produced in
much higher quantities at a huge financial
loss.
Huge financial losses certainly wouldn’t
stop American oil companies who have so far
generated a $300 billion loss through
fracking—financed by looting retirement
savings, saddling future generations with
onerous debt and other nefarious schemes.
Also keep in mind that the single largest
oil consumer in the world is the US Dept. of
Defense, and if it has to pay a little more
for oil in order to go on blowing up
countries—so it will. Or, rather, you will.
It’s all the same to them. The US is already
well beyond broke, but its leaders will do
anything to keep the party going for just a
while longer.
Here’s the real problem: the fracking
bonanza is ending. Most of the sweet spots
have already been tapped; newer wells are
depleting faster and producing less while
costing more; the next waves of fracking,
were they to happen, would squander $500
billion, then $1 trillion, then $2 trillion…
The drilling rate is already slowing, and
started slowing even while oil prices were
still high. Meanwhile, peak conventional
(non-fracked) oil happened back in 2005-6,
only a few countries haven’t peaked yet,
Russia has announced that it will start
reducing production in just a couple years
and Saudi Arabia doesn’t have any spare
capacity left.
A rather large oil shortage is coming, and
it will rather specifically affect the US,
which burns 20% of the world’s oil (with
just 5% of the world’s population). Once
fracking crashes, the US will go from having
to import 2.5 million barrels per day to
importing at least 10—and that oil won’t
exist. Previously, the US was able to solve
this problem by blowing up countries and
stealing their oil: the destruction of Iraq
and Libya made American oil companies whole
for a while and kept the financial house of
cards from collapsing. But the effort to
blow up Syria has failed, and the attempt to
blow up Venezuela is likely to fail too
because, keep in mind, Venezuela has between
7 and 9 million Chavistas imbued with the
Bolivarian revolutionary spirit, a large and
well-armed military and is generally a very
tough neighborhood.
Previously, the US resorted to various dirty
tricks to legitimize its aggression against
oil-rich countries and its subsequent theft
of their natural resources. There was that
vial of highly toxic talcum powder Colin
Powell shook at the UN to get it to vote in
favor of destroying Iraq and stealing its
oil. There was the made-up story of
humanitarian atrocities in Libya to get the
votes for a no-fly zone there (which turned
out to be a bombing campaign followed by a
government overthrow). But with Venezuela
there isn’t any such fig leaf. All we have
is open threats of naked aggression and
blatant lies which nobody believes,
delivered incompetently by clowns, stooges
and old fogies.
If Plan A (steal Venezuela’s oil) fails,
then Plan B is to take all of your US
dollar-denominated paper waste—cash, stocks,
bonds, deeds, insurance policies, promissory
notes, etc.—and burn it in trash barrels in
an effort to stay warm. There is a definite
whiff of desperation to the whole affair.
The global hegemon is broken; it fell down
and it can’t get up.
Dmitry Orlov is a Russian-American engineer and a writer on subjects related to "potential economic, ecological and political decline and collapse in the United States," something he has called “permanent crisis”. Orlov believes collapse will be the result of huge military budgets, government deficits, an unresponsive political system and declining oil production. https://cluborlov.blogspot.com/2019/01/why-must-venezuela-be-destroyed.html
Do you agree or disagree? Post your comment here
==See Also==
Note To ICH Community
We ask that you assist us in dissemination of the article published by ICH to your social media accounts and post links to the article from other websites.
Thank you for your support.
Peace and joy