This is not the first time that the Trump
administration has amplified its regime change
efforts in response to negotiations between the
Venezuelan government and the opposition.
By Leonardo FloresMarch 16, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" -
The first quarter of 2020
has seen the Trump administration escalate its
rhetoric against Venezuela. At the State of the
Union, President Trump promised to “smash” and
destroy the Venezuelan government. This was followed
by a renewed
threat of a naval blockade on the country, which
is an act of war under U.S. and international law.
Then the State Department eagerly noted that the “Monroe
Doctrine 2.0” will be “fleshed out in the weeks
and months to come,” while declaring
“maximum-pressure March” against Venezuela.
These aren’t just mere threats; the rhetoric has
been backed up by policies and actions. Russian oil
company Rosneft, one of the world’s primary
purchasers of Venezuelan oil, has seen two of its
subsidiaries sanctioned in less than one month for
doing business with Venezuela. The State Department
telegraphed this move in February, singling out
oil companies Rosneft, Reliance (India) and Repsol
(Spain). Chevron, the biggest U.S. oil company still
working in Venezuela, has been warned by the Trump
administration that its license to operate in the
country (which exempts it from the sanctions)
will not be renewed.
Since 2015, the U.S. government has sanctioned
49 oil tankers, 18 Venezuelan companies, 60 foreign
companies and 56 airplanes (41 belonging to state
airliner Conviasa and 15 belonging to state oil
company PDVSA), but this is the first time they’ve
gone after foreign oil companies. By targeting
Rosneft Trading and TNK Trading (the two Rosneft
subsidiaries), the United States makes it
next-to-impossible for those firms to continue
trading in Venezuela oil, as shipping companies,
insurance companies and banks will refuse to work
with them.
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The sanctions have taken a heavy toll,
causing at least 130 billion dollars’ worth
of damage to the economy
between 2015 and 2018. Even worse,
according to former U.N. special rapporteur
Alfred de Zayas, the
sanctions been responsible for the death of
over 100,000 Venezuelans. It is
therefore not surprising that Venezuela
asked that the International Criminal Court
investigate the
sanctions as crimes against humanity.
The effects of the sanctions are most noticeable
in Venezuela’s health sector, which has been
decimated over the past five years. These measures
have impeded banks from carrying out financial
transactions for the purchase of medical supplies.
In addition, they have caused a 90% decrease in
Venezuela’s foreign income earnings, depriving the
health sector of much needed investment. Were it not
for the solidarity of
China and
Cuba, which sent testing kits and medicine,
Venezuela would be woefully ill-equipped to handle
the coronavirus. The sanctions are worsening an
already dangerous situation, forcing Venezuela to
spend three times as much for testing kits as
non-sanctioned countries.
President Maduro appealed directly to Trump to
lift the sanction to combat this global pandemic.
Yet this appeal will likely go unanswered, given the
intensification not just in sanctions, but in the
violent opposition’s acts of irregular warfare. On
March 7, a warehouse containing virtually all of
Venezuela’s electronic voting machines was
deliberately burned to the ground. A group named
the Venezuelan Patriotic Front,
allegedly composed of soldiers and policemen,
claimed responsibility for this terrorist act.
Although no direct connection can (yet) be made
between this group and the Trump administration, it
beggars belief that an operation requiring
significant logistical and financial costs would not
have received support from at least one the many
actors openly engaged in regime change: the Trump
administration, the Duque administration in
Colombia, the Bolsonaro administration in Brazil or
the extremist right-wing opposition factions lead by
Juan Guaidó.
The silence from the international community on
this terrorist act is deafening, but should not be
surprising. After all, there were no denunciations
from the OAS, EU or U.S. when a
warehouse containing telecommunications equipment
was similarly burned in February, or when
rebel soldiers attacked barracks in southern
Venezuela in December 2019.
There is already evidence that Venezuelan
paramilitaries opposed to the Maduro government have
received support and training in both
Colombia and
Brazil, not to mention the
alleged millions of dollars spent by the U.S.to
get Venezuelan military officials to turn on the
government. In addition to supporting irregular
warfare, the Trump administration is preparing for
conventional warfare. The
threat of a naval blockade – an act of outright
war – was followed up by separate meetings between
Trump, Defense Secretary Mark Esper and high-ranking
military officials with
Colombian President Ivan Duque and
Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro. (Ironically,
while meeting with the Brazilian delegation to
discuss the destruction of the Maduro government,
Trump was likely exposed to coronavirus. One of
the delegation’s members, Bolsonaro’s communications
secretary, tested positive for the disease.) In
addition to the naval blockade, the U.S. plans an “enhanced
presence of ships, aircraft and security forces
to... counter a range of threats to include illicit
narco-terrorism,” a clear reference to Venezuela
despite the fact that according to the U.S.
government’s own statistics, it is
not a primary transit country for drug trafficking.
“Maximum pressure March” is timed to coincide
with
important negotiations in Caracas between the
Venezuelan government and moderate sectors of the
opposition. The two sides have set up a commission
that will select new members of the National
Electoral Council in time for this year’s
legislative elections. One of Juan Guaidó’s allies,
Henry Ramos Allup, leader of opposition party Acción
Democrática (Democratic Action), came under fire
from the extreme right for saying
he will participate in the elections. The terror
attack on the voting machines is unlikely to affect
the timing of the elections, but without its system
of electronic voting backed up by paper receipts and
audits of the vote count, the results will be
vulnerable to claims of fraud.
This is not the first time that the Trump
administration has amplified its regime change
efforts in response to negotiations between the
Venezuelan government and the opposition. It did so
in February 2018, when then-Secretary of State Rex
Tillerson threatened an oil embargo and said he
would welcome a military coup right as the two sides
were about to sign a comprehensive agreement worked
on for months in the Dominican Republic. It happened
again in August 2019, when the U.S. applied what the
Wall Street Journal characterized as a “total
economic embargo” in the middle of discussions
between the Guaidó-led opposition and government.
Both times, negotiations fell apart as a result of
U.S. government actions and statements. This time it
is unlikely that the pressure will scuttle dialogue,
as moderate opposition politicians are coming to
terms with the fact that
82% of Venezuelans reject sanctions and support
dialogue. Unfortunately, the Trump
administration has made it clear it doesn’t care
about what Venezuelans want. Instead, it continues
to ramp up the pressure and might even be setting
the scene for a military intervention, perhaps an
October surprise to help Trump’s reelection bid.
Leonardo Flores is a Latin American policy
expert and campaigner with CodePink.
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