April 01, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" -
According
to the parable, the ungrateful son takes out a life
insurance policy on his parents, murders them to
collect, and is caught and found guilty. At his
sentencing, the judge asks if he has anything to say
on his behalf. The son replies: “Have mercy upon me
because I am an orphan.” That’s chutzpah.
U.S. Attorney General Barr’s
indictments on March 26 against the government of
Venezuela for narcoterrorism go beyond chutzpah. For
starters, William P. Barr was
chief counsel for the
CIA airline, Southern Air Transport, implicated in
the 1980s for running illicit drugs and related narco-terrorism
during
Iran-Contra.
The U.S. charges of drug trafficking against
Venezuela are the height of hypocrisy. The world’s
leading source of heroin is U.S.-occupied Afghanistan
and the U.S. is the world’s largest cocaine market.
The president of Honduras, Juan Orlando Hernández (JOH),
is the latest in a line of corrupt presidents since the
2009 U.S.-backed coup there. JOH was identified as an
unindicted
co-conspirator in October by a US federal court for
smuggling millions of dollars worth of cocaine into the
U.S.
Colombia is the chief regional U.S. client state,
distinguished by being the largest recipient of U.S.
military aid in the hemisphere. Hillary Clinton called
Plan Colombia a model for Latin America. Yet this model
is the planet’s largest
supplier of illicit cocaine. And that’s only
scratching the surface of U.S. history of complicity in
international narcotrafficking.
The false criminal charges by the U.S. government
against fourteen high-ranking Venezuelan officials are
for alleged involvement in international drug
trafficking. The U.S. government has, in effect, put a
$15 million bounty on
Venezuelan President Maduro and bounties of $10 million
each for the head of the National Constituent Assembly
and other leading officials and former officials.
Thirty years ago, the U.S. posted a $1 million reward
on the head of
Manuel Noriega, then president of Panama, on charges
of narcotrafficking. Noriega had long been a
U.S. security asset assisting in the CIA’s dirty
Contra war against the Sandinista government in
Nicaragua.
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Noriega had also used his U.S. patronage
to consolidate his rule in Panama as well as
his ties with Colombian drug cartels.
However, toward the end of his tenure,
Noriega did not demonstrate a sufficient
level of servility to his U.S. handlers and
was deposed in the U.S. invasion of Panama
in 1989, taking the lives of many
uncounted civilians.
As RT warns:
“The US indictment of Venezuelan President Nicolás
Maduro and his subordinates on narcotrafficking charges
echoes the rationale used to invade Panama and kidnap
its leader.” Unlike the Noriega case, where the
Panamanian president was convicted of massive drug
trafficking with the knowledge and full protection of
the CIA and other security agencies, the U.S. lacks
evidence against the Venezuelans.
The U.S.
claims that Venezuelan officials are conspiring to
“flood the United States with cocaine” are thoroughly
groundless. Even the Washington Office on Latin America
(WOLA), a Washington-based think tank that supports
regime change in Venezuela,
found in a recent detailed report using the U.S.
government’s own data that the facts do not support such
bogus claims.
The authoritative U.S. interagency Consolidated
Counterdrug Database reports, in fact, that 93 percent
of U.S.-bound cocaine is trafficked through western
Caribbean and eastern Pacific routes, not through
Venezuela’s eastern Caribbean coast. Over six times as
much cocaine flowed through the U.S.-allied Guatemala
than Venezuela in 2018.
Yes, some illicit drugs do flow through Venezuela – a
minor amount compared to those emanating from U.S.
client states – but the culprits are criminal gangs that
the very indicted officials are fighting. The coca is
grown and manufactured into cocaine in neighboring
Colombia, not Venezuela. While supporting U.S.
government actions to undermine Venezuelan state
institutions, WOLA
recognizes: “Venezuela’s state institutions have
deteriorated…In this environment, armed groups and
organized criminal structures, including drug
trafficking groups, have thrived.”
Yet WOLA’s
conclusion is: “US government data suggests that,
despite these challenges, Venezuela is not a primary
transit country for US-bound cocaine. US policy toward
Venezuela should be predicated on a realistic
understanding of the transnational drug trade.”
The indictments against the government of Venezuela
are a
ramping up of a policy of regime change. Ever since
Hugo Chávez was elected president of Venezuela in 1998
and launched the Bolivarian Revolution, the hostile U.S.
government has floated consistently unsubstantiated
accusations of narcotrafficking.
More recently the Trump administration has sought to
replace the democratically elected president of
Venezuela with a U.S.-chosen and groomed
security asset. Juan Guaidó, the man anointed by
Trump to be president of Venezuela, had never run for
the presidency, nor served as president. He was
unknown to 81 percent of the Venezuelan population
at the time of his self-declaration as president.
Besides these dubious qualifications, Guaidó
collaborated with the right-wing Colombian
drug cartel and paramilitary group known as Los
Rastrojos and even posed for pictures with some of their
operatives, which were
posted on Twitter.
The ever-tightening unilateral coercive measures on
Venezuela by the U.S. have created a blockade, costing
Venezuela
over 100,000 lives. Sanctions are not an alternative
to war but an economic
form of warfare and just as deadly. As such,
unilateral economic sanctions are an explicit
violation of international law under the charters of
the United Nations and the Organization of American
States and even under U.S. law.
Unfortunately, Venezuela is not alone. The rogue
empire’s sanctions now blight
a third of the world’s population in 39 countries.
This latest escalation of the U.S.
hybrid war against Venezuela takes place within the
context of the global
coronavirus pandemic, which the U.S. empire sees as
an opportunity to further attack the Venezuelan people
made more vulnerable by the health crisis. Indeed, the
State Department has
declared “Maximum-pressure March” against Venezuela.
In service of the empire,
Twitter has closed the accounts of the Venezuelan
ministries of health, science, education, and housing.
Meanwhile, Cuba, Russia, and China are all materially
supporting the Maduro government’s
successful efforts to contain the spread of COVID-19
in Venezuela. In contrast to this internationalist
solidarity, the U.S. is in the midst of the largest
war games in 25 years, Defend Europe 20, in
contravention of World Health Organization quarantine
protocols.
Words cannot sufficiently describe the
inhumane perfidy of the U.S. empire’s response to
the
pandemic. This should be a time for the U.S.
government to drop the unsupported indictments against
President Maduro and other Venezuelan officials, to lift
the inhumane and illegal sanctions on Venezuela so that
Venezuela can purchase medicines and equipment to better
fight the coronavirus pandemic and to restore normal
relations with Venezuela based on respect for national
sovereignty.
Roger D. Harris is with the
Task Force on the Americas, a human rights group
working in solidarity with the social justice movements
in Latin America and the Caribbean since 1985.
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