Biden’s vision for Venezuela is
virtually indistinguishable from Trump’s
A campaign event demonstrated that when it comes to
Venezuela, policies of regime change, sanctions, and
refusal to engage in dialogue, Biden and Trump are
two sides of the same coin.
By Leonardo Flores
July 27, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" - The Biden campaign held an
online event on July 8 pitched as the former vice
president’s “vision for Venezuela and Venezuelans in the
U.S.” Spoiler alert: his vision for Venezuela barely
differs from President Trump’s.
This event, which didn’t merit an
appearance from Biden himself, was aimed at getting
Venezuelan-Americans to volunteer for “Uncle Joe,” as
Representative Darren Soto (D-Fl) called him. It was an
hour and a half of shilling for votes and influence, and
it demonstrated that, when it comes to Venezuela,
policies of regime change, sanctions, and a refusal to
engage in dialogue unite VenezolanosConBiden (the group
hosting the event) with MAGAzuela (the term for
Trump-supporting Venezuelans).
There are only two policy differences in
the Biden and Trump approaches to Venezuela. One is
about TPS, or temporary protected status, which is an
immigration policy that allows people from 10 specific
countries affected by disasters to live and work in the
U.S. Biden supports TPS for Venezuelans, while Trump
allies have blocked it in the Senate, and Trump himself
ended the program and has refused to issue it for
Venezuelans. According to one of Biden’s surrogates,
there are 150,000 Venezuelans in the U.S. who are either
undocumented or are here on expired visas.
This money was previously held in the
Treasury Department’s “forfeiture fund,” which is
typically used to finance law enforcement operations.
This $601 million is part of an estimated
$24 billion that the U.S. and its allies have frozen and
looted from Venezuela in their regime-change efforts.
Juan Guaidó, the self-proclaimed interim president,
has yet to comment on how the Trump administration is
using these Venezuelan funds, but his “ambassador,”
Carlos Vecchio, admitted to working with the Justice
Department to “establish
a formal agreement … to define the percentage” of
how much of the seized Venezuelan funds will go to the
United States. According to Guaidó and his associates,
it is “normal” for the Trump administration to take a
cut.
TPS and the wall are the only two points on
which Biden and Trump differ. Biden’s surrogates claim
he will grant TPS to Venezuelans on day one of his
administration, and Biden says he will stop financing
the wall.
These differences are minor though,
especially considering that Biden will continue the
policies that have led millions of Venezuelans to flee
in the first place, and he has given every indication
that more funds will be frozen.
Biden’s vision is more of the same magical
thinking that the Trump administration has engaged in
for years. His campaign says the sanctions will continue
and actually intensify. A Biden administration would
seek “a huge increase in aid,” not just for Venezuela
but for Colombia and other countries with Venezuelan
migrants. They would build an “international coalition”
to rebuild Venezuela. They would persecute key
supporters of the Venezuelan government, regardless of
where they are in the world.
According to Juan González, former deputy
assistant secretary of state under Obama and current
advisor to Biden on Latin America, they would give the
government of
President Nicolás Maduro one option: elections
observed by a respected (and unnamed) multilateral
institution and he must leave office.
Biden’s surrogates warn that Venezuela is a
national security issue for the U.S., that the country
has been infiltrated by terrorist groups and everything
must be done to end Russian, Chinese, and Cuban
influence. They responded to a question about the impact
of sanctions by blaming the “humanitarian crisis” on
Chavismo. They say Biden will not negotiate with Maduro.
The Biden campaign even attacked Trump for
suggesting he would meet with Maduro, forcing Trump to
backtrack on the offer. The campaign has been
running
ads in Miami accusing Trump of being soft on Maduro.
Biden’s policies are the same policies and
reflect the exact rhetoric used by the Trump
administration. Since 2017, the U.S. has imposed
sanctions that have cost
100,000 Venezuelans their lives and led to economic
losses of $130 billion. But according to Biden
supporter Rep. Soto, “there hasn’t been enough of a
crackdown” on the Maduro government.
Trump has spent three years building an
approximately 60-country anti-Maduro coalition, and
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has traveled the world
seeking more aid allegedly for Venezuela, but that ends
up in countries with Venezuelan migrants. They have
sanctioned foreign companies doing business with
Venezuela and sought to arrest Venezuelan businessmen
overseas.
On the issue of military intervention, the
Biden surrogates claimed Trump’s threats of a military
option were empty and insisted other options must be
explored and all other avenues of pressure exhausted
(except, of course, dialogue) before considering
military action. They did not say whether U.S.
intervention should be “on the table,” and framed the
discussion around the U.S. public’s alleged aversion to
another war rather than on the catastrophic consequences
this would have for the Venezuelan people, let alone the
illegality of any sort of military intervention.
It is no secret that regime change in
Venezuela is a bipartisan objective, and Trump’s tactic
of pandering to right-wing latino extremists in Florida
has led the Democrats to do the same.
The Biden campaign strategy is clear: mimic
the administration’s Venezuela policy while offering TPS
to draw votes away from Trump.
The surrogates also repeatedly insisted
that Biden is not a socialist – apparently a common
misconception among the MAGAzuela crowd.
It should be no surprise that this is all
about Florida and the 2020 election. Trump not only won
the state in 2016, but his allies took the governorship
and a Senate seat in 2018, albeit by small margins.
Republican Governor Ron DeSantis and
Senator Rick Scott both accused their opponents of
being socialists who are soft on Venezuela. The Biden
camp is doing its utmost to prevent those types of
attacks from sticking against their candidate.
There is no reason to believe that Biden
will change course on Venezuela if elected. There are
too many votes in Florida at stake, as well as donations
to be had from wealthy Venezuelan expats – who at this
point are playing both sides and doing so very well.
A Biden presidency, just like another four
more years of Trump, looks to be disastrous for the
Venezuelan people.
Leonardo Flores is a Latin
American policy expert and campaigner with CODEPINK.
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