US and Venezuela:
Decades of Defeats and Destabilization
By James Petras
March 05, 2015 "ICH"
- Introduction: US
policy toward Venezuela is a microcosm
of its larger strategy toward Latin
America. The intent is to reverse the
region’s independent foreign policy and
to restore US dominance; to curtail the
diversification of trading and
investment partners and re-center
economic relations to the US; to replace
regional integration pacts with US
centered economic integration schemes;
and to privatize firms partly or wholly
nationalized.
The resort to military coups in
Venezuela is a strategy designed to
impose a client regime. This is a replay
of US strategy during the 1964-1983
period. In those two decades US
strategists successfully collaborated
with business-military elites to
overthrow nationalist and socialist
governments, privatize public
enterprises and reverse, social, labor
and welfare policies. The client regimes
implemented neo-liberal policies and
supported US centered “integration”. The
entire spectrum of representative
institutions, political parties, trade
unions and civil society organizations
were banned and replaced by imperial
funded NGO’s, state controlled parties
and trade unions. With this perspective
in mind the US has returned to all out
“regime change” in Venezuela as the
first step to a
continent-wide transformation to
reassert political, economic and social
dominance.
Washington’s resort to
political violence, all out media
warfare, economic sabotage and military
coups in Venezuela is an attempt to
discover the
effectiveness of these tactics
under
favorable conditions, including a
deepening economic recession, double
digit inflation, declining living
standards and weakening political
support, as a dress rehearsal for other
countries in the region
Washington’s
earlier resort to a “regime
change” strategy in Venezuela, Bolivia,
Argentina and Ecuador failed because
objective circumstances were
unfavorable. Between 2003 to 2012 the
national-populist or center-left regimes
were
increasing political support,
their economies were growing, incomes
and consumption were improving and
pro-US regimes and clients had earlier
collapsed under the weight of a systemic
crises. Moreover, the negative
consequences of military coups were
fresh in peoples’ minds. Today
Washington’s strategists believe that
Venezuela is the
easiest and most
important target because of its
structural vulnerabilities and because
Caracas is the linchpin to Latin
American integration and welfare
populism.
According to
Washington’s domino theory, Cuba will be
more susceptible to pressure if it is
cut-off from Venezuela’s subsidized
oil-for-medical services agreement.
Ecuador and Bolivia will be vulnerable.
Regional integration will be diluted or
replaced by US directed trade
agreements. Argentina’s drift to the
right will be accelerated. The US
military presence will be enlarged
beyond Colombia, Peru, Paraguay and
Central America. Radical
anti-imperialist ideology will be
replaced by a revised form of
“pan-Americanism”, a euphemism for
imperial primacy.
The concentrated and
prolonged US war against Venezuela and
the resort to extremist tactics and
groups can only be accounted for by what
US strategists perceive as the
large scale (continent-wide)
long-term interests at stake.
We will proceed by
discussing and analyzing the US fifteen
year war (2000-2015) against Venezuela,
now reaching a climax. We will
then turn to examining the past and
current
strengths and weakness of
Venezuela’s democratic, anti-imperialist
government.
Prolonged Political
Warfare: Multiple Forms of Attack in
Changing Political Conjunctures
The US war against
Venezuela started shortly after
President Chavez’s election in 1999. His
convoking of a constitutional assembly
and referendum and the subsequent
inclusion of a strong component of
popular participatory and nationalist
clauses “rang bells” in Washington. The
presence of a large contingent of former
guerrillas, Marxists and Leftists in the
Chavez electoral campaign and regime,
was the signal for Washington to develop
a strategy of regrouping traditional
business and political clients to
pressure and limit changes.
Subsequent to 9/11/01,
Washington launched its global military
offensive, projecting power via the
so-called “war on terror”. Washington’s
quest to reassert dominance in the
Americas included demands that Venezuela
fall into line and back Washington’s
global military offensive. President
Chavez refused and set an example of
independent politics for the
nationalist-populist movements and
emerging center-left regimes in Latin
America. President Chavez told President
Bush “you don’t fight terror with
terror”.
In response, by
November 2001 Washington strategists
shifted from a policy of
pressure to contain change to a
strategy of all-out warfare to
overthrow the Chavez regime via a
business-military coup in (April 2002).
The US backed coup was
defeated in less than 72 hours. Chavez
was restored to power by an alliance of
loyalist military forces backed by a
spontaneous million person march.
Washington lost important assets among
the military and business elite, who
fled into exile or were jailed.
From December 2002 to
February 2003, The White House backed an
executive lockout in the strategic oil
industry, supported by corrupt trade
union officials aligned with Washington
and the AFL-CIO. After three months the
lockout was defeated through an alliance
of loyalist trade unionists, mass
organizations and overseas petrol
producing countries. The US lost
strategic assets in the oil industry as
over 15,000 executives, managers and
workers were fired and replaced by
nationalist loyalists. The oil industry
was renationalized – its earnings were
put at the service of social welfare.
Having lost assets
essential to violent warfare, Washington
promoted a strategy of
electoral politics – organizing a
referendum in 2004 which was won by
Chavez and a boycott of the 2005
congressional elections, which failed
and led to an overwhelming majority for
the pro Chavez forces.
Having failed to
secure regime change via internal
violent and electoral warfare,
Washington, having suffered a serious
loss of internal assets,
turned outside by organizing
para-military death squads and
the Colombian military to engage in
cross border conflicts in alliance with
the far right regime of Alvaro Uribe.
Colombia’s military incursions led
Venezuela to break economic ties,
costing influential Colombian
agro-business exporters ad
manufacturers’ losses exceeding $8
billion dollars . . . Uribe backed off
and signed a non-aggression accord with
Chavez, undermining the US “proxy war”
strategy.
Washington revised its
tactics, returning to electoral and
street fighting tactics. Between
2008-2011/12 Washington channeled
millions of dollars to finance electoral
party politicians, NGO’s, mass media
outlets (newspapers, television and
radio)
and direct action saboteurs of
public energy, electricity and power
stations.
The US “internal”
political offensive had
limited success – a coalition of
warring rightwing political groups
elected a
minority of officials thus
regaining an institutional presence. A
Chavez backed overtly socialist
referendum was defeated (by less than
1%). NGO’s gained influence in the
universities and in some popular
neighborhoods exploiting the corruption
and ineptness of local Chavez elected
officials.
But the US strategy
failed to dislodge or weaken the Chavez
led regime for several reasons.
Venezuela’s economy was riding the
prolonged commodity boom. Oil prices
were soaring above $100 a barrel,
financing free health, education,
housing, fuel and food subsidy programs,
undercutting the so-called “grass-roots”
agitation of US funded NGO’s
Government subsidies
of imports and lax regulation of dollar
reserves secured support even among the
capitalists and loosened their support
for the violent opposition. Sectors of
the middle class voted for Chavez as a
ticket to the consumer society.
Secondly, President
Chavez’s charismatic appeal, promotion
and support of popular neighborhood
groups
counter-acted the ill-effects of
corrupt and inept local “Chavista”
officials who otherwise played into the
hands of US backed opposition.
Thirdly, US
intervention in Venezuela
alienated not only the center-left but
the entire political spectrum in Latin
America,
isolating Washington. This was
especially evident by the universal
condemnation of the US backed military
coup in Honduras in 2009.
Fourthly, the US could
not counter Venezuela’s subsidized oil
sales to Caribbean and Central American
regimes. Petrocaribe strengthened
Venezuela and weakened US dominance in
Washington’s historical “backyard”.
The entire
electoral strategy of the US
depended on
fomenting an
economic crises – and given the
favorable world prices for oil on the
world market (it failed). As a result
Washington depended on
non-market strategies to disrupt
the socio-economic links between mass
consumers and the Chavez government.
Washington encouraged
sabotage of the power and electrical
grid. It encouraged hoarding and price
gouging by commercial capitalists
(supermarket owners). It encouraged
smugglers to purchase thousands of tons
of subsidized consumer goods and sell
them across the border in Colombia.
In other words, the US
combined its
electoral strategy with violent
sabotage and illegal economic
disruption.
This
strategy was intensified with the
onset of the economic crises following
the financial crash of 2009, the decline
of commodity prices and the death of
President Hugo Chavez.
The US and its mass
media megaphones went all-out to
defend the protagonists and
practioners of illegal violent actions –
branding arrested saboteurs, assassins,
street fighters, assailants of public
institutions as “political prisoners”.
Washington and its media branded the
government, as “authoritarian” for
protecting the constitution. It accused
the independent judiciary as biased. The
police and military were labelled as
“repressive” for arresting fire bombers
of schools, transport and clinics.
No violent crime or
criminal behavior by opposition
politicos was exempt from Washington’s
scrofulous screeds about defending
“human rights”.
The crises and
collapse of oil prices greatly enhanced
the opportunities for the US and its
Venezuelan collaborator’s campaign to
weaken the government. Venezuela’s
dependence on President Chavez, as the
singular transformative figure, suffered
a serious blow with his
death.Personalistic leadership weakened
organic mass organization.
The US relaunched a
multi-pronged offensive to undermine and
overthrow the newly elected Nicolas
Maduro regime. Washington, at first,
promoted the ‘via electoral’ as the
route to regime change, funding
opposition leader Henrique Capriles.
After Capriles’
electoral defeat, Washington resorted to
an intense post-electoral propaganda
campaign to de-legitimize the voting
outcome. It promoted street violence and
sabotage of the electrical grid. For
over a year the Obama regime refused to
recognize the electoral outcome,
accepted and recognized throughout Latin
America and the world. In the subsequent
Congressional, gubernatorial and
municipal elections the US backed
candidates suffered resounding defeats.
President Nicolas Maduro’s United
Socialist Party of Venezuela won three
quarters of the governorships and
retained a solid two-thirds majority in
Congress.
Beginning in 2013 the
US escalated its “extra-parliamentary”
offensive – massive hoarding of consumer
goods by wholesale distributors and
retail supermarkets led to acute
shortages, long lines, long waits and
empty shelves.
Hoarding, black market
speculation of the currency, wholesale
smuggling of shipments of consumer goods
across the border to Colombia
(facilitated by opposition officials
governing in border-states and corrupt
National Guard commanders) exacerbated
shortages.
US strategists sought
to drive a political wedge between the
consumer driven middle and lower classes
and the Maduro government. Over time
they succeeded in fomenting
discontent among the lower middle
class and directing it against the
government and not at the big business
elite and US financed opposition
politicians, NGO’s and parties.
In February 2014
emboldened by growing discontent the US
moved rapidly toward a decisive
confrontation… Washington backed the
most violent extra parliamentary
opposition. Led by Leopoldo Lopez, it
openly called for a coup and launched a
nationwide assault on public buildings,
authorities and pro-democracy activists.
As a result 43 people were killed and
870 injured – mostly government
supporters and military and police
officials – and hundreds of millions of
dollars of damage was inflicted on
schools, hospitals and state
supermarkets.
After two months, the
uprising was finally put down and the
street barricades were dismantled— as
even rightwing businesspeople suffered
losses as their revenues diminished and
there was no chance for victory.
Washington proclaimed
the jailed terrorists leaders as
“political prisoners”– a line parroted
by al the mass media and the bogus
Human Rights Watch. The Obama
regime sought to secure the release of
its
armed thugs to prepare for the
next round of violent confrontation.
Washington accelerated
the pace of planning, organizing and
executing the next coup throughout 2014.
Taking advantage of the Maduro regime’s
lax or non-existent enforcement of laws
forbidding ‘foreign funding of political
organizations, the US via NED and its
“front groups” poured tens of millions,
into NGOs, political parties , leaders
and active and retired military
officials willing and able to pursue
“regime change”
via a coup.
Exactly one year
following the violet uprising of 2014,
on February 14, 2015, the US backed a
civilian-military coup. The coup was
thwarted by military intelligence and
denunciations by lower level loyalist
soldiers.
Two power grabs in a
year is a clear indication that
Washington is accelerating its move to
establish a client regime.
What makes these
policies especially
dangerous, is not simply their
proximity, but the
context in which they occur and
the recruits who Washington is
targeting.
Unlike the coup of
2002, which occurred at a time of an
improving economy, the most
recent one takes place in the context of
declining economic indicators. Earlier
the masses turned out to support the new
constitution, declining inflation, the
introduction of new social legislation
and improving income. The most recent
coup takes place with incomes declining,
a devaluation which reduces purchasing
power, rising inflation (62%) and
plummeting oil prices.
Moreover, the US has
once again gained converts in the
military as was the case in the 2002
coup but absent in the 2014. Three
generals, three colonels, 9 lieutenants
and a captain signed on to the coup and
it can be surmised that they were in
contact with others. The
deteriorating loyalties in the military
are not simply a product of US bribery.
It is also a reflection of the
socio-economic decline of sectors of the
middle class to which middle level
officers belong by family ties and
social identification.
Subsequent to the
earlier coup (of 2002) then President
Chavez called for the formation of
popular militias, National Reserve and a
rural defense force to ‘complement’ the
armed forces. Some 300,000 militia
volunteers were registered. But like
many radical ideas, little came of it.
As the US moves to
activate its ‘military option’,
Venezuela must consider activating and
linking these militias to mass popular
community based organizations, trade
unions and peasant movements.
The US has developed a
strategic concept for seizing
power by proxy. A war of attrition built
upon exploiting the social consequences
of the fall of oil revenues, shortages
of basic commodities and the growing
fissures in the military and state
institutions.
In 2015 Washington has
embraced the strategy of 2002, combining
multiple forms of attack including
economic destabilization, electoral
politics, sabotage and military
penetration..All are directed toward a
military – civilian coalition seizing
power.
Facing the US Offensive:
The Strengths and Weaknesses of the
Maduro Government
The basic strength of
the Chavista government of President
Maduro is the
legacy of nearly 15 years of
progressive legislation, including
rising incomes, grass roots community
based democracy, the affirmation of
racial, class and national dignity and
independence. Despite the real hardships
of the past 3 years, forty percent of
the electorate, mostly the urban and
rural poor, remains as a solid core of
support of the democratic process, the
President and his efforts to reverse the
decline and return the country to
prosperity.
Up to now the Maduro
government has successfully rebuffed and
defeated the offensive by US proxies.
President Maduro won electorally, and
more recently has pacified the coupsters
by adopting firmer security measures and
more technically efficient intelligence.
Equally important he has demanded that
the US reduce its embassy operatives
from 100 to 17, equal to Venezuela’s
staff in Washington. Many embassy
personnel were engaged in meetings with
Venezuelan organizers of violent
activity and in efforts to subvert
military officials..
Yet these security
measures and administrative
improvements, as important and necessary
as they are, reflect short-range
solutions. The deeper and more
fundamental issues relate to the
structural weakness of the
Venezuelan
economy and state.
First and foremost,
Venezuela cannot continue running on a
petrol based ‘rentier economy’
especially one that still depends on the
US market.
Venezuela’s ‘consumer
socialism’ totally depends on oil
revenues and high oil prices to finance
the importation of foodstuffs and other
essential commodities.
A strategy of
‘national defense’ against the imperial
offensive requires a far higher level of
‘self-sufficiency’, a greater degree of
local production and decentralized
control.
Secondly, next to US
intervention and destabilization, the
greatest threat to the democratic regime
is the government’s executive,
managerial and elected officials who
have misallocated billions in investment
funds, failed to effectively carry out
programs and who largely
improvise according to day to day
considerations, It is essential that
Maduro advances the strategic priorities
ensuring basic popular interests.
The Chavez and the
Maduro governments outlined general
guidelines that were passed off
as a strategic plan. But neither
financial resources, nor state personnel
were systematically ordered to implement
them. Instead the government
responded or better still
reacted,
defensively, to the immediate
threats of the opposition induced
shortages and oil revenue shortfalls.
They chose the easy route of securing
loans from China by mortgaging future
oil exports. They also took out
commercial loans – borrowed at the
highest rates in the world (18%)!
The post commodity
boom requires a
decisive break with the petrol
economy . . . continuing costly debt
financing staves off the day of
reckoning, which is fast approaching.
US military coups and
political warfare are
with us and
will not fade away even as
Washington loses
battles. The jailing of
individual plotters is not enough. They
are expendable …Washington can buy
others.
The Maduro government
faces a
national emergency which requires
a
society-wide mobilization to
launch a war-economy capable of
producing and delivering
class specific commodities to meet
popular needs.
The February 12, 2015,
coup dubbed, Plan Jericho, was funded by
the US NGO, the National Endowment for
Democracy and its subsidiaries, the
International Republican Institute and
the National Democratic Institute and
Freedom House. The coup organizers led
by former Venezuelan Congresswomen
Corina Machado, (a White House invitee)
was designated to head up the post-coup
dictatorship.
As a matter of
survival the Maduro government must
clamp down and
prosecute all self-styled ‘NGO’
which are recipients of overseas funding
and serve as conduits for US backed
coups and destabilization activity.
No doubt the Obama
regime will seek to protect its proxy
financing and howl about ‘growing
authoritarianism’. That is predictable.
But the Venezuelan governments’ duty is
to protect the constitutional order, and
defend the security of its citizens. It
must move decisively to prosecute not
only the recipients of US funds but the
entire US political
network, organizations and
collaborators as
terrorists.
Venezuela can take a
page out of the US legal code which
provides for 5 year prison sentences for
“nationals” who receive overseas funds
and fail to
register as foreign agents. More
to the point, the Obama regime has
prosecuted organized groups suspected of
conspiring to commit violent acts to
lifetime prison sentences. He has
justified extra judicial assassinations
(via drones) of US “terrorist suspects”.
President Maduro need
not go to the extremes of the Obama
regime. But he should recognize that the
policy of “denunciation, arrest and
release” is totally out of line with
international norms regarding the fight
against terrorism in Venezuela.
What the US has in
mind is not merely a ‘palace coup’ in
which the democratic incumbents are
ousted and replaced by US clients.
Washington wants to
go far beyond a change in
personnel, beyond a friendly regime
amenable to providing unconditional
backing to the US foreign policy agenda…
A coup and post-coup
regime is only the
first step toward a
systematic and
comprehensive reversal of the
socio-economic and political
transformations of the past 16 years!
Heading the list will
be the crushing of the mass popular
community organizations which will
oppose the coup. This will be
accompanied by a mass
purge, of all
representative institutions, the
constitutionalist armed forces, police
and nationalist officials in charge of
the oil industry and other public
enterprises.
All the major public
welfare programs in education, health,
housing and low cost retail food
outlets, will be dismantled or suffer
major budget cuts.
The oil industry and
dozens of other publically owned
enterprises and banks will be
privatized and denationalized. US
MNC will be the main beneficiaries. The
agrarian land reform will be reversed:
recipients will be evicted and the land
returned to the landed oligarchs.
Given how many of the
Venezuelan working class and rural poor
will be adversely affected and given the
combatative spirit which permeates
popular culture, the implementation of
the US backed neo-liberal agenda will
require prolonged ,large-scale
repression. This means, tens of
thousands of killings, arrests and
incarceration.
The US coup- masters
and their Venezuelan proxies will
unleash all their pent-up hostility
against what they will deem the blood
purge necessary to punish, in Henry
Kissinger’s infamous phrase, “an
irresponsible people” who dared to
affirm their dignity and independence.
The US backing of
violence in the run-up to the February
2015 coup will be escalated in the
run-up to the inevitable next coup.
Contemporary US
imperial wars in Iraq, Afghanistan,
Syria and Libya and past US backed
bloody military coups installing
neo-liberal regimes in Brazil, Chile,
Argentina, Bolivia and Uruguay a few
decades past, demonstrate that
Washington places no limits on how many
tens of thousands of lives are
destroyed, how many millions are
uprooted, if it is ‘necessary’ to secure
imperial dominance.
There is no doubt that
the Venezuelan economy is on shaky
foundations; that officials have yet to
devise
and implement a coherent strategy
to exit the crises. But it is of
decisive importance to remember that
even in these times of intensifying
imperial warfare, basic freedoms and
social justice inform the framework of
government and popular representation.
Now is the time, and time is running
short, for the Maduro government to
mobilize all the mass organizations,
popular militias and loyal military
officials to administer a
decisive
political defeat to the US
proxies and then to proceed forward to
socializing the
economy. It must take the
opportunity of turning the US
orchestrated offensives into a historic
defeat. It must convert the drive to
restore neo-liberal privilege into the
graveyard of rentier capitalism.
Epilogue
Unlike past political
confrontations between US imperial
regimes and leftwing Latin American
governments, in the case of Venezuela
the US has suffered numerous major
defeats with regard to domestic and
foreign policy, over the past 15 years.
US-Venezuelan Conflicts:
Internal Policies and their Results
In 2001 the US
demanded Venezuela support its “war on
terrorism, its global quest for
domination via war. President Chavez
refused to back it, arguing successfully
that “you cannot fight terror with
terror”, and winning support
worldwide
In April 12, 2002, the
US organized and backed a
military-business coup which was
defeated by a mass uprising backed by
constitutionalist armed forces. US lost
key assets in the military, trade union
bureaucracy and business sector.
In December 2002 –
February 2003, the US backed a CEO
directed lockout designed to shut-down
the oil industry and overthrow the
Chavez government that was defeated, as
workers and engineers took charge and
overseas oil partners supplied
petroleum. The US lost assets in the oil
industry.
In 2004, a referendum
to oust Chavez, funded by the US and
organized by NED funded NGOs was
defeated. US electoral assets were
demoralized.
In 2006 a US backed
boycott of Congressional elections was
defeated. The electorate turned out in
force. US congressional assets lost
their institutional power base and
influence.
In 2006 Chavez is
re-elected for a second time. The
US-backed candidate is badly beaten.
In 2007 a US backed
coalition squeak out a 1% margin of
victory, defeating constitutional
amendments, socializing the economy.
In 2009 President
Chavez wins a referendum on
constitutional amendments including the
abolition of term limits.
In 2012 Chavez wins
re-election for the fourth time
defeating a US financed opposition
candidate.
In 2013 Chavez’s
selected candidate Maduro wins the
Presidency defeating Obama’s anointed
candidate.
Pro-Chavez parties win
resounding Congressional majorities in
all elections between 1999 – 2010.
Repeated electoral
defeats convinced Washington’s political
strategists to rely on violent,
unconstitutional roads to power.
The anti-capitalist
domestic social reforms and ideology
were one of two key motivating factors
in Washington’s prolonged political war
against Venezuela. Equally important was
Chavez and Maduro’s foreign policy which
included Venezuela’s leading role in
opposing US centered regional
integration organizations like ALCA,
regional political organizations like
the OAS and its military missions.
Venezuela promoted
Latin American centered integration
organizations which excluded the US.
They included
Petro-Caribe, a Venezuelan
sponsored trade and investment
organization that benefited Caribbean
and Central America countries.
UNASUR (Union of South
American Nations) a regional political
organization which displaced the US
dominated OAS and included 33 Latin
American and Caribbean states.
Venezuela joined
MERCOSUR, a “free trade” organization,
which included Brazil, Argentina,
Uruguay and Paraguay.
Venezuela’s leading
role in promoting five organizations
promoting
Latin American and Caribbean
integration – excluding the US and
Canada – was seen as a
mortal
threat to Washington’s political
dominance of Latin American politics and
markets.
Venezuela’s large
scale, long-term political and economic
ties with Cub
undermined the US economic
blockade and reinforced Cuba’s links
with and support by the rest of Latin
America.
Venezuela opposed the
US backed coup against Haiti’s reformist
President Bertram Aristide.
Its opposition to the
US invasions of Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria
and (later) Libya and its increased
investment and trade ties with Iran in
opposition to US sanctions, set US plans
of a global empire on a
collision course with Venezuela’s
embrace of a global anti-imperialist
policy.
US failure to secure
passage of a US centered Latin American
Free Trade Treaty and incapacity to
secure across the board support in Latin
America for its Middle East wars and
Iran sanctions was largely the result of
Venezuelan foreign policy.
It would not be an
exaggeration to say that Venezuela’s
foreign policy
successes in countering US
imperialist policies, especially with
regard to Latin American integration, is
the main reason that Washington has
persisted in its long-term, large scale
effort to overthrow the Venezuelan
government.
The US escalation of
its global military interventions under
Obama and its increasing
belligerency toward the
multiplication of independent Latin
American regional organizations,
coincides with the intensification
of its violent destabilization campaign
in Venezuela.
Faced with the growth
of Latin American trade and investment
ties with China – with $250 billion in
the pipeline over the next ten years –
pioneered by Venezuela, Washington fears
the loss of the 600 million Latin
American consumer market.
The current US
political offensive against Venezuela is
a reaction to over 15 years of
political defeats including
failed coups, resounding electoral
defeats, the loss of strategic political
assets and above all decisive set-backs
in its attempts to impose US centered
integration schemes.
More than ever, US
imperial strategists today are
going all-out to subvert
Venezuela’s anti-imperialist government,
because they sense with the decline of
oil revenue and export earnings, double
digit inflation and consumer shortages,
they can
divide and
subvert sectors of the armed
forces,
mobilize violent street mobs via
their mercenary street fighters, secure
the backing of elected opposition
officials and
seize power. What is at stake in
the US –Venezuelan conflict is the
future of Latin American independence
and the US Empire.