For some time now I
have been talking about the existence of a Latin American alliance of
criminals, from Chavez to Lula, from Ortega to Castro, from Kirchner to Zelaya,
a Club of Bandits created with the purpose of clinging to indefinite power in
Latin America, while enriching themselves, see: http://lasarmasdecoronel.blogspot.com/2016/02/el-cartel-de-ladrones-latinoamericanos.html.
This new article attempts to summarize the origins, the current status of this
alliance, the magnitude of its threat and what remains to be done to wipe it
out.
HIGHLIGHTS
*** This criminal
organization had its origin in the Sao Paulo Forum, a leftist organization
created by Fidel Castro and Lula da Silva in 1990, with the main objective of “aiding the progressive forces in the continent who are in power”.
*** From 1999 onwards,
the Chavez/Maduro Venezuelan regime has financed the Club with oil money and,
as oil money dwindled, with drug trafficking and massive transnational corruption
*** State owned
enterprises, private corporations and the International Financial System have
helped this Club of Bandits to hide and launder their illicit financial gains
*** There is an
increasing tide of protests and rejections against this club, in special
against the Venezuelan regime, one of its main centers of criminal activity
*** Sanctions against
the Club are urgently required and can be implemented multilaterally by the OAS
or unilaterally through conventions and protocols such as the U.N. Palermo
Convention, the U.S. Global Magnitsky Act and the initiatives taken by the U.S.
Treasury Department
CREATION AND EARLY
SUCCESS
The electoral victories
of Hugo Chavez in Venezuela, Lula da Silva in Brazil and Nestor Kirchner in
Argentina at the turn of the century provided Fidel and Raul Castro’s Cuba with
the opportunity of masterminding a plan to take over and hold indefinitely
political power in Latin America. This plan, a new version of the export of the
Cuban Revolution pursued by Fidel Castro during the last century, followed the guidelines of
the Sao Paulo Forum, created in 1990 by Fidel Castro and Lula da Silva, and
progressed rapidly during the first decade of this century when an group of
ideologically friendly leaders, mostly financed by the Club, obtained the
presidencies in Bolivia (Evo Morales), Ecuador (Rafael Correa), Nicaragua
(Daniel Ortega), El Salvador (Mauricio Funes), Uruguay (Jose Mujica), Honduras
(Jose M. Zelaya) and Paraguay (Fernando Lugo).
The oil price boom
during these years allowed Venezuelan strongman Hugo Chavez the use of $60-70
billion of Venezuelan money to support the consolidation and expansion of the plan.
Much of this money went to continue paying for the presidential campaigns of
ideological friends in the region. Such was the case of Ollanta Humala in Peru (first campaign),
Cristina Fernandez-Kirchner in Argentina and Andres Lopez Obrador in Mexico, as
well as supporting Honduras’s President Zelaya in his unsuccessful attempt to stay
in power indefinitely, as Chavez had been doing in Venezuela.
The ultimate objective
of the plan was for Latin America to become a “socialist/communist bloc” in the
region, in order to counterbalance the influence of the United States. As part
of this plan the Club established close links with rogue countries in other
parts of the world, such as Iran, North Korea, Libya, Syria and Zimbabwe and
with terrorist groups such as the FARC and Hezbollah.
FROM POLITICAL ALLIANCE
TO TRANSNATIONAL CRIMINAL CLUB
The deaths of Hugo
Chavez and Nestor Kirchner plus the electoral defeat of Cristina Fernandez in
Argentina and the ousting of Zelaya in Honduras and Lugo in Paraguay greatly
weakened the progress of the plan. Other factors such as the collapse of the
Venezuelan economy under the rule of Nicolas Maduro, the strong civic reaction
against Lula and Rousseff’s corruption in Brazil, the departure of Rafael
Correa from power in Ecuador and the death of Fidel Castro have also
contributed to this weakening.
As Venezuelan oil money
dwindled the political alliance has had to engage in openly criminal activities
to finance their plans, becoming an openly criminal, transnational alliance
involved in money laundering, drug trafficking, promotion of terrorism and
hyper corruption at the highest political levels. Sadly, these activities are facilitated
by the International Financial System, through the creation, by members of the
Club of Bandits, of numerous shell companies in the financial havens of the
world. Investigations in different
countries have either indicted or strongly suggested that members of the
alliance such as Lula da Silva, Dilma
Rousseff, Nestor Kirchner and Cristina Fernandez, Daniel Ortega, Hugo Chavez
and family, his successor Nicolas Maduro and many of his close collaborators
have been involved in corruption, money laundering and, even, drug
trafficking. In particular, the U.S.
government has already sanctioned members of the Venezuelan bureaucracy,
including President Maduro, the vice president, ministers and army generals for
being involved in violations of human rights, drug trafficking and money
laundering. In the course of these investigations the corrupt activities of
Brazilian construction companies such as Odebrecht, Venezuelan state oil
company Petroleos de Venezuela and government agencies such as Nicaragua’s
Albanisa have been well documented.
THE CLUB IS STILL ALIVE
WITH HELP FROM CHINA, RUSSIA AND BIG CORPORATIONS
Although the main
objective of the plan is badly faltering due to strong civic reaction in countries
such as Brazil, Argentina and Peru, it has been gaining ground in Colombia,
where the members of FARC have been able to gain political power under the
bland presidency of Juan Manuel Santos, in Mexico, where Andres Lopez Obrador
is trying, again, to win the presidency and in Venezuela, where Maduro’s regime
has become an open dictatorship, aided by the corrupt armed forces and in spite
of the valiant but uneven fight staged by the university students and members
of the lower and middle classes.
Russia and especially
China have come to the rescue of the Venezuelan regime during the last 10 years
and have loaned no less than $75 billion to Chavez and Maduro. In a more modest
level some multinational corporations and financial institutions have also come
to the aid of the corrupt regime, as in the case of Goldman Sachs acquisition
of $2.8 billion of Venezuelan government bonds or the loans made by oil
companies Rosneft ($2 billion) and Chevron ( $2 billion) to the Maduro and
Chavez governments.
Such help has served to
extend considerably the life of the Venezuelan regime. Currently the population
is suffering under heavy repression at the hands of the dictatorship and the
effects of malnutrition and lack of medical attention. Every year some 25000
citizens die violently in the streets, many of them at the hands of the police
and armed forces controlled by the dictatorship and of partly controlled by the
regime, partly anarchic, criminal gangs. Hundreds of dissidents are in prison. Almost
two million Venezuelans, many with high academic qualifications, have fled the
country and the mass emigration is intensifying in spite of the great financial
and travel limitations imposed by the dictatorship.
A MAIN THREAT TO
NATIONAL SECURITY IN THE REGION
The combined effects of
the criminal transnational alliance described above and of the more specific Venezuelan
crisis represent a significant threat to political and economic stability in
the Americas. Specifically, drug trafficking activities in the hands of
Venezuelan high-level bureaucrats, massive money laundering activities by the kleptocratic
members of the club, promotion of terrorism and the current, massive emigration
of Venezuelans into neighboring countries such as Colombia, Brazil, Panama and
Peru and to a minor degree, to the islands of Aruba and Curacao, already
represent a major threat to the Americas and, in particular, to the United
States, a country which is the main target of Islamic terrorism, where much of
the drug distributed by the Venezuelan regime finally arrives, and where
petitions for political and humanitarian asylum have increased exponentially in
the last few years.
Together with Castro’s
Cuba the Venezuelan regime is the main center for the transnational political-
criminal alliance that is attempting to transform Latin America and the
Caribbean states into a communist bloc that would serve to counterbalance the
political and economic influence of the United States in the region. The
recognition of this alliance and its capabilities for coordinated criminal
action has been slow to take hold among the democratic governments of the
hemisphere and no investigation, as far as we know, has been made of its
regional extent and imbrications. Investigations are still being conducted on a
country basis, neglecting to consider the transnational links that have already
existed for some time.
MAIN COMPONENTS OF THE
THREAT TO POLITICAL AND SOCIAL STABILITY AND TO NATIONAL SECURITY IN THE
HEMISPHERE
The main components of
the threat posed by the Club of Bandits to political and social stability and
to the national security in the region include:
·
Establishing Communist/Socialist regimes
in countries of Latin America
·
Alignment with rogue countries in other
parts of the world
·
Promotion of Islamic terrorism in the
hemisphere
·
Intensive corrupt regional activities
and money laundering
·
Main centers of drug distribution and
massive deliveries of drugs to the United states
·
Large volumes of Venezuelans escaping
the regime to neighboring countries and to other countries of the hemisphere
POSSIBLE COURSES OF
ACTION AGAINST THE CLUB OF BANDITS
There are several
possible courses of action against the Club of Bandits.
Investigations in each
country
One of them has to do
with the action against the main leaders of the club in each country. For
example, a few days ago a member of Lula da Silva’s cabinet, Antonio Palocci,
declared before Brazil’s judge Sergio Moro that there had been a pact between
Odebrecht, the Brazilian construction company, and Lula’s Worker’s Party, PT,
through which the company gave the party about $100 million, with the approval
of Lula. This money would go to several purposes related to Lula’s permanence
in power. In parallel, the Brazilian Attorney General, Rodrigo Janot, accused
Dilma Rousseff and Lula of
running a “criminal organization”
that raked in hundreds of millions in bribes during the party’s nearly 14-year
reign”, see: https://www.nytimes.com/2017/09/05/world/americas/brazil-dilma-rousseff-lula-corruption-workers-party.html.
In Argentina the Kirchner couple is being investigated for corruption. In Peru
former president Ollanta Humala and his wife are being investigated for
accepting bribes from Odebrecht and money from former Venezuelan President Hugo
Chavez. It is only in Venezuela that no investigations are being conducted
because all institutions in the country are controlled by the narco-
dictatorship of Nicolas Maduro
Investigations and
sanctions by countries affected by the Kleptocratic regimes
In the case of
Venezuela, where no investigations of the kleptocracy have been conducted this
task has been undertaken, primarily, by the United States government and by the
Organization of American States, OAS. and, also, by some European countries
such as Spain and Switzerland. As a result, the Venezuelan regime, particularly
its main leaders, such as the President, the Vice president, the Minister of
the Interior, the head of the National Electoral Council and a group of top
military and civilian bureaucrats have been exposed as violators of human
rights, money launderers and/or drug traffickers. As a result of these
investigations the Venezuelan regime has been defined as a rogue, failed state.
Although individual sanctions against Venezuelan kleptocrats have been a
powerful instrument to weaken the Venezuelan regime they are insufficient to
accelerate the ousting of the bandits from power. Economic sanctions are now
being considered both by the U.S. and by the European Union to further isolate
the Venezuelan regime.
The potential role of
International Protocols
There are, at least,
three international protocols and conventions that can be utilized to combat
the Latin American Club of Bandits. One is the Interamerican Democratic Charter
of the OAS, the second is the U.N. Palermo Convention and the third is the U.S.
recently passed Global Magnitsky Act.
The Inter American
Democratic Charter
The first one is, in
theory, a powerful instrument, since it gives the Organization of American
States the authority to intervene and sanction any member country that violates
the articles of the charter. This has been the case of Venezuela, first under Chavez and now under Maduro now. The
current Secretary General, Luis Almagro, has made all possible efforts to apply
this charter to the Venezuelan regime but they have, so far, failed, due to the
blockage imposed within the organization by the member countries of
PetroCaribe, which have sold their dignity and independence of action to the
Venezuelan regime in exchange for oil subsidies. At least $30 billion in
subsidies have been stolen away from the Venezuelan people in order to buy
political loyalty from the mercenary states. However, the efforts of Mr.
Almagro are slowly bearing fruit. Up to 20 OAS member countries, representing
90% plus of the population of Latin America now reject the Venezuelan regime as
a dictatorship that has to be removed from office.
The U.N. Palermo
Convention
This is a U.N.
convention agreed in 2000 and ratified by all countries of the western hemisphere,
which can be applied to prevent, investigate and punish transnational organized
crime. The crime is defined as organized and transnational by this convention
if committed by three or more people in one state but with effects in other
states. This convention can be applied by any individual state that feels
affected by the criminal actions of the group. The Director of the Miami based
Interamerican Institute for Democracy, Mr. Carlos Sanchez Berzain is promoting
actively this tool to be utilized against the Maduro regime, see video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UHJrX7p2Yko
The Global Magnitsky
Act
Passed by the U.S.
Congress in December 2016 with ample bipartisan support, this Act might become
the most powerful international tool against corruption. It gives the U.S.
authority to sanction with freezing of assets and visa restrictions foreign
individuals that have committed violations of human rights and/or acts of
financial corruption. Recently up to 60 U.S. NGO’s presented U.S. Executive and
Legislative representatives 15 cases of such violations , fully documented, in
which this Act can and should be applied.
This Act will be a
welcome ally of the actions taken by the U.S. Treasury Department, which –as we
know – includes President Maduro, Vice president El Aissami, the President of
the Supreme Court and about 30 other members of the Venezuelan regime. See: https://www.treasury.gov/resource-center/sanctions/OFAC-Enforcement/Pages/20170726.aspx
for the latest additions to the list.
Cuba: an invisible
elephant in Main Street Latin America
Although the tutelage
of the Venezuelan regime by Castro’s Cuba is well documented and the actions of
the Club of Bandits clearly point to a significant strategic input from Havana, no actions are directed against the
Castro regime. Many analysts have described how Venezuela is politically
controlled by the Cuban Castro regime. Moises Naim says: “Maduro… is simply a useful
idiot, the puppet of those who really control Venezuela: the Cubans, the drug
traffickers, and Hugo Chavez’s political heirs. Those three groups effectively
function as criminal cartels, and have co-opted the armed forces into their
service; this is how it is possible that every day we see men in uniform
willing to massacre their own people in order to keep Venezuela’s criminal
oligarchy in power. The most important component of this oligarchy is the Cuban
regime. Three years ago I wrote:
“Venezuelan aid is indispensable to prevent the Cuban economy from collapsing.
Having a government in Caracas that maintains such aid is a vital objective of
the Cuban State. And Cuba has accumulated decades of experience, knowledge, and
contacts that allow it to operate internationally with great efficacy and, when
necessary, in a way that is almost invisible”. See: https://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2017/05/maduro-venezuela/528003/
. In spite of this no country in the hemisphere has taken the initiative of
denouncing this situation and, as a result, the Castro regime stays free from
pressure. There is no doubt that a quick resolution of the Venezuelan tragedy strongly depends on proper pressure being
placed upon Castro’s Cuba by the U.S. and the European Union.
Summary
The Latin American Club of Bandits has morphed
from being a group designed to place and maintain its members in power into a transnational
criminal organization which still aims at indefinite and total political power
but now adds drug trafficking, money laundering and obscene personal enrichment
of its individual members to its priorities. Although it has suffered important
political reversals the Club still represents one of the main threats to the political
stability of the Americas. Its leading forces, the Venezuelan and the Cuban regimes, should be politically isolated
and the object of vigorous political and economic sanctions either multilaterally
by organizations such as the U.N., the OAS or the European Union or
unilaterally, by means of the application of the Palermo Convention, the Global
Magnitsky Act or the actions of the United States government.
Justamente ayer estaba pensando en que, como van las cosas, para poner fin a la tragedia venezolana parece evidentemente necesaria la caída de la tiranía castrista, así de colonizados y dependientes somos de la isla burdel. Nada fácil el panorama, dado el desentendimiento, como Ud. señala, de la comunidad internacional ante los desmanes de los Castro. Una alcahuetería que dura decenios, el mejor ejemplo de la doble moral existente para juzgar a las tiranías de derecha -condenadas- y de izquierda -aplaudidas disfrutando de un silencio cómplice-. Es hora de terminar de una vez y para siempre con esta complacencia.
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