As the result of Cuban political shrewdness and chavista ignorance and treachery Venezuela has become a Cuban colony since the early years of this century. Everybody in and outside Venezuela knows that there are thousands of Cubans in Venezuela, inserted in all facets of social, military and political life, that Hugo Chavez then and Nicolas Maduro now, traveled and travel incessantly to Havana to receive their marching orders. The enormous transfer of wealth from Venezuela to Cuba, of the order of $4-5 billion per year in petroleum and cash, is well documented. When the dead Chavez was in Havana, under Cuban medical and political control, cabinet meetings were held in Havana and decisions were made in violation of Venezuelan law.
Cuban tutelage of Venezuela is one of
the most shameful events in Venezuelan history and Chavez, Maduro and their
accomplices will have to answer for their treason to history (the dead) and to
Justice (the survivors).
In the early years the Venezuelan
opposition was adamant that this was a “Venezuelan problem, to be solved by
Venezuelans”. Opposition leaders strongly opposed any form of external
sanctions against the Venezuelan regime, in a display of what I always
considered false patriotism. Opposition
leaders, still active today, traveled to the U.S. to ask that individual sanctions
not be imposed on violators of human rights and drug lords linked to the regime
and to the Venezuelan military.
At least since 2015, see: http://www.eastwebside.com/gustavo-coronel-intervencion-inmediata-del-regimen-venezolano.html
; http://tururutururu.com/gustavo-coronel-la-fuerza-armada-venezolana-corrupta-y-mandando/
; http://critica24.com/index.php/2016/01/02/asombroso-carta-abierta-al-secretario-general-de-la-oea-por-gustavo-coronel/
; http://jaquemateweb.com/gustavo-coronel-por-que-el-regimen-de-nicolas-maduro-debe-ser-intervenido/,
I have been asking for outside intervention in Venezuela because I am convinced that
Venezuelan society lacks enough strength to clean the government and restore
democracy without a decisive help from outside. Some sectors of the so-called
opposition, such as the parties of Henri Falcon and Manuel Rosales are currently
collaborating with the regime and have become part of the problem. In fact,
they now control the Board of the National Assembly, the only legitimate political
institution left in Venezuela.
My opinion has not made many inroads
because outside intervention is one of the political “taboos” of Latin America,
derived from the years of unilateral U.S. intervention in Latin America. This is
no longer the case. The intervention of Venezuela has been done by Castro’s
Cuba, with the complicity of Chavista traitors and some false members of the
opposition.
I
have always said that today’s blasphemy becomes, in time, accepted dogma.
Respected Economist Ricardo Hausmann, now at Harvard, has written an article
calling for military intervention in Venezuela, see: https://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/venezuela-catastrophe-military-intervention-by-ricardo-hausmann-2018-01.
In this article Hausmann says: “Targeted sanctions, managed by the US Office of Foreign Assets
Control (OFAC), are hurting many of the thugs ruling Venezuela. But, measured
in the tens of thousands of avoidable deaths and millions of additional
Venezuelan refugees that will occur until the sanctions yield their intended
effect, these measures are too slow at best. At worst, they will never work.
After all, such sanctions have not led to regime change in Russia, North Korea,
or Iran. This leaves us with an international military intervention, a solution
that scares most Latin American governments because of a history of aggressive
actions against their sovereign interests, especially in Mexico and Central
America. But these may be the wrong historical analogies”
I am glad to see that Hausmann, who
carries much more weight in Venezuelan public opinion that I could, has come
out in favor of strong and definitive external intervention in Venezuela.
I agree with the concept, of course.
However, I find that Hausmann has left some intermediate steps out of the
sequence. Individual sanctions should definitely be continued. But we still have to see stronger global economic
sanctions against Maduro and we still have to see a global diplomatic rupture of
the Latin American Group of 21, the U.S., Canada and the European Union with
Maduro’s narco-regime. I have the impression that a combination of these
measures would do the job.
It is not that I am against a regional
military intervention. It is that I feel this would be a much more difficult
step to be agreed by the actors involved. And, as Ricardo Hausmann says, time
is of the essence.
America. my country, has a chance to save millions of lives and work with the Congress before they get executed, and overthrow this crooked regime. We did it in Panama, now a great place to live
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