President Maduro of Venezuela urges US diplomats to leave country within next 72hrs

George's Dilemma

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It's damn near impossible to form an educated opinion on this situation without actually being down there. I can't say I trust any of the sources "reporting" on this situation although I'm inclined to distrust Bolton, Pence, Trump, Pompeo, Fox News, more than the other pundits and outlets.
 

Fatboi1

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Yes USA is passing misinformation just like they did in Haiti, Iraq, Syria, Yemen, Libya etc...

why would anybody listen and push right wing nuts who help destroy latin america in the pass
It's almost like a playbook with how they're pushing this "The country needs aid and the dictator there is preventing it, please let us come peacefully.." narrative. Sounds exactly like Haiti's 2004 military intervention.
 

loyola llothta

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It says "right wing governments" but Ecuador backed Guaido and Ecuador's president is a socialist
what? you mean ex president Rafael Correa.

Judas or the imposter in the movement is the current president Lenin Moreno who turncoat when he got elected. Moreno regime link up with trump bs and start rolling back on progressive policy of the former president ...signing billion dollars IMF deals ..
 

loyola llothta

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US Moving Special Forces and Equipment to the Venezuelan Border

25 February 2019

In a series of tweets posted in her twitter account a few hours agoMaria Zakharova, spokeswoman for the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs affirmed that the US government is moving special forces to the borders of Venezuela along with military equipment.


She also alerted that the same US government (and US companies) with the help of some NATO allies is seeking to buy arms and ammunition in east European countries to arm the Venezuelan opposition.

This weekend near the Tienditas Bridge, the Venezuelan border with Colombia, there are two concerts being organized, one calling for peace and labeled #HandsOffVenezuela on the Venezuelan side of the border, the other on the Colombian side called Aid Venezuela, trying to forcefully introduce into Venezuela’s border some so called “humanitarian aid” delivered by the US Army Southern Command. In this respect Zaharova stated that “It is fraught with a clash of the current government’s supporters and opponents and provides a convenient pretext for forceful action to remove the legitimate President from power”.

The Russian and Chinese governments are straregic allies of the Venezuelan goverment but lately the Russian Goverment is the most outspoken about US promoting “regime change” in Venezuela with the excuse of “humanitarian aid”.

The original source of this article is Orinoco Tribune
 

loyola llothta

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BenjaminNorton


This is an outrageously misinformed statement, @AOC. The problem in Venezuela is not a "failure of democracy" from the government; it's a violent right-wing US-backed opposition that has dropped all pretense of wanting democracy and demanded a coup and war

8:55 AM - 25 Feb 2019



The conflict in Venezuela *is* precisely about ideology, @AOC. The violent right-wing US-backed opposition wants nothing less than the total eradication of Chavismo. The opposition is exterminationist As a US-backed opposition politician admitted, they want "the Pinochet option"




Far-right billionaire-in-chief Trump and neocon war hawks John Bolton, Mike Pompeo, Elliott Abrams, and Marco Rubio have spent all their energy trying to overthrow Venezuela's elected government, but "socialist" @AOC instead blames Venezuela, while it is under brutal attack.
 

loyola llothta

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I have been here in Venezuela for over 2 weeks, and it has been impressive how democratic the country still is — despite non-stop foreign intervention, internal sabotage and violence from the opposition, and many threats of war from the US and right-wing puppets in Latin America.



It's not the Venezuelan government but rather the right-wing US-backed opposition that does not care about democracy, @AOC. The Chavismo movement is still very democratic, with thriving communes, local councils, and direct democracy in working-class barrios throughout the country




I went to several opposition protests in rich neighborhoods here in Caracas, and I almost never saw cops, let alone supposed violent "state repression."

I see way more cops walking down the sidewalk in NYC.

Incarceration Nation USA is much more of a police state than Venezuela.
 

loyola llothta

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I was at an opposition protest in a rich neighborhood in Caracas 2 days ago and right-wing coup-mongering leader María Corina Machado — who is publicly calling for a military coup and for the US to overthrow her elected government — walked around freely. I didn't see a single cop


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Imagine if an opposition politician in the US openly conspired with a foreign superpower to carry out a military coup to overthrow their elected government In the US, that politician would be imprisoned, maybe hanged In Venezuela, they walk around freely
 

loyola llothta

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1) A new article from Foreign Affairs cites independent (academic and definitely not pro-government) research showing that the government is now providing food to 90 percent of Venezuelans https://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/venezuela/2019-02-25/will-maduros-supporters-abandon-him …

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2) Can everyone call Speaker Nancy Pelosi (202) 225-4965 & inform her that recognizing a parallel gov't in Venezuela has imposed a trade embargo & therefore is depriving millions of Venezuelans of food & medicine, and politely ask why she would support that?



3) Since all of the journalists covering Venezuela understand that the recognition of Juan Guaidó as "interim president" imposes a trade embargo (since it prevents Venezuelan oil from being sold to most of its export markets), perhaps some of them could also ask this question.
 

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Senator Mark Rubio Tells Maduro He Will End Up Like Gaddafi


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Mike Pompeo, the former boss of the world’s most prolific terror organization, the CIA, climbed up on his high State Department horse Saturday and lectured us on the crimes of the “sick tyrant” Nicolas Maduro.



This little tweeted tirade was intended for the ignorant masses in America who know virtually nothing about Venezuela beyond what a lying and script-reading corporate media tells them.

For instance, they don’t know Russia and other countries have sent food and supplies to Venezuela and the US-orchestrated events on the border are designed to make you think Maduro is denying aid and willfully starving his people.




Pompeo would also have you believe evil Cuban communists are calling the shots in Venezuela.



So, what are these vile communists doing? In return for subsidized oil, they are providing doctors and diplomats.

But if you read The War Street Journal, you will get a different picture: the Cubans are orchestrating the murder of Venezuelans and spying on Venezuelan army officers to head off a coup.

“If the international community wants to head off disaster, a good place to start would be in Havana,” Mary Anastasia O’Grady wrote for the newspaper in 2017.

Neocon favorite Marco Rubio let it be known what the US has in mind for Maduro. He tweeted out this on Sunday:





Prior to this, Rubio posted a couple photos of Manuel Noriega, the CIA’s favored drug kingpin who fell from favor



Noriega’s useful past for the neoliberal cartel is of course not mentioned by Rubio.

“Noriega was recruited as a CIA informant while studying at a military academy in Peru,” writes Mark Tran. “He received intelligence and counterintelligence training at the School of the Americas at Fort Gulick, Panama, in 1967, as well as a course in psychological operations at Fort Bragg, North Carolina. He was to remain on the CIA payroll until February 1988.”

The Panamanian dictator “made himself valuable to the US during the Contra wars when he allowed the US to set up listening posts in Panama and by helping the US campaign against the leftist Sandinista regime in Nicaragua. Noriega allowed Panama to be used as a conduit for US money and weapons for the Contras as then US president Ronald Reagan sought to undermine the Sandinistas. But Noriega’s increasing brutality turned him into a liability, especially after the assassination of Hugo Spadafora, a political opponent who was found beheaded in 1985.”

After the 1988 Senate subcommittee on terrorism, narcotics and international operations concluded that US support for Noriega “represents one of the most serious foreign policy failures for the United States,” the first Bush administration decided the small Central America country with its strategically invaluable canal must be invaded and Noriega taken down.

Rubio also didn’t mention the fact after Noriega was removed the new government agreed to ditch the Torrijos treaties, under which all US military bases in Panama would be shut down by the year 2000.

Meanwhile, those of us who can’t find Venezuela on a map will likely fall for the narrative pushed by the corporate media as it reads from its government script.

As noted by Mark Cook of FAIR, the propaganda media in the US has engaged in serial and pathological lying about Venezuela.

In other words, those of us who either refuse to do our homework, are intellectually incurious, and take the media’s gross distortions and lies as a matter of fact will support the continuation and escalation of economic sanctions and the growing probability of war waged against not only Venezuela, but Nicaragua and Cuba as well.


The original source of this article is Global Research
Copyright © Kurt Nimmo, Global Research, 2019
 

loyola llothta

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When it Comes to Venezuela, Trump Follows in Obama Footsteps
But some diplomats are frustrated by the policy paralysis.
BY EMILY TAMKIN | JUNE 1, 2017, 2:16 PM
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Protests against the government of Nicolás Maduro are entering their third month. Over 60 people have been killed in faceoffs between protesters and security forces, at least 1,000 have been jailed, and 75 percent of Venezuelans lost an average of 19 pounds over the past year.

A Wednesday meeting of foreign ministers of the Organization of American States failed to produce a single statement on the crisis. The meeting is the latest–and perhaps most high-profile–example of how divided the Americas are in dealing with the rapidly escalating events in Venezuela.

And it looks unlikely that the Donald Trump White House will chart a new course.

The Trump White House is largely following the policies put in place by U.S. President Barack Obama’s administration, Mark Feierstein, former senior director of Western Hemisphere Affairs at the National Security Council said at a Thursday event in Washington, D.C. “I’m not accustomed to saying nice things about the Trump administration,” he said, but “their policy is on the right track. I think in many cases they’re building on what we did in the Obama administration,” he said, pointing in particular to sanctions put on Venezuelan officials by the Obama and Trump administrations.

One senior diplomat from the region told Foreign Policy that there is a very good level of coordination between the United States and other countries in the region, although staffing shortages and Obama-era holdovers mean that it’s perhaps too early to know the Trump White House’s position on Venezuela. “No one really knows what to do on Venezuela,” the diplomat said.

Others, however, are more frustrated. Obama was working toward normalizing relations with Cuba, which limited his administration’s ability to pressure countries with important votes in the Organization of American States on other issues. But since the Trump White House isn’t focused on improving relations with Cuba, some countries had hoped the new administration would do more to address the Venezuela situation.

Many Venezuelans are looking expectantly to the Organization of American States for some statement or action, Caracas Chronicles executive editor Francisco Toro said at the same Thursday event. But in order for the Organization of American States to put out a declaration on the situation in Venezuela–whether on the release of political prisoners or calls to protect the constitution–it needs at least 23 of its member states to vote yes.

But every vote is equal, and 14 of them are held by Caribbean countries, many of which are unwilling or hesitant to turn against the Maduro regime. In some cases, this is because they are members of the Venezuelan-Caribbean oil alliance Petrocaribe and benefit from subsidies. In other cases, it’s because they are loyal out of memory of Hugo Chavez, who paid for public works, airports, and infrastructure in Caribbean countries, as Eric Farnsworth of the Americas Society and Council of the Americas explained to FP.

Another diplomat from the region told FP that those countries that want action taken on Venezuela had expected the Trump administration to try to flip the Caribbean countries’ votes.

Though some had expected the United States to try to exert more influence over Caribbean states, they hadn’t seen that, and didn’t expect to at Wednesday’s meeting, the diplomat said ahead of the ministerial.

The diplomat understood that trying to improve relations with Cuba restricted the Obama administration’s actions. But “with the Trump administration, we were hoping we could get more influence in the region, especially Caricom. We are not seeing that at the OAS level.”

And while there’s bilateral engagement between Washington and individual states, the United States would ultimately need to find some way to wean those countries off Venezuelan oil and money, Moisés Rendon of the Center for Strategic and International Studies said.

Given the limited attention Venezuela and the Caribbean got in Rex Tillerson’s address to the State Department in early May and staffing shortages in the new administration, that doesn’t seem to be an undertaking team Trump is planning on managing any time soon.

The diplomat reiterated after the meeting that, “we don’t see the engagement that we would like to see from the U.S.”

A declaration from the Organization of American States wouldn’t immediately change the situation in Venezuela, but it could make clear that the country’s international standing is threatened.

“We lost. Not having a declaration, not having anything — it’s not a good position,” the frustrated regional diplomat said, pointing out that the situation on the ground is growing worse by the day.

“But the votes are facts,” the diplomat said. “This is what we have for now.”
When it Comes to Venezuela, Trump Follows in Obama Footsteps
 
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