To help Venezuela, the U.S. must use diplomacy, not a military coup
03/11/2019, 05:00pm
To help Venezuela, the U.S. must use diplomacy, not a military coup
By Jesse Jackson
The United States is pushing for an overthrow of the government of Venezuela. The Trump administration has denounced Nicolas Maduro as a dictator, dismissing the 2018 election, which the opposition boycotted. Instead of a good neighbor policy or a policy of non-intervention, the Trump administration has set out intentionally to overthrow the regime.
Long before Trump, the United States was a bitter opponent of the Hugo Chavez regime. The fact that Chavez was wildly popular and freely elected made no difference. He represented a revolution that embraced Fidel Castros Cuba and implemented plans to redistribute wealth and empower the poor. In 2002, when the Venezuelan military moved to overthrow Chavez, an official in the Bush administration reportedly met with the coup leaders. The coup attempt was frustrated, however, when Venezuelans rose up in mass against the plotters.
Now with Chavez gone, the current president Nicolas Maduro unpopular, the economy a mess in significant degree because the price of oil is near record lows the Trump administration is apparently orchestrating another attempt.
OPINION
It has continued to ratchet up pressure. It has imposed brutal sanctions on Venezuela, making a bad situation far worse, all the while blaming the government for the misery. Trump has openly threatened a military option for Venezuela. His bellicose national security adviser, John Bolton, boasted that The troika of tyranny in this hemisphere Cuba, Venezuela and Nicaragua has finally met its match.
More:
https://chicago.suntimes.com/columnists/venezuela-trump-administration-coup-president-maduro/