By Austin Bay
Wednesday, February 19, 2014
Despite five years of Obama Administration "smart
diplomacy," Venezuela's deteriorating socialist regime is following a
classic script as its replacement caudillo blames America for his own regime's
legacy of economic folly, domestic repression, corruption and criminal
turpitude.
That America should continue to serve as a gangster
clique's scapegoat ought to surprise no one except the gullible frumps who
thought Barack Obama's presidency would reset relations with Russia, reduce the
cost of health insurance and end the ocean's rise. For over 200 years,
"blame America" has been the baseline propaganda ploy of dictators
and corrupt oligarchs confronting the impoverishing consequences of looting
their own countries and brutalizing political opponents.
When compared to his flamboyant predecessor, Hugo Chavez,
Venezuela's replacement president, Nicolas Maduro, is a second-rate caudillo
and fourth-string media operative.
Chavez, who died of cancer in March 2013, began his
career as a paratrooper. Maduro, who won a disputed election in April 2013, is
a bus driver turned union organizer turned Chavez toady, then successor. Union
toughs can earn hard-boy reputations (a resume' essential for caudillos), but
jumping out of airplanes is automatically macho.
Still, Chavez picked Maduro as his heir for a reason. The
second-stringer possesses two of his mentor's talents: He's a first-rate goon
and relentless America-hater.
Brutal police and blaming America won't reduce inflation
(Venezuela's is currently a whopping 56 percent a year) but they can help keep
the caudillo's gang in power. Chavez, like his fellow America-blamer, Fidel
Castro, both had the Mussolini knack for combining aggressive macho with
charismatic spectacle. The political pay-offs for their regimes were,
respectively, the Chavismo and Fidelismo personality cults.
Maduro has tried to leverage Chavez' cult by claiming
kudos from the deceased strong man. Chavez appears to Maduro as a bird.
Parachutist wings?
Maduro does know how to employ brutal secret policemen.
This Tuesday, Feb. 18, cops and soldiers arrested Maduro's main political
opponent Leopoldo Lopez. A former mayor of a Caracas suburb, Lopez is a
graduate of two U.S. colleges, Kenyon and Harvard. He has the media presence of
Mexico's President, Enrique Pena -- the same sophisticated charm.
Venezuelans have been complaining about corruption for
years, but complaints about economic mismanagement have increased since
mid-2013. In October 2013, Maduro accused the U.S. of plotting a coup, then had
soldiers seize several businesses that he claimed were gouging the public. How
classic. Blame America, have thugs seize private property. But inflation
continued to soar.
Earlier this month, Lopez rallied student demonstrators
protesting Maduro's crackdown on civil rights. Subsequently, at least three
demonstrators died as protests spread. Several other people have been killed in
what Maduro claims is violence instigated by Lopez and outside forces
(America).
Lopez is now charged with terrorism and threats against
the Maduro government.
Lopez firmly believes there should be no Maduro
government. Lopez and several million other Venezuelans think Maduro stole the
2013 election. Maduro beat pro-democracy candidate Henrique Capriles by about
one percent of the vote. Capriles accused Maduro of fraud, but then he
capitulated.
Lopez thinks Capriles made a huge mistake. He told a
Venezuelan interviewer that the country cannot survive until the next election
(2019). "The struggle against poverty," Lopez said, "against
drug smuggling, against irregular groups (paramilitary militias) tearing into
the fabric of our country ... can't wait six more years. It would be immoral to
not do all we can right now."
On Feb. 18, Lopez turned himself in to security agents
and was hauled off in a military vehicle. Lopez said he had done nothing wrong,
and he was being arrested by "unjust justice." However, he hoped his
illegal incarceration would spark more mass protests.
Maduro and his Chavista clique, however, will continue
the crackdown. Why? Because unjust justice, poverty, their paramilitary thugs,
socialist looting and crony drug smuggling aren't the source of Venezuela's
problems. No, America is. On Feb. 17, Maduro's regime declared three U.S.
"personae non gratae" and expelled them. The U.S. diplomats were
accused of organizing the protests and plotting against Venezuela. In September
2008 (Bush Administration), Chavez expelled the U.S. ambassador for supporting
anti-Chavez political groups. The Bush Administration said no, the U.S.
ambassador was supporting freedom.
On Feb. 18, Obama's State Department rejected Maduro's
accusations and said the U.S. supports "fundamental freedoms."
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