Venezuela: Resistance or disintegration?

Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro promised to arrest all judges of the Supreme Court that were appointed by the opposition-controlled Parliament.

Venezuela's Maduro Says to Arrest All Supreme Judges Appointed by Parliament
https://sputniknews.com/latam/201707241055810901-venezuela-maduro-arrests-sepreme-judges/

On Friday, the country’s parliament appointed 13 judges of the Supreme Court and their 20 deputies. The day before, the Supreme Court itself denounced the appointments as non-legitimate.

"All of them, one after another, will go in jail, and they will all have their assets and property frozen," Maduro said late on Sunday in his weekly TV address.

He explained that such strict measures were necessary because the parliament was planning to create a parallel state.

Next week they will announce creation of a new National Electoral Council, a false, unconstitutional and illegal one," Maduro said.
 
Venezuelan President Nicholas Maduro blasted a plot by the United Statesspy agency, to overthrow his government in collaboration with neighboring Mexico and Colombia.

Venezuelan President Slams CIA Regime Change Plot
http://en.farsnews.com/newstext.aspx?nn=13960503001647

Maduro has also demanded the governments of Colombia and Mexico respond to allegations that they are working with the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) to overthrow the Venezuelan government, Al Waght reported.

In a televised interview, Maduro said, “The director of the CIA has said, ‘The CIA and the U.S. government work in direct collaboration with the Mexican government and the Colombian government to overthrow the constitutional government in Venezuela and to intervene in our beloved Venezuela.’"

“I demand the government of Mexico and the government of Colombia to properly clarify the declarations from the CIA and I will make political and diplomatic decisions accordingly before this audacity,” he added.

The comments come after CIA Director Mike Pompeo confirmed the United States is advising Mexico and Colombia on developments in Venezuela.

In an interview with Vanessa Neumann, president of business intelligence firm Asymmetrica, Pompeo said, "We are very hopeful that there can be a transition in Venezuela and we in the CIA are doing our best to understand the dynamic there."

“America has a deep interest in making sure that Venezuela is stable, as democratic as possible ... The Colombians, I was just down in Mexico City and in Bogota a week before last talking about this very issue trying to help them understand the things they might do so that they can get a better outcome for their part of the world and our part of the world,” he added.

Following the statements, Maduro accused the Colombian and Mexican government of colluding with the United States to protect their oil interests.

The Mexican government has denied the allegations. In a press statement, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs said, "Mexico is a country that respects international law and does not work with any other country to the detriment of another."

The Venezuelan government has come under increased national pressure ahead of elections for the National Constituent Assembly on July 30.

President Trump has threatened economic sanctions against Venezuela if it goes ahead with the elections, a call which has been supported by Luis Almagro, the head of the Organization of American States.

President Maduro however, has insisted that the National Constituent Assembly is the only solution to the political crisis in Venezuela.


The Mexican Secretariat of Foreign Affairs and the Colombian Ministry of Foreign Affairs refuted on Monday the allegations of the official Caracas that they had been allegedly working together with the US intelligence against Venezuela.

Colombia, Mexico Refute Accusations of Conspiring With CIA Against Venezuela
https://sputniknews.com/latam/201707251055844810-colombia-mexico-refute-cia-venezuela/

Earlier, Venezuelan Foreign Minister Samuel Moncada said that the CIA, together with Colombia and Mexico, were working together to harm Venezuela.

Mexico is a country that respects international law and does not work with any countries to the prejudice of others, and its position on the situation in Venezuela was clearly presented in the communique and in the international forums in which it participates," the Mexican foreign office said in a statement.

According to the ministry, the Mexican government again emphasizes its readiness to promote diplomatic, peaceful and democratic solution to the serious crisis experienced by Venezuela with strict respect for the sovereignty of the country.

"Colombia is a country that respects the fundamental principles of the international system and the rule of law, in this context it bases its foreign policy and its actions on respect for these principles of international law. Colombia has never been an interventionist country and we reject the existence of any actions or steps aimed at intervening in Venezuela," the Colombian Foreign Ministry said.

Venezuela will hold voting on July 30 to elect the Constitutional Assembly, set to rewrite the constitution as a way out of the political turmoil, which started in January 2016, when a new legislature was elected and relations between Maduro and the parliament became strained.


Evo Morales accused Washington of supporting separatism in his country and preparing his assassination in 2008.

Bolivia’s President Accuses US of Preparing His Assassination in 2008
https://sputniknews.com/latam/201707241055840809-bolivia-president-accuses-usa-assasination/

Bolivian President Evo Morales on Monday accused Washington of supporting separatism in his country and preparing his assassination in 2008.

"The analysis by WikiLeaks showed that the United States have supported the separatism in Bolivia. In 2008, the emergencies committee and the US Southern Command were considering the possibility of a coup in Bolivia and assassination of President Evo Morales," the leader said as quoted by Bolivia TV broadcaster.

The documents of the US embassy showed that Washington had allocated millions of dollars for financing separatism in Bolivia, Morales continued.

"According to the e-mails from 2006-2009, the United States Agency for International Development [USAID] had transferred no less than $4 million to the separatist movements of the region comprising the eastern departments of Bolivia known as the Media Luna," the Bolivian leader pointed out.

Morales made his statements during the 30th anniversary celebration of the establishment of the country’s special forces for countering drug trafficking.

In 2008, the authorities of Santa Cruz, Beni, Pando, and Tarija departments, which make up the Media Luna region, carried out referendums during which the majority of local residents supported the creation of wide-ranging economic and political autonomy. Central government authorities subsequently declared the referendums' results unconstitutional and held a vote of confidence in Morales. Over 67 percent of the voters supported the president’s policies.
 
US Central Intelligence Agency Director Mike Pompeo has admitted the US is working to change the elected government of Venezuela, and collaborating with Colombia and Mexico to do so. While it's the first public acknowledgement of US meddling in the embattled country, Latin American political analysts likely won’t be surprised.

Shock Horror! CIA Director Admits US Trying to Overthrow Venezuelan Government
https://sputniknews.com/military/201707261055890332-us-venezuela-coup-latinamerica/

Speaking at a Q&A session at the Aspen Institute think tank's annual security forum, Pompeo said he was "very hopeful" of a "transition" in Venezuela.

"I was in Mexico City and Bogota a week before last talking about this, trying to help them understand [what] they might do so they can get a better outcome for their part of the world and our part of the world. I'm always careful when we talk about South and Central America and the CIA, but suffice to say, we're very hopeful there can be a transition in Venezuela and we [are] doing [our] best to understand the dynamic there, so that we can communicate to our State Department and to others," he said.

Colombia and Mexico have been quick to refute Pompeo's allegations, both issuing eerily similar statements attesting to their mutual respect for international law and rejecting the existence of any plan or desire to overthrow President Nicolas Maduro's administration on either of their parts.

Despite their protestations, Pompeo's statement sparked understandable outcry in Caracas, with Maduro slamming the US, Colombia and Mexico alike.

"The director of the CIA has said the CIA and US government is working in direct collaboration with the Mexican and Colombian government to overthrow the government and intervene in our beloved Venezuela. I demand the governments of Mexico and Colombia properly clarify the declarations and I will make political and diplomatic decisions accordingly before this audacity," he said

The exposure comes as both Maduro and Venezuela face mounting problems, with food shortages and soaring inflation — produced by the US ongoing official economic war against the country — producing much unrest, and protests sparked by the decision of the Supreme Court to absorb legislative powers from the opposition-controlled National Assembly raging since April. They have endured despite the Court reversing the ruling.

Opponents are also angry about Maduro's plan to press ahead with a vote for a Constitutional Assembly on July 30, claiming the rules of the Assembly ensure a majority for the United Socialist Party of Venezuela — in turn, Maduro claims it's the only way to restore harmony.

Critics may find Pompeo's statements ironic given the ongoing uproar in mainstream US discourse about Russia's interference in the 2016 Presidential election — allegations based on evidence-free claims issued by anonymous sources which have been refuted by cybersecurity experts and former intelligence professionals.

Furthermore, few will surely be surprised by the revelation of US meddling in Venezuela — while the first public admission by US authorities that the CIA is actively working to undermine and topple the government of Venezuela, evidence indicates the US has worked to weaken the governments of both Maduro and his predecessor Hugo Chavez for some time — including bankrolling and organizing the 2002 coup that briefly removed the latter from power.

There's much to suggest the distribution of funds to opposition groups via organizations such as the National Endowment for Democracy has continued, while black propaganda about the state of affairs in Venezuela has reached fever pitch in the mainstream media the world over. In May 2016 unidentified US officials said they doubted Maduro would be able to complete his Presidential term, due to end after elections in late 2018.

US interference in the politics of sovereign nations the world over is arguably borderline non-newsworthy — particularly in Latin America. The US' first known foray into the southern Americas was Operation PBSuccess in 1953, which overthrew the democratically-elected, progressive government of Jacobo Arbenz.

The coup was motivated by Arbenz' nationalization program, which saw plantations owned by US fruit giant the United Fruit Company passed back into public hands. Washington feared the firm's vast profits would be dented, and Guatemala's social democratic reforms would spread across the continent, and set the CIA to work.

"The engine of American foreign policy has been fueled not by a devotion to any kind of morality, but rather by the necessity to serve other imperatives — making the world safe for American corporations, enhancing the finances of US defense contractors, preventing the rise of any society that might serve as a successful example of an alternative to the capitalist model and extending political and economic hegemony over as wide an area as possible," historian William Blum has observed.

The result was a country fractured, which has been ruled by a series of vicious military dictatorships ever since — and rulers have routinely employed death-squads, torture, disappearances and mass executions totaling hundreds of thousands of victims.

Since then, the US has meddled — on occasion in seeming perpetuity — in many other countries in Latin America, including Haiti, El Salvador, Panama, Grenada, Brazil, Nicaragua, Chile, Dominican Republic and British Guiana. Nevertheless, their efforts are not always successful, as Cuba has palpably demonstrated.


A two-day nationwide strike initiated by opposition to President Nicolas Maduro has begun in Venezuela, media reported Wednesday.

Nationwide Strike Initiated by Venezuela Opposition Starts in Country
https://sputniknews.com/latam/201707261055899737-strike-venezuela-opposition/

The opposition called on Venezuelan citizens to boycott their work and barricade the streets in protest of Maduro's bid to convene a National Constituent Assembly and amend the country's constitution.

The call we've made for the coming days will require each of you to ask yourselves what role you have to play in Venezuela's rescue," Vice President of the Venezuelan National Assembly and opposition member Freddy Guevara said as quoted by CNN.

Maduro announced his decision to call the National Constituent Assembly in May. The opposition regarded the president's decision as an attempted coup, which resulted in an escalation of already fraught tensions.

The elections of the members of the Constitutional Assembly are scheduled for Sunday.


Luisa Ortega Diaz said that the country's authorities had violated Venezuelan constitution amid ongoing political crisis.

Venezuelan Attorney General Says Country's Authorities Violate Constitution
https://sputniknews.com/latam/201707261055880563-venezuelan-attorney-constitution-violation/

Venezuelan Attorney General Luisa Ortega Diaz said Tuesday that the country's authorities had violated the constitution amid ongoing political crisis and street protests.

You can not continue to rule the country as if it were a personal thing. Venezuela is living a dangerous and dark moment (of its history). How long will the country tolerate a cruel violation of the constitution?" Ortega Diaz said at a press conference in Caracas.

According to the Prosecutor General, the country's Supreme Court has become one of the main usurpers of power, taking over the powers of the National Assembly and the Attorney General's Office itself, violating the main law of Venezuela.

Ortega Diaz herself is currently on trial, being suspected of committing illegal actions when performing her duties. She is prohibited from leaving the country and transferring property to management of third parties, all her accounts are frozen. The Attorney General's troubles began after she opposed the authorities' actions in the situation with more than three months of street protests and their intention to change the constitution.


The United States sanctioned 13 Venezuelan government and military current officials, the US Department of the Treasury announced on Wednesday.

US Sanctions 13 Venezuelan Gov't Officials, Ready to Impose New Measures
https://sputniknews.com/us/201707261055905006-us-venezuela-sanctions-court/

The 13 officials are listed on Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) sanctions website. The Constituent Assembly, when elected, will have the power to draft a new version of constitution. The opposition believes that the decision to convene the assembly should have been taken via a referendum rather than a decree.

Moreover, anyone who joins Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro’s National Constituent Assembly, the body set to change the country’s constitution, could be subject to US sanctions, a senior US administration official told reporters on Wednesday.

"Anyone who decides to join the National Constituent Assembly should know that their role in undermining democratic processes and institutions in Venezuela could expose them to US sanctions," the official stated.

Since early April, Venezuela saw mass protests after the decision of the Supreme Court to take over legislative powers from the opposition-controlled National Assembly. The top court reversed the ruling but the step did not stop the mass demonstrations.

The opposition is staging a 48-hour strike that will last through Thursday and aims to prevent the government from pressing forward with the Sunday vote. The protests have been ongoing in Venezuela since April, when the country's top court attempted to curb the powers of the National Assembly.
 
Venezuelan authorities will prohibit street protests starting Friday, Interior Minister Nestor Luis Reverol said.

Venezuela to Introduce Ban on Street Protests
https://sputniknews.com/latam/201707271055942873-venezuela-ban-protests/

Venezuelan authorities will prohibit street protests starting Friday ahead of the upcoming Constitutional Assembly elections on Sunday, Interior Minister Nestor Luis Reverol said Thursday, adding that this ban will be in effect until August 1.

“[People] who organize, support or incite organization and functioning of the country’s electoral process or social life will be sentenced to imprisonment from five to 10 years in accordance with article 56 of the Organic Law on National Security,” Reverol said as quoted the NTN 25, specifying that the ban will be in force from July 28 until August 1.


The State Department said that the United States ordered family members of government personnel to depart the US Embassy in Caracas, Venezuela amid ongoing social unrest.

US Orders Family Members of Government Personnel to Depart Caracas Embassy
https://sputniknews.com/latam/201707281055947669-usa-venezuela-diplomatic-evacuation/

"This travel warning also informs U.S. citizens that on July 27, the Department ordered the departure of family members and authorized the voluntary departure of U.S. government employees from the U.S. Embassy in Caracas," the alert stated on Thursday.

The alert also warned US citizens against travel to Venezuela due to social unrest, violent crime, and pervasive food and medicine shortages.


Nicolas Maduro proposed reconciliation talks to the defiant opposition after it vowed to go ahead with a planned protest against this weekend's legislative vote.

Venezuela’s Maduro Invites Opposition to Reconciliation Talks
https://sputniknews.com/latam/201707281055945322-venezuela-madure-opposition-talks/

Venezuela’s embattled President Nicolas Maduro on Thursday proposed reconciliation talks to the defiant opposition after it vowed to go ahead with a planned protest against this weekend's legislative vote.

"I propose to Venezuela’s political opposition to abandon its path of insurrection, return to the constitution and set up in the hours before the election for the national constituent assembly a table for dialogue, national agreement and reconciliation," Maduro said in a televised speech.
 
Venezuelan opposition supporters are reportedly building barricades and hampering traffic in several districts of Caracas.

Venezuelan Opposition Builds Barricades in Caracas Amid Ban on Protests
https://sputniknews.com/latam/201707291055980761-venezuela-opposition-builds-barricades/

Venezuelan opposition supporters are building barricades and hampering traffic Friday in several districts of Caracas amid the ban on street protests introduced in the country ahead of the elections of the Constituent Assembly, which will be charged with rewriting the constitution, local media reported.

On Thursday, Venezuelan Interior Minister Nestor Luis Reverol announced that the ban which was set to last from Friday until Tuesday and the opposition Venezuelan opposition party Democratic Unity Roundtable (MUD) responded with calling for another manifestation.

El Nacional newspaper informed about the opposition’s barricades in La Lucha quarter and on Francisco de Miranda avenue.


Air France halted flights to Venezuela ahead of a legislative vote that has led to violent protests across the country.

Air France Grounds Venezuela Flights Ahead of Controversial Vote
https://sputniknews.com/latam/201707291055985303-air-france-grounds-venezuela-flights/

"Given the current situation in Caracas, Venezuela, we had to suspend flights between Paris and Caracas from Sunday, July 30 until Tuesday, August 1," the airline said in a statement.


Juan Manuel Santos said he would not recognize this weekend’s election to a constituent assembly in Venezuela.

Colombian President Rejects ‘Spurious’ Legislative Vote in Venezuela
https://sputniknews.com/latam/201707291055985394-colombia-reject-venezuela-vote/

Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos said Friday he would not recognize this weekend’s election to a constituent assembly in Venezuela, which he said lacked legitimacy.

"This constituent assembly is of a spurious origin and, therefore, we cannot recognize its [election] results," Santos said at a university in Barranquilla, as quoted by the presidential office.

The Colombian president added his country would continue to seek a "peaceful and hopefully prompt democratic solution" to the ongoing political crisis in Venezuela.

Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro has called the vote for a new legislative body for this Sunday to elect 545 people’s representatives in an effort to bring peace to the country.
 
Today Sunday July 30th is the Constituent Assembly elections. This first article gives a clearer picture of what this election might accomplish for Maduro and the Citizens of Venezuela. The second article goes into the present political situation and past history of Venezuela and surrounding Countries.

Since Hugo Chavez’s February 1999 ascension to power, Washington wanted Bolivarian democracy replaced by a US sponsored regime.

US Plotting to Topple Venezuela’s Government
http://www.globalresearch.ca/us-plotting-to-topple-venezuelas-government/5601489

Earlier coup attempts failed, another likely planned, months of US-orchestrated violence a convenient pretext to act, along with imposing illegal sanctions on Venezuelan officials.

On Wednesday, the Treasury Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) sanctioned 13 current and former Venezuelan officials, along with others, wrongfully accusing them of “undermining democracy” – a US specialty at home and abroad.

Treasury Secretary Mnuchin represents US imperial lawlessness. Claiming the Trump administration “will not ignore the Maduro regime’s ongoing efforts to undermine democracy, freedom, and the rule of law” turned truth on its head.

Saying America “stand(s) by the Venezuelan people” is polar opposite US aims, wanting regime change, the country transformed into a vassal state, its resources plundered, its people exploited.

Mnuchin promised tougher actions if legitimate end of July constituent assembly voting takes place as planned. Article 347 of Venezuela’s constitution states:

“The original constituent power rests with the people of Venezuela. This power may be exercised by calling a National Constituent Assembly for the purpose of transforming the State, creating a new juridical order and drawing up a new Constitution.”

In 1999, Chavez let voters decide whether to convene a National Constituent Assembly – to draft a new Bolivarian Constitution.

They overwhelmingly approved. Three months later, National Assembly elections were held. Chavistas won 95% of the seats.

They drafted a Bolivarian constitution. A second referendum followed. Venezuelans again overwhelmingly approved it. Historic provisions became law.

Article 348 states - “(t)he initiative for calling a National Constituent Assembly may emanate from the President of the Republic sitting with the Cabinet of Ministers; from the National Assembly by a two-thirds vote of its members; from the Municipal Councils in open session, by a two-thirds vote of their members; and from 15% of the voters registered with the Civil and Electoral Registry.”

Article 349 states - “(t)he President of the Republic shall not have the power to object to the new Constitution. The existing constituted authorities shall not be permitted to obstruct the Constituent Assembly in any way.”

“For purposes of the promulgation of the new Constitution, the same shall be published in the Official Gazette of the Republic of Venezuela or in the Gazette of the Constituent Assembly.”

Maduro called for a Constituent Assembly because of anti-democratic foreign and internally orchestrated violence against the nation and its people.

Dark forces allied with Washington want his government toppled. Constituent Assembly elections are scheduled for July 30. Anyone could be nominated as a candidate to participate:
◾by their own initiative;
◾by other registered voters or groups; or
◾by sectoral groups comprising 173 seats of the 545-seat Constituent Assembly.

Over 6,000 candidates are competing for Constituent Assembly seats. Right-wing extremists comprising the disloyal opposition oppose the constitutionally-permitted process, fearing voters may choose a majority of Bolivarian advocates, diluting their power.

Trump administration officials oppose the Constituent Assembly for this reason. Mnuchin threatened “(a)nyone elected to the National Constituent Assembly (with possible) US sanctions” or harsher measures.

Bolivarian democratic forces in Venezuela support Maduro’s initiative. Dark forces internally and in Washington oppose what conflicts with their diabolical interests.

A Final Comment - On Thursday, the Trump administration ordered family members of its embassy personnel to return to America. It authorized the voluntary departure of embassy staff.

Colombia’s Avianca airlines halted operations. Fascist opposition elements vowed to keep fighting on the streets, blocking roads in what they call “The Takeover of Venezuela” on Friday.

Is another US coup attempt imminent? Things are especially tense ahead of July 30 Constituent Assembly elections.


During the last two months Venezuela has been faced with a terrible wave of violence. It has already resulted in more than 60 deaths along with looted schools, burned public buildings, destroyed public transportation and emptied hospitals. The major media, however, simply engage in a running stream of gruesome denunciations of the government. They have installed the image of a “dictator in conflict” with the “opposition democrats”.

Venezuela: Reactionary Coup in the Making, Media Disinformation, The Attitude of the Left
http://www.globalresearch.ca/venezuela-reactionary-coup-in-the-making-media-disinformation-the-attitude-of-the-left/5601646

But the statistics do not corroborate that narrative, especially when it comes to those who have fallen. When the number had risen to 39, an initial report pointed to only four who were victims of the security forces. The remainder had died in looting or shoot-outs within the opposition mobilizations.[1] Another assessment noted that 60 per cent of those killed had absolutely nothing to do with the clashes.[2]

These characterizations are consistent with the estimates that attribute most of the murders to snipers linked with the opposition. More recent inquiries report that most of the victims lost their lives through vandalism or settlements of accounts.[3]

There are numerous denunciations as well of incursions by paramilitary groups linked to the Right. And there are indications that much of the violence enjoys local protection from municipalities governed by the opposition.[4]

Those death tolls are consistent with the fascist brutality that led to setting afire persons associated with Chavismo.[5] Burning alive a partisan of the government is a practice more closely linked to the Colombian paramilitaries or the criminal underworld than it is to the traditional political organizations. Some analysts even estimate that out of a total of 60 deaths, 27 were of sympathizers of Chavismo.[6]

Others say that within the opposition marches there are some 15,000 persons trained as shock groups. They are using balaclavas, shields and home-made weapons to create a chaotic climate and establish “liberated territories.”[7]

Assessing the Violence - The assessments presented by the opposition are diametrically opposite, but have been refuted by detailed reports on the victims.[8] Since no one acknowledges the existence of “independent” assessments, it is appropriate to judge what is happening, bearing in mind the antecedents. In the guarimba of February 2014, 43 persons died, the great majority of them unrelated to the political clashes or police repression.

Similarly, we need to assess how the opposition reacted when faced with an equivalent challenge. Its governments finished off the “Caracazo” of 1989 with hundreds of deaths and thousands of wounded. The situation in Venezuela is dramatic but this does not explain the centrality of the country in all the news reports. Situations of greater seriousness in other countries are totally ignored by the same media.

In Colombia, since the beginning of the year, 46 social movement leaders have been assassinated and in the last 14 months 120 have perished. Between 2002 and 2016 the paramilitary forces massacred 558 mass leaders, and in the last two decades up to 2,500 trade unionists have been murdered.[9]Why no mention by any broadcaster of repute of this ongoing bloodshed in Venezuela’s nearest neighbour?

More terrifying is the scene in Mexico. Every day some journalist is added to the long list of students, teachers and social fighters who are assassinated. In the climate of social warfare imposed by the “anti-drug trafficking actions,” 29,917 people have disappeared.[10] Should not this level of killings attract more journalistic attention than Venezuela?

Honduras is another hair-raising case. Along with Berta Cáceres 15 other militants have been murdered. Between 2002 and 2014 the number of assassinated environmental defenders has risen to 111.[11] The list of victims of the horror who are ignored by the hegemonic press could be extended to Peru’s political prisoners. Moreover, very few know of the suffering confronted by the Puerto Rican independence leader Oscar López Rivera during his 35 years of imprisonment.

The majority of the Latin American population simply does not know of the tragedies prevailing in the countries governed by the Right. The media’s double standard confirms that Venezuela’s prominence on the television screens is not due to humanitarian concerns.

Forms of a Coup - The media coverage shores up the opposition’s promotion of a coup. Since they cannot carry out classic disturbances like those that led to Pinochet’s coup, they try to remove President Maduro through the dislocation of society. They repeat what was attempted in February 2014 in order to commit an institutional coup similar to the ones carried out in Honduras (2009), Paraguay (2014) or Brazil (2016). They hope to impose through force what they will later validate in the ballot boxes.

The Right lacks the military force used in the past to return to government. But it is trying to recreate such intervention by staging skirmishes at military barracks, setting fire to police stations or marching on military headquarters. Its plan combines sabotage of the economy with riots by armed groups which, in contrast to Colombia, act anonymously. These actions are mingled with the criminal underworld and they terrorize merchants.[12]

The actions include fascist methods sponsored by the most violent currents of anti-Chavismo. They appropriate the insurgent symbolism forged by the popular movements and present their pillage as a heroic gesture. Their leader Leopoldo López is not some innocent politician. Any court operating under the rule of law would have sentenced him to life imprisonment for his criminal liability.

The Right promotes a climate of civil war in order to demoralize the Chavista bases, affected by the lack of food and medicine. It is explicit in its call for foreign intervention and negotiates with the creditor banks an interruption in the country’s access to credit.

The opposition hopes to lynch Maduro in order to bury Chavismo. It takes its battle to the streets, in the conquest of public opinion and the collapse of the economy. It considers elections as nothing more than a simple coronation of this offensive.

But it is confronting growing obstacles. The predominance of the violence in its marches alienates the majority of those who are discontented and wears down its own demonstrators. As it did in 2014 the rebuff of the fascists undermines the entire opposition. Maduro’s steadfastness, moreover, deters attendance in the marches. They have not managed to penetrate the popular neighborhoods where they still confront the risk of an adverse armed conflict.[13]

The big bourgeoisie in Venezuela incites the coup with the regional support of Macri, Temer, Santos and Peña Nieto. For months it has been promoting a destabilizing plan in the OAS. But it has failed to get results in that area. Proposed sanctions against Venezuela have been unsuccessful because of the opposition of various foreign ministries; they have failed to achieve the unanimity with which Cuba was expelled from the OAS in the 1960s.
Notorious, as well, is the United States’ promotion of coups with the aim of regaining control over the major crude oil reserve on the continent. The State Department wants to repeat the operations it used in Iraq or Libya, in the knowledge that after overthrowing Maduro no one will remember where Venezuela is. It suffices to see how the media omit any mention in the news of the countries where the Pentagon has already intervened. Once the adversary is liquidated, the news turns to other issues.

The strategic goals of imperialism are not registered by those who highlight the flirtation of some U.S. newspaper with the Venezuelan president or the verbal ambiguities of Trump.[14] They imagine that those irrelevant facts illustrate the absence of any conflict between the United States and Chavismo. But it does not register with them that the immense majority of the press is maliciously attacking Maduro and that the multimillionaire in the White House denies each day what he said the previous day.

Trump is not indifferent or neutral. He simply delegates to the CIA and the Pentagon the implementation of a conspiracy that is designed through the Sharp and Venezuela Freedom 2plans. Those operations include espionage, troop deployment and cover for terrorism.[15] They develop in a stealthy way while the major media outlets discredit any condemnation of those preparations. They question especially the “exaggerations of the left” so that no one will disturb the conspirators.

Some analysts think the presence of Chevron in Venezuela – or PDVSA’s continued business in the United States – illustrate a tight association between the two governments.[16] They conclude from this relationship that there is no coup scenario. But those connections do not alter in the least the Empire’s decision to overthrow the Bolivarian government.

The activities of U.S. corporations in Venezuela (and of their counterparts in the United States) have persisted from the outset of the Chavista process. But Bush, Obama and Trump have sought to recover direct imperial control over the oil. They cannot get this through a strained relationship between partners or clients. They want to install the model of privatization that prevails in Mexico and to expel Russia and China from their backyard.

Attitude of the Left - If the diagnosis of a reactionary coup is correct, the position of the left should not give rise to disagreements. Our main enemies are the Right and imperialism, and to crush them is always a priority. This elementary principle must be reaffirmed at critical times when what is obvious can become confused.

Whatever our criticisms were of Salvador Allende, our central battle was against Pinochet. Similarly, we adopted a corresponding line of conduct toward the Argentine gorillas of 1955 or the saboteurs of Arbenz, Torrijos and the various anti-imperialist governments of the region. This position in Venezuela today points to the need for common action against the rightist escalation.

When a coup is on the horizon, it is indispensable to single out those who are responsible for the crisis. Those who cause a disaster are not the same as those who are powerless to resolve it.

This distinction applies in the economic field. The errors committed by Maduro are both numerous and unjustifiable, but those guilty of the present damage are the capitalists.
The government is tolerant or incapable, but it does not belong on the same plane. Those who commit the monumental error of drawing a line of identity between both sectors[17] confuse responsibilities of a different nature.

The government’s mistakes have been demonstrated in the inoperative system of currency exchange rates, the unacceptable external debt, or in the lack of control over prices and smuggling. But the collapse of the economy has been caused by the affluent who manipulate the currencies, trigger inflation, handle imported goods and limit supplies of basic goods.

The Executive is unresponsive or acts mistakenly for many reasons: inefficiency, tolerance of corruption, protection of the bolibourgeoisie, connivance with millionaires disguised as Chavistas. That’s why it does not cut support to the private groups that receive cheap dollars in order to import dear. But the collapse of production has been carried out by the ruling class in order to overthrow Maduro. Not to recognize that conflict is to display an unwonted level of myopia.

This blindness prevents recognition of another key fact at this time: the resistance of Chavismo to the rightist onslaught. Albeit with methods and attitudes that are highly questionable, Maduro is not surrendering. He maintains the vertical structure of the PSUV, he favours the banning of the critical currents, and he preserves a bureaucracy that strangles responses from below. But unlike Dilma or Lugo he does not give in. His conduct is the exact opposite of the capitulation carried out by Syriza in Greece. This stance explains the hatred of the powerful. The government has made the excellent decision to withdraw from the OAS. It has abandoned the Ministry of Colonies and carried out the rupture that the left has always demanded. This decision should arouse the overwhelming support that very few have expressed.

Like any administration under attack from the Right, the government has resorted to force in its self-defence. The establishment media denounce that reaction with unusual hysteria. Forgotten are the justifications habitually made by governments of another character when they face similar situations. But Maduro has also been challenged conversely for his relative indulgence toward the fascists. He has simply adopted guarded measures in response to the opposition savagery.

In its response the government has of course committed injustices. That’s the regrettable cost of any significant confrontation with the counter-revolution. These mishaps have been present in all battles with the reaction, from Bolívar to Fidel. There is a need to avoid self-indulgence in this delicate terrain, but without repeating the slanders propagated by the opposition.

Maduro is directing his fire against the Rightist brutality and not against the people. So it makes no sense to compare him with Gaddafi or Saddam Hussein. He has not carried out any massacre of left-wing activists or participated in war-mongering adventures instigated by the United States. The analogy with Stalin is more ridiculous, but it reminds us that the spectre of Hitler hovers over many of the opposition leaders associated with Uribe or nostalgic for a Pinochet.

Social-Democratic Positions - In recent months, as well, among the adversaries of the Right there has been an increase in views that blame Maduro for Venezuela’s agony. These opinions repeat the old social- democratic posture of joining with the reaction at critical moments.

They question the legitimacy of the government, using the same arguments as the opposition. Instead of accusing the CIA, the escuálidos [the squalid ones, a Venezuelan phrase for the filthy rich], or the OAS, they concentrate their objections against Chavismo. They do this in the name of a democratic ideal that is as abstract as it is divorced from the battle to determine who will prevail in the running of the state.

This position has affected various “critical left” thinkers [pensadores del post-progresismo] linked to autonomism. Not only do they accuse Maduro for the present situation, they say he has reinforced an authoritarian leadership in order to maintain the model based on hydrocarbon rents.[18]

This characterization is very similar to the liberal thesis that attributes all of Venezuela’s problems to populist politics, implemented by tyrants who are squandering the resources of the state. Only they use language that is more diplomatic in its diagnosis.

Other views of the same order point more categorically to the responsibility of the Chavista leader. They call on us as well to avoid “the conspiratorial over-simplification of blaming the Right or imperialism” for the country’s troubles.[19] But are the conspirators of the reaction imaginary? Are the murdered, the paramilitaries and the plans of the Pentagon paranoiac Bolivarian inventions?

Without answering this elementary question, that position also dismisses any comparison with what happened in Chile in 1973. However, it does not explain why that analogy is inapplicable. It takes for granted that the two situations differ without noting the huge similarities in respect to the shortages, the conservative irritation of the middle class or the intervention of the CIA.

The disputed parallels with Allende are, however, accepted in the case of the first Peronist government, which is viewed as a direct antecedent of Chavismo. But is the resemblance located in the years of stability or in the moments prior to the coup of 1955? The preoccupation with the escalation of violence suggests that the similarity is in relation to that latter period. And in a situation of that type what was the priority? Confront Perón’s authoritarianism or resist the gorillas?

The social-democrats and “critical left” point to the authoritarian Maduro as the main cause of the current situation.[20] That’s why they downplay the danger of a coup and reject the need to prepare some defense against the Right’s provocations. But the consequences of this attitude are demonstrated whenever the oligarchs and their bandits return to government. The recent events in Honduras, Paraguay or Brazil do not even arouse alarm among those who demonize Chavismo.

They object as well to the extractivism, indebtedness and contracts with oil companies. But they do not explain if they are demanding anticapitalist and socialist alternatives to these obvious failings of Maduro. The same applies to the shortages and the speculation. Are they urging him to act with greater firmness against the bankers and the big commercial cartels? Do they propose confiscations, nationalizations, or direct popular control?

By adopting these initiatives one could imagine building bridges with the government, but never with the opposition. The detractors of Chavismo sidestep this difference.

‘Critical Left’ Appeals - The social-democratic viewpoint characterizes the urgent call for peace signed by numerous intellectuals. This statement promotes a peace process, rejecting both the authoritarian turn of Chavismo and the violent attitude of right-wing sectors.[21]

The call favours equilibrium to overcome the polarization and resorts to a language closer to that of the foreign ministries than to the popular activists. The tone is in conformity with the implicit attachment to a theory of two evils. Against both extremes it proposes to take the middle road.

But this equidistance was immediately belied by the fundamental responsibility it assigned to the government. And not only does it overlook the harassment of the Right, but imperialism is barely mentioned in passing.

The text was met with a powerful reply sponsored by the REDH [Network of Intellectuals, Artists and Social Movements in Defense of Humanity] and signed by many intellectuals. This criticism rightly objected to the fascination with conventional republicanism and noted the pre-eminent gravitation of extra-constitutional forces in critical situations.[22]

The liberal relapse of the post-progressive or “critical left” thinkers recreates what happened with the social-democratic Gramcians in the 1980s. The animosity of that group toward Leninism and the Cuban revolution is comparable to the present hostility to Chavismo. A number of those who signed the call have passed through both periods.

But the present social-democratic variant is late and lacks the political reference once contributed by the Spanish PSOE. The social-liberal turn of that party has completely demolished its initial progressive imaginary. That it is now orphaned explains, perhaps, the present re-encounter with the old liberalism.

In some cases this evolution is the culmination of the division that has affected distinct variants of autonomism. The positions taken toward the Bolivarian process have triggered this fracture. Those who chose to line up with the opposition are suspicious of those who “cling to Chavismo.”[23] But this latter sector has thought through the previous insufficiencies and has come to understand the need to fight for the state power with socialist perspectives related to Latin American Marxism.

In contrast, the other segment continues navigating in the ambiguity of generalities about anti-patriarchism and anti-extractivism without offering any concrete example of what is proposed. Absorbed by the liberal universe, their enigmatic vagaries no longer enrich left-wing thinking. Between their forgetfulness of the class struggle and their fascination with bourgeois institutionality, their denunciations of extractivism are becoming a picturesque curiosity.

Absent-Minded Dogmatism - A discourse that is convergent with social democracy is also disseminated using sectarian arguments. In this case Maduro’s is portrayed as a corrupt government, submissive and adaptable, that is consolidating a dictatorial regime.[24] On other occasions that same illegitimacy is described with more indirect or sophisticated categories (de facto president, Bonapartist chief).

But all the variants coincide in underscoring the fundamental responsibility of an authoritarian government that is tearing apart the country. The harmony of this focus with the media narrative is striking. The main problem, however, is not in the rhetoric but in the practice.

Every day there are marches of the Right and of the government. The champions of socialist rigour have to ask themselves: Which of the two mobilizations will we join? With whom will we identify? If they think the government is the main enemy they will have to make common cause with the escuálidos of the guarimbas.

In Buenos Aires, for example, they called last May for a mobilization demanding the ouster of Maduro.[25] All the passers-by who observed this march understood clearly who would immediately occupy Venezuela’s presidency if the present head of state were overthrown. And they noted the total coincidence between this demand and the messages issued daily by the news media.

This is not the first time that sectors of the left have so clearly converged with the Right. An antecedent in Argentina under the Kirchner governments was the presence of red flags in the soy farmers’ marches and the demonstrations of the caceroleros [middle- and upper-class opponents of the government banging pots and pans]. But what was pathetic in Buenos Aires can turn to tragedy in Caracas.

Other visions compare Maduro with the opposition, arguing that under the masquerade of an apparent contraposition hide huge coincidences. So they speculate about the moment when this convergence will become explicit.[26] This curious interpretation contrasts with the pitched battles between both sectors that everyone else sees. So it is a bit difficult to interpret the guarimbas, assassinations and Pentagon threats as a fictitious quarrel between two relatives.

The sole logic of this presentation is to downplay the seriousness of the current conflict, to interpret it as a mere inter-bourgeois fight over the appropriation of the rent. That is why Maduro’s totalitarianism is seen as a danger equivalent to (or worse than) the opposition.

The major problem in this focus is not its absent-mindedness but the implicit neutrality that it promotes. Since everyone is equal, the self-coup attributed to the government is compared with the coup promoted by the Right.

That equivalence is obviously false, however. In Venezuela there are not two reactionary variants in contention like, for example, jihadism and the dictatorships in the Middle East. Nor is it the type of competition between troglodytes that in Argentina opposed Videla to Isabel Perón.

The clash between Capriles-López and Maduro resembles the confrontation of Pinochet with Allende, of Lonardi with Perón or more recently of Temer with Dilma. Similarly the triumph of the Right over Maduro, far from an engagement between equals, would entail a terrible political regression.

Confronted with this alternative, neutrality is a synonym for passivity and represents a huge degree of impotence in the face of great events. It means renouncing participation and commitment to genuine causes.

Since this attitude takes for granted that Chavismo is finished, it limits its entire horizon to writing a balance sheet of that experience. But the biggest failure in political action never affects unfinished or frustrated processes. The worst thing is narrow-mindedness in the face of major epic events.

Whatever one’s questions about Maduro, the outcome in Venezuela will define the immediate destiny of the entire region. If the reactionaries triumph, the result will be a scenario of defeat and a feeling of impotence in the face of the Empire. The end of the progressive cycle will be a fact and not a subject for evaluation among social science thinkers.

The Right knows this and for that reason is stepping up the campaigns against the intellectuals who defend Chavismo. The recent broadside attack in Clarín is a foretaste of the assault that is being prepared for a post-Maduro regional setting.[27] The sectarians do not register that danger.

Spurious Elections - In the immediate future there are two political options at play: the Right demands that the general elections be moved forward, and the government has called a Constituent Assembly. The opposition is only willing to participate in elections that will ensure it first place.

Of the 19 elections carried out under Chavismo, the Bolivarians won 17 and immediately recognized the two that they lost. In contrast, the Right never accepted their adverse results. They always claimed there was some fraud or resorted to a boycott. When they won in by-elections they demanded the immediate fall of the government.

In December 2015 they obtained a majority in the National Assembly and proclaimed the overthrow of Maduro. Then they attempted in various ways to disregard the constitution, even by swearing in deputies illegally elected and falsifying signatures on petitions to recall Maduro.

Capriles, Borges and López are now calling for spurious elections amidst the economic war and provocation in the streets. They want elections like those in Colombia where, in one election after another, hundreds of popular activists are murdered. They hope to gain at the ballot boxes as in Honduras under the pressure of the murder of Berta. They want the kind of elections that are held in Mexico over the dead bodies of journalists, students and teachers.

It would be a terrible error to join in elections designed to prepare a Chavista cemetery. Maduro is being asked to carry out elections in a climate of civil war that would be unacceptable to any government.

Venezuela is going through a situation that bears some resemblance to the scene in Nicaragua at the end of the first Sandinista electoral term in office. The military siege and shortages wore out an exhausted population who voted for the Right out of simple fatigue. In those conditions elections have a pre-established winner. On the other hand, comparison with the scenario that led to the fall of the Soviet Union makes no sense. Venezuela is not a big power imploding internally at the end of a lengthy divorce between the regime and the population. It is a vulnerable Latin American country under attack from the United States.

Some thinkers take for granted the oppressive role of imperialism and suggest that this is not a decisive factor in the present crisis.[28] They assume that the persistent denunciations of that domination constitute “a fact already known” or a mere ritual of the Left. But they forget that it is never pointless to emphasize the devastating impact of aggression from the North on governments that have become enemies of Washington.

The entire spectrum of ex-Chavistas who are joining in the call for general elections confuse democracy with liberal republicanism. They have lost sight of the way in which the right to self-government is systematically blocked by bourgeois institutionality.

This impediment is why the great majority of constitutional regimes have lost legitimacy. It becomes more and more evident that the ruling class uses voting systems to consolidate its power. It uses this control to run the economy, the justice system, the news media and the repressive apparatus. Real democracy can only emerge in a socialist process of transformation of society. It is true that Maduro cancelled the recall referendum, suspended regional elections and proscribed some opposition politicians. These measures are part of a blind reaction to the harassment. But the Chavista leader is confronting the hypocrisy of greater import exhibited by the defenders of the present electoral regimes.

It suffices to see how in Brazil the impeachment was carried out by a group of outlaws with the cover of the judges and parliamentarians who manipulate the system of indirect presidential selection. It never occurred to the OAS to intervene against that vulgar violation of democratic principles.

Nor did the establishment get indignant when the Electoral College anointed Trump after he had received a few million votes less than Hilary Clinton. A ruling monarchy in Spain or England seems natural to them, as do the clumsy schemes that are used to manipulate each election in Mexico. The sacrosanct democracy they ask of Venezuela is completely absent in all capitalist countries.

Possibilities of the Constituent Assembly - Obviously, the best opportunity for a transformative Constituent Assembly was lost several years ago. The present call is purely defensive and is an attempt to contend with an exasperating situation.

But it is useless to discuss only what has not been done. There is still time left for those balance-sheets. The important thing now is to determine how this call can reopen a road for popular initiative.

Before the call for the Constituent Assembly the government was limiting itself to developing a purely bureaucratic confrontation between one state power and another. It relied on a struggle from above by the Executive or the Supreme Court against the National Assembly. Now it is finally calling on the communal power and we will have to see whether this idea translates into a real mobilization.

There are numerous signs of weariness and skepticism within Chavismo. But no one chooses the conditions in which to fight and the main dilemma turns on whether to continue or abandon the struggle. Those who have resolved to dig in their heels are calling for a revival of the popular project.

Some left currents that are very critical of Maduro’s management think this convening of a Constituent Assembly could unleash a dynamic of communes against the bureaucratic operations.[29] They see the Constituent Assembly as an imperfect instrument to disentangle the dispute with corrupt bourgeoisified and bolibourgeois Chavismo.

The Constituent Assembly could also help to break the stalemate in recent months between guarimbas and pro-government mobilizations. If it is adequately tasked it could break down the opposition front, separating the discontented from the fascists. But it is obvious that without drastic measures on the economic and social front the Constituent Assembly will be an empty shell. If the disaster in production is not attacked through nationalization of the banks, foreign trade and the expropriation of the saboteurs, there will be no recovery in popular support.

The palliative measures attempted in order to increase participation of the base organisms in the distribution of food are insufficient. Radical measures cannot be postponed. Whatever the alternative, it will not be easy to redirect the economy after so many mistakes in regard to the debt, the creation of special investment zones or the tolerance of capital flight.

Chávez achieved a big redistribution of the rent through new methods of popular politicization, but he never managed to lay the foundations for a process of industrialization. He clashed with the opposition capitalists but not with the internal bolibourgeoisie and he was unable to deactivate the rentist culture that undermined all attempts to build up a productive economy. The hesitation to break with the capitalist structure explains the adverse results.

The present context is more difficult because of the sharp drop in oil prices and the blockage of regional integration projects under the conservative restoration. But it should also be noted that all revolutionary processes take off in adversity and the Constituent Assembly can provide a framework for regaining the initiative.

Some critics of this call object to the sectoral and communal form of election. They say that with this format the “assembly will be tricky, corporatist or illegitimate.”[30] And here they repeat the endorsement the Right makes (when it suits them) of conventional constitutionalism. That demand is not surprising when it comes from establishment commentators but it is disturbing when it comes from enthusiasts of the Russian revolution.

After three decades of post-dictatorial regimes, many have forgotten the duplicities of bourgeois democracy. It might be remembered how Lenin and Trotsky defended in 1917 the legitimacy of the soviets and withdrew recognition of a Constituent Assembly that rivalled the revolutionary power.

The context in Venezuela today is very different. However, the Bolshevik revolution not only taught us to note the social background, the class conflicts and the interests at stake, it also indicated a path by which to go beyond the hypocrisy of bourgeois liberalism and it confirmed that acts of force against the reaction form part of the confrontation with rightist barbarism.

The Left will have to determine whether it converges with the opposition in the boycott or participates in the Constituent Assembly. There is also a third option, with a very small audience: “yes, no and the very opposite.”

In the rest of the region the need is for solidarity. As in Cuba’s special period, we have to put our shoulders to the wheel in difficult situations. Let us hope that many compañeros adopt this approach before it is too late.
 
Two people were shot dead close to a polling station in the Libertador municipality of Merida sate in Venezuela on the night into Sunday, the day of the assembly election in the country, local media reported.

Venezuela Election: Two People Killed Near Polling Station
https://sputniknews.com/latam/201707301056017686-venezuela-national-assembly-election-two-killed/

According to the Nacional media outlet, one of the victims worked as a security officer in the education center of Simon Rodriguez, where the polling station is located.

Earlier it was reported that an opposition candidate, who was going to become a member of Venezuela's Constituent Assembly was killed at his home overnight.

The election to the Constituent Assembly is taking place in Venezuela on Sunday. The body will have the right to amend the constitution. The opposition’s so-called popular referendum on July 16 voted against the decision to hold such election.


The Peruvian government will not recognize the results of the ongoing Constituent Assembly election in Venezuela, Peru's Foreign Ministry said in a statement on Sunday.

Peru Refuses to Recognize Results of Venezuela's Constituent Assembly Election
https://sputniknews.com/latam/201707311056021171-peru-refuses-venezuela-constituent-assembly/

On Sunday, Venezuela is holding election of the members of the Constituent Assembly, a new legislative body with the power to amend the constitution. The last time a National Constituent Assembly was convened in 1999.

"This election violates the Venezuelan constitution and is not in line with the sovereign will of people represented in the National Assembly [country's parliament]," the statement said.

Peru also condemns the alleged repressions in Venezuela and demands the launch of a national dialogue that will help to restore the democratic order.

Earlier in the day, Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos said that Bogota would also refuse to recognize the results of the Venezuelan election.
 
A grenade explosion hit a polling station in the central Venezuelan state of Guarico leaving six people injured, local media reported.

Grenade Explosion at Polling Station in Venezuela Leaves 6 People Injured
https://sputniknews.com/latam/201707311056022571-venezuela-polling-station-grenade/

The incident occurred in the city of Valle De La Pascua where unknown persons threw a grenade to a school where a polling station was located, the 2001 media outlet reported. Several minutes earlier a grenade was thrown to another polling station but it has not exploded.


The US Department of State condemned the Venezuelan election to the Constituent Assembly and vowed to continue to take "strong and swift actions" against the country's leadership.

US Condemns Venezuelan Election to Constituent Assembly - Department of State
https://sputniknews.com/politics/201707311056023422-us-condemns-venezuelan-elections/

The United States condemns the elections imposed on July 30 for the National Constituent Assembly, which is designed to replace the legitimately elected National Assembly and undermine the Venezuelan people’s right to self-determination… We will continue to take strong and swift actions against the architects of authoritarianism in Venezuela, including those who participate in the National Constituent Assembly as a result of today’s flawed election," Heather Nauert, spokesperson for the US Department of State, said in a statement on Sunday.

She also expressed condolences to all Venezuelans, whose relatives or friends died during the ongoing protests.


Only 9 percent of voters took part in the Venezuelan election to the Constituent Assembly, opposition lawmaker Delsa Solorzano said at a press conference.

Only 9% of Voters Participate in Venezuelan Election - Opposition
https://sputniknews.com/latam/201707311056022805-nine-percent-voters-venezuelan-elections/

"The turnout amounts to 9 percent with 25 percent of these votes belonging to civil servants, they are not valid," Solorzano said on Sunday.

There is no official data about the turnout. Earlier on Sunday, one of the opposition leaders, Governor of of the Venezuelan state of Miranda, Henrique Capriles Radonski wrote on his Twitter page that the turnout would not reach 15 percent.

Venezuelan authorities have already decided to extend the work of polling stations by an hour so that more people could take part in the election.
 
The results of the voting for the Constituent Assembly were given. According to Tibisay Lucena, President of the Electoral Council chavism obtain 8.0 million of votes, 41 % of the voters universe. 56 % abstention. The opposition not participated because the assembly was designed to give total power to Maduro and its government, violating some constitutional articles. Opposition called to not vote.

I have never seen the streets so deserted, even during this lasts days of Civic strike. Near my house there are many voting centers and there was no people in rows as is usual as I have seen many times in the past. Some didn't have people at all and looked closed. Yesterday the Electoral Council in a weird movement allowed people to vote in any place they want, inside the same municipality and prepared a big center of voting, the poliedro of caracas, a place used to big shows. This place was the only that show big rows of people voting in the capital. It is nonlegal to change the place of vote, even more in the way it was made.


The numbers don't fit for me. If they have more people that the opposition that claims to have 7.7 millions and according to chavism the opposition don't reach 5 -6 millions, why they have hindered all the elections in Venezuela? I really suspect of fraud. The opposition said the participation don't reach the 15 % and this seems more real in accordance of what I have seen and all my friends told about other places.

Even so, this is big mistake of Maduro, Chavism decided burn the Constitution, Burn the confidence in the electoral system. They already threatened to politicians of opposition with jail without pass throw courts just because the Constituent Assembly has supra-powers, and dissolve the legitimate Congress, to Intervene universities, one of them the place where I work. Let's see what happens.
 
Galaxia2002 said:
The results of the voting for the Constituent Assembly were given. According to Tibisay Lucena, President of the Electoral Council chavism obtain 8.0 million of votes, 41 % of the voters universe. 56 % abstention. The opposition not participated because the assembly was designed to give total power to Maduro and its government, violating some constitutional articles. Opposition called to not vote.

I have never seen the streets so deserted, even during this lasts days of Civic strike. Near my house there are many voting centers and there was no people in rows as is usual as I have seen many times in the past. Some didn't have people at all and looked closed. Yesterday the Electoral Council in a weird movement allowed people to vote in any place they want, inside the same municipality and prepared a big center of voting, the poliedro of caracas, a place used to big shows. This place was the only that show big rows of people voting in the capital. It is nonlegal to change the place of vote, even more in the way it was made.


The numbers don't fit for me. If they have more people that the opposition that claims to have 7.7 millions and according to chavism the opposition don't reach 5 -6 millions, why they have hindered all the elections in Venezuela? I really suspect of fraud. The opposition said the participation don't reach the 15 % and this seems more real in accordance of what I have seen and all my friends told about other places.

Even so, this is big mistake of Maduro, Chavism decided burn the Constitution, Burn the confidence in the electoral system. They already threatened to politicians of opposition with jail without pass throw courts just because the Constituent Assembly has supra-powers, and dissolve the legitimate Congress, to Intervene universities, one of them the place where I work. Let's see what happens.

Interesting. I actually thought that things would get much worse than they did. I mean, the government banned demonstrations for the weekend, when the opposition had already planned them. And we know how violent that opposition can be (they burn and lynch people), and how much they opposed this constitutional assembly. So, the way you describe it, it sounds like many voters had the same bad feeling and decided not to vote, which resulted in a relatively calm weekend.

I always thought that the idea of the election for the constitutional assembly was bad, simply because in a time of crisis like now, and with the country so divided and with such explosive moods on the streets, it would hardly turn out to be an effective and convincing process, much less one that would 'solve the crisis', as the government intended. However, I'm reading on twitter and elsewhere people like Nikki Halley and John McCain saying that these elections are a "dictatorial move", and I find that over the top. When people say "dictator" I think of Pinochet, for example, who truly ruled with an iron fist and had entire families 'disappear' at night for their political views, having them tortured and executed, and their children handed over to regime-sympathizers for adoption. But calling for an constitutional assembly election like Maduro did? A mistake, perhaps even an impopular one - but dictatorial? Not really.

Like this article posted by angelburst suggests ( http://www.globalresearch.ca/venezuela-reactionary-coup-in-the-making-media-disinformation-the-attitude-of-the-left/5601646 ), much of the 'dictatorial', 'draconian' or 'totalitarian' moves made by Maduro should be understood in the context of being under siege for years, therefore they are reactions to the attacks from abroad (imperialist Washington and friends, the CIA, the manipulation of the markets) and from within the country (the goods-supply manipulation by companies, the violent opposition whom are real terrorists). Again, one could argue they were bad moves, even undemocratic or immoral ones, but I don't think they are on the same level as what the opposition and their imperialist supporters do. Apart from that, I tend to see Maduro and his government more or less as your average Latin American government, with its almost obligatory amount of corruption and nepotism (or so say the rumors). But you don't hear the hysterical calls for 'regime change' in any of the other LA countries that commit similar sins or worse.

So in short, I'm afraid that it would be a mistake to aim for the 'middle ground' in this case - which is also not to say that Maduro is a saint. But he is not the devil he is painted to be, and I'm sure the alternative would be much worse. At this point, it seems it's just a matter of time for that alternative to grab the power, in which case I am truly sory for Venezuela. As this article says:

https://www.sott.net/article/357880-Strange-Fruit-Why-no-one-should-support-the-Opposition-in-Venezuela

Many who favor the opposition will cite President Nicolás Maduro's unpopularity and allege his incompetence. Yet this, too, is to employ a silly double standard and strong dose of bad faith. Supposing Maduro and his government were unpopular and incompetent, how, then, would they differ from any number of governments that nobody ever thinks of bringing down through lynchings and burnings?

They will also say: But Venezuelans don't have access to the medicine and food they need. This is true but sadly also applies to the people of Haiti, Yemen, Chad and even many parts of the United States. Yet the real question is: What makes one think that the lynchers, racists and their apologists are going to bring food and medicine to the people of Venezuela?

Venezuela has real problems, no doubt. It has been hit by a severe economic crisis. Its government is not socialist, so it cannot distribute resources evenly through central planning, meaning that rich people are the only ones who live completely at ease.

Generally, the government has tried to muddle its way through the crisis, getting funds through deals with international corporations and distributing large numbers of food bags. This is not a very pretty picture, but it is actually considerably better than the practices of most governments worldwide.

Most important, the Venezuelan government is not white supremacist, it does not employ terror tactics, and it does not lynch people. That is where the real red line is, which nobody should cross. We should also not let the media, the US government, or any important international institution cross it. And we should criticize the hell out of them when they do.
 
US Treasury sanctions Venezuelan president Maduro

Source: https://www.rt.com/news/398125-maduro-us-treasury-sanctions/

US Treasury sanctions Venezuelan president Maduro... more details to follow

If this trend keeps on going, ... the entire world will end up on sanction list ...
Moreover, to sanction the elected head of another state (is this legal against international law?), because elections were organized is... a paramount, in order to safeguard democracy (official reason)...

I am still waiting for the complete text explaining these sanctions over.

#art
 
Re: US Treasury sanctions Venezuelan president Maduro

artofdream said:
Source: https://www.rt.com/news/398125-maduro-us-treasury-sanctions/

US Treasury sanctions Venezuelan president Maduro... more details to follow

If this trend keeps on going, ... the entire world will end up on sanction list ...
Moreover, to sanction the elected head of another state (is this legal against international law?), because elections were organized is... a paramount, in order to safeguard democracy (official reason)...

I am still waiting for the complete text explaining these sanctions over.

#art

More information on Venezuela here - that might answer your questions:

https://cassiopaea.org/forum/index.php/topic,44068.0.html
 
Venezuelan Attorney General Luisa Ortega Diaz refused to recognize the results of the recent elections to the National Constituent Assembly.

Venezuelan Attorney General Opposes Results of Constituent Assembly Election
https://sputniknews.com/latam/201708011056056598-ortega-diaz-refuse-constituent-assembly/

"Now we will see an absolute power in the hands of minority… There will be no separation of powers, which is the only guarantee of control over the administration," Ortega said on Monday.

The official added that the country faced "dictatorial ambitions."

A number of Venezuela's internal political groups, as well as foreign countries, such as Argentina, Italy and the United States, have refused to recognize the results of the Sunday vote.


Italy does not recognize the National Constituent Assembly of Venezuela and believes that the situation in the country comes close to a civil war, according to Italian Prime Minister Paolo Gentiloni.

Italy Refuses to Recognize Venezuelan Constituent Assembly – Prime Minister
https://sputniknews.com/politics/201708011056056319-italy-refuses-recognize-venezuelan-assembly/

"The situation is on the edge of a civil war and establishment of a dictatorial regime. Italy does not recognize the Constitutional Assembly wanted by [Venezuelan President Nicolas] Maduro," Gentiloni said in an interview with TG5 channel.

Italy is concerned with the fate of 130,000 Venezuelans of Italian origin, and Rome pledges its support to them, the prime minister added.


The United States has introduced sanctions against Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, according to US Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control.

US Sanctions Venezuela’s President Maduro - Treasury
https://sputniknews.com/politics/201707311056053490-us-sanctions-maduro/

The United States has introduced sanctions against Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, US Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control said in an update on Monday.

The following individual has been added to OFAC's SDN List: MADURO MOROS, Nicolas… President of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela," the update stated.

The Treasury imposed sanctions on Maduro for "undermining democracy" in Venezuela, according to a release.

"As a result of today’s actions, all assets of Nicolas Maduro subject to US jurisdiction are frozen, and US persons are prohibited from dealing with him," the release added.

The United States is monitoring the situation in Venezuela and will consider hitting the country with new sanctions, US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said on Monday.

"We very much believe that sanctions do work, and we will continue to monitor the situation and consider additional sanctions," Mnuchin told reporters at a White House briefing.


According to reports, Venezuelan opposition has announced new protests against Nicolas Maduro after the country held its election to the Constituent Assembly.

Venezuelan Opposition Announces New Protests Against President Maduro After Vote
https://sputniknews.com/latam/201707311056024530-venezuelan-opposition-protests/

"Tomorrow [on Monday], from the noon, there will be a new day of protests across the country," the Democratic Unity Roundtable (MUD) party wrote on its Twitter page citing one of the opposition leaders, Governor of the Venezuelan state of Miranda, Henrique Capriles Radonski.
 
Lawyer Gustavo Velasquez says that Leopoldo Lopez, one of the leaders of the Venezuelan opposition movement, is held in the Ramo Verde military prison.

Venezuelan Opposition Leader Lopez Held in Military Prison - Lawyer
https://sputniknews.com/latam/201708011056093486-venezuelan-opposition-military-prison/

Leopoldo Lopez, one of the leaders of the Venezuelan opposition movement, is held in the Ramo Verde military prison, his lawyer, Gustavo Velasquez told Sputnik Tuesday.

"Leopoldo [Lopez] is at Ramo Verde [military prison], the house arrest was lifted without presenting an arrest warrant, his lawyer was not informed," Velasquez said.

Earlier in the day, Venezuelan authorities arrested Lopez and Antonio Ledezma, two opposition figures, amid mass anti-government protests, taking them from their homes and giving no information as to where they would be kept.

On Sunday, Venezuela held the election of the Constituent Assembly, which will be charged with rewriting the constitution. The opposition did not recognize the results of the vote, saying the decision to convene the assembly should be made via referendum. The series of protests has so far claimed the lives of over 120 people.


EU Spokeswoman for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy Catherine Ray called the detention of Venezuelan opposition leaders "step in the wrong direction."

EU Believes Arrest of Venezuelan Opposition Leaders 'Step in Wrong Direction'
https://sputniknews.com/world/201708011056086144-eu-venezuela-opposition/

The European Union considers the detention of Venezuelan opposition leaders as a step in the wrong direction and calls on Venezuelan authorities to de-escalate the tensions currently unsettling the country, EU Spokeswoman for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy Catherine Ray said Tuesday.

Earlier in the day, Venezuelan authorities arrested two opposition figures, including founder of Venezuelan opposition Popular Will party Leopoldo Lopez, amid anti-government protests in the country triggered by the election of the Constituent Assembly.

Well, if you remember, a few weeks ago we had welcomed the transfer of Leopoldo Lopez from prison to house arrest. We have heard the news today and we believe it's clearly a step in the wrong direction. We expect more information from the Venezuelan authorities on the situation which is still unclear," Ray said at news conference.

Ray called on the government of Venezuela to work toward urgent confidence-building measures aimed at de-escalating tensions within the country and fostering better conditions for resuming efforts for a peaceful, negotiated solution.

In September 2015, Lopez was sentenced to 14 years in prison for inciting violence during 2014 street protests. On July 8, he was transferred from prison to house arrest after three years of imprisonment.

On Sunday, Venezuela held the election of the Constituent Assembly, which will be charged with rewriting the constitution. The draft is anticipated to find the way out of the political crisis which started in January 2016, when a new opposition-controlled National Assembly was elected.

The Popular Will party, headed by Lopez, is a member of the Democratic Unity Roundtable, the electoral coalition that currently holds a supermajority in the National Assembly. The opposition believes that President Nicolas Maduro's plan for constitutional reform is aimed at sidelining the parliament and does not recognize the results of the vote.


The Cuban Foreign Ministry reported in a statement about an international attack against the Venezuelan authorities organized by the United States and supported by the Organization of American States (OAS).

Cuban Foreign Ministry Reports About International Attack Targeting Venezuela
https://sputniknews.com/latam/201708011056060941-cuba-venezuela-foreign-atack/

"Cuba reports about a well-organized international operation led from Washington with the support of the Luis Almagro, the Secretary-General of the OAS, that aimes at making the Venezuelan nation stay calm and to make it give up through the attacks and economic sanctions," the statement said on Monday

The statement added that Havana knows such "interventionist practices" very well.

According to the Cuban ministry, only the Venezuelans themselves could make decisions about their future on their own.
 
Trump's "attitude" towards Maduro makes some sense - when you discover - that Ex-ExxonMobil CEO and current U.S. Secretary of State is personally involved in manipulating events. If the information in the second article is valid, ExxonMobil is financing the Venezuelan opposition organizations to generate acts of violence ..... while diplomatic maneuvers are being carried out - by the U.S. State Department to revive the internal political conflict.
ALL - in the personal interests of oil, power and stolen wealth!

Donald Trump called on Nicolas Maduro to release the political opposition prisoners Leopoldo Lopez and Antonio Ledezma without any conditions immediately.

Trump Calls on Maduro to Immediately Release Political Prisoners
https://sputniknews.com/latam/201708021056097552-trump-calls-maduro-opposition-release/

"The United States holds Maduro — who publicly announced just hours earlier that he would move against his political opposition — personally responsible for the health and safety of Mr. Lopez, Mr. Ledezma, and any others seized. We reiterate our call for the immediate and unconditional release of all political prisoners," Trump said on Tuesday.

Lopez and Ledezma were arrested for violating the terms of their house arrest, local media reported, citing Venezuela's Supreme Court.

Both politicians were seized after Venezuela's intelligence agency determined that they had been planning their escape, El National newspaper reported.


Exxon wants to topple Venezuela for geopolitical and geo-economic reasons

US Occupation Has Already Begun and Is Being Conducted by ExxonMobil July 27, 2017
_http://misionverdad.com/mv-in-english/us-occupation-has-already-begun-and-is-being-conducted-by-exxonmobil

Translated by Telesur.

ExxonMobil awarded contracts to Guyana for infrastructure, drilling and storage with a view to extracting the huge oil and gas reserves from the so-called “Liza Project” located in maritime territory claimed by Venezuela as stipulated by the Geneva Agreement of 1966. In 2015 the first oil discovery in the area provoked a diplomatic conflict between the nations due to the activities of the oil company on the Atlantic front of the Essequibo river.

‘One of the Biggest Oil Discoveries in the Industry of the Last Decade’ - According to Gulf Oil & Gas, Dutch oil holding company SBM Offshore NV has been granted a contract awarded by ExxonMobil, a U.S. company that owns 45 percent of the Stabroek Block located on the Atlantic front of the Essequibo through its subsidiary Esso Exploration and Production Guyana Limited Atlantic, where the rich deposits of Liza-1 and Liza-2 were found.

The CEO of the Dutch holding company Bruno Chabas commented on the contract, “We are proud that ExxonMobil has awarded the Liza contracts to SBM Offshore. Liza, the offshore field in Guyana, is one of the major oil discoveries in the industry over the past decade.”

However, this contract is not the first by ExxonMobil to accelerate its plans for oil and gas extraction in the territory claimed by Venezuela. In May, a subsidiary of the Italian oil company ENI named Saipem, took over the rights to carry out “the engineering, acquisition, construction, installation of associated bands, structures and bridges” to Liza-1, according to the World Oil website.

Recently teleSUR, citing the U.S. Geological Survey, informed that the area concentrated in the “Liza Project” is the second largest untapped oil fields in the world.

With this latest contract awarded, ExxonMobil seeks to produce 120,000 barrels of oil and 170 million cubic feet of natural gas, with a storage capacity of 1.6 million barrels of crude oil. In total, the Stabroek Block occupies an area of 26 thousand 800 km2 and it is estimated that 1.4 billion barrels of high-quality oil is deposited in the Liza-1 field alone.

In 2015, Rex Tillerson, the current U.S. Secretary of State and former general manager of ExxonMobil, commented with joy to his shareholders that this well (Liza-1) was the largest found anywhere in the world that year, thus giving a strategic character to future projects of the U.S. oil company.

Geopolitical Urgency - The priority of this U.S. oil company to topple Venezuela is geopolitical and geo-economic, as a fundamental pillar of a new political, economic and financial configuration of the continent (with Russia and China as alternative strategic partners), which poses a threat to the strategic advantages and the almost absolute control of the energy resources of the region that these corporations boasted throughout the 20th century. Securing that source of supply not only enabled it to carry out its arms race and military campaigns in the Middle East, but to maintain a global superpower status which is challenged today by emerging rivals.

In the demarcation reinforced by this second round of contracts in the Liza-1 and Liza-2 fields, there is an implicit interest in appropriating an energy corridor as an Exxon exclusive exploitation zone that runs from the Orinoco Oil Belt, through the Essequibo, reaching the mouth of its Atlantic front.

The details drawn into the plans of the oil company are not only energetic but also move to the political and diplomatic terrain, as the takeover of political power in Venezuela by extraconstitutional means would conclude in the appropriation of the other end of the corridor — the richest on earth if the reserves of the Orinoco Belt and those off the shore of the Essequibo and the Stabroek Block are added together. In the thick of it, Russian and Chinese oil companies (Rosneft and Cnooc) are ahead in investments and exploration projects that represent a serious threat to what the largest U.S. oil company sees as a strategic source of supply for their geopolitical global control plans.

Inescapable data. ExxonMobil’s awarding of contracts came just days after Venezuela and China signed four large-scale energy partnership projects
ranging from increased oil production to refining projects in the Asian giant.

The Coup Master - In an investigation presented by Mision Verdad a few weeks ago, ExxonMobil’s financing of Venezuelan opposition organizations to generate acts of violence was revealed, while at the same time diplomatic maneuvers were being carrying out by the U.S. State Department to revive the internal political conflict and to repudiate the Venezuelan government in international organizations such as the OAS.

The last meeting of foreign ministers of the OAS on Venezuela, prior to the organization’s general assembly in Mexico, served to illustrate how the oil corporation also manages the threads of the international siege against the country. The Guyanese government, subordinate to its investments and currently the chair of CARICOM, tried to impose a resolution not agreed upon by the Caribbean states and identical to the one presented by the U.S. at the last meeting, with the aim of condemning the Venezuelan National Constituent Assembly. The “red line” drawn by the U.S. to camouflage rounds of much more aggressive sanctions against the Bolivarian nation.

The Caribbean as a Strategic Objective - The Caribbean is a mix of the circumstantial and strategic. The need to overthrow Petrocaribe is not just a circumstantial calculation to break Venezuela’s alliance with the Caribbean and the support it receives against the diplomatic siege.

It is also run in parallel to the objectives of ExxonMobile, as the company tries to maneuver into Guayana and politically and economically reconfigure the Caribbean Basin to serve it purposes.

We have already mentioned that the U.S. oil company aims to make the Caribbean dependent on the United Sates both politically and in terms of energy by using its natural gas surplus (Exxon is a global leader producer and exporter), while at the same time lining up its batteries against Petrocaribe to regain geopolitical control of its key maritime and commercial position, placing a barrier to stop Chinese and Russian capital from investing in areas not only in the energy sector but also infrastructure and transport.

Changes to the energy sector over the last decade have displaced its core centers, both in supply and demand, to the Middle East, Central Asia and Eurasia, and its productive matrix toward the production of unconventional oil and gas (oil shale). Whoever insures this source of energy supply will undoubtedly have enormous geopolitical advantages to dictate the global rules of the game in the coming decades. According to a recent report of the Inter-American Development Bank, more than 70 percent of global oil and gas reserves are in the Atlantic basin.

ExxonMobil would undoubtedly be very pleased to achieve its plans and retake the Caribbean by overthrowing the Venezuelan government, the Petrocaribe pillar.

ExxonMobil’s strategy is long-term, directed at the entire continent and has Venezuela as its primary objective. It is not in vain that a crew of business elites has assumed the reins of U.S. foreign policy today. There and not elsewhere you will find the reasons for the aggressive siege we face.
 
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