Venezuela - U.S. Again Tries Regime Change...

Moderators: Elvis, DrVolin, Jeff

Re: Venezuela - U.S. Again Tries Regime Change...

Postby MacCruiskeen » Sun Feb 17, 2019 3:48 pm

Andre Vitchek's impassioned recent article is worthy of your attention. As is this short and eloquent comment by an American who remembers the recent past, who saw first-hand what the US did in Latin America, and who is appalled by the shameless disinterment of that vampire Abrams:

Gary Weglarz

Feb, 15, 2019

Thank you Mr. Vltchek. And who does the empire bring in to oversee it’s criminal intervention program in Venezuela? Elliot freaking Abrams – the spawn of satan. Few beings are walking the planet today that can claim more blood, more torture, more terrorizing of innocent people and more mass murder than Abrams.

Abrams was the architect of the “death squad democracies” of Central America in the 1980’s. The death-squad slaughter of tens of thousands in El Salvador and Guatemala in order to insure the continued rule of the small local pro-U.S. oligarchy has become known as the “Salvador Option” among those who deal in such mayhem for a living. Murder labor leaders, rape and murder nuns, murder priests, teachers, social workers, even the archbishop [Oscar Romero], anyone who stood with the poor. But of course torture them first. Leave the body by the roadside for all to see. Cut off a head and throw it through the family’s window as a message. All done through U.S. “counter-insurgency training” and military support. This is the legacy of Elliot “death-squad” Abrams. It is exceptionally well documented.

Many, as I did, participated in the Central American solidarity movement and saw first hand the torture scars, the PTSD, the photos of the dead family members, and the most recently murdered bodies executed by the death squads, all up close and first hand when we traveled to those nations. On multiple visits to U.S. embassies we were invariably told by the smiling CIA jackals there that “we didn’t see what we saw,” “there are no death squads,” “the human rights situation is improving,” “the army doesn’t torture,” and other endless shameless lies.

Mr. Abram’s career work has been simply put the mass torture, murder and terrorizing of the poor of Latin America. Now he hopes to continue his “legacy” in Venezuela. We cannot allow that to happen.

https://off-guardian.org/2019/02/15/the ... /#comments


Image

Oscar Romero’s Assassination

Image
"Ich kann gar nicht so viel fressen, wie ich kotzen möchte." - Max Liebermann,, Berlin, 1933

"Science is the belief in the ignorance of experts." - Richard Feynman, NYC, 1966

TESTDEMIC ➝ "CASE"DEMIC
User avatar
MacCruiskeen
 
Posts: 10558
Joined: Thu Nov 16, 2006 6:47 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: Venezuela - U.S. Again Tries Regime Change...

Postby MacCruiskeen » Sun Feb 17, 2019 6:31 pm

"Ich kann gar nicht so viel fressen, wie ich kotzen möchte." - Max Liebermann,, Berlin, 1933

"Science is the belief in the ignorance of experts." - Richard Feynman, NYC, 1966

TESTDEMIC ➝ "CASE"DEMIC
User avatar
MacCruiskeen
 
Posts: 10558
Joined: Thu Nov 16, 2006 6:47 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: Venezuela - U.S. Again Tries Regime Change...

Postby The Consul » Tue Feb 19, 2019 5:08 pm

It's like there is Zero historical memory of the Mordad coup against Mossaddegh and all that has since unfolded.
No recollection of what has happened in the Lavant over the last 28 years.
No memory of Samosa Guardia murder of Bill Stewart.
No honest discussion of similarities and differences of pre Chavez economic collapse and what is happening now.



And for sure, none of these evil motherfuvckers ever saw Star Trek or encountered the concept of the Prime Directive!
They are like mobsters who never go to jail, they just slither away for a few years then climb out from under their rocks to suck fresh blood.. But the policy has been here for years and essentially, it's fascism. Until we openly recognize that in our political speech, we will remain and instrument of naked greed ruled by brute force. There are forces that would love to light up the night sky over Lake Maracaibo just like they did over Baghdad and there seems little likelihood of stopping them if that is what they want to do. Guess it depends on whether Yanaz will be followed by others in the high command.

What person in their right mind would bet against US foreign policy creating newer, more improved banana republics?
These guys are like zombies, or scabies. The "Grand View" is unconcerned with any of the lofty ideals it pretends to hold. They are nothing more than murderous thieves. And they will get applause when they say "I don't understand what she said, but I understand what she said."
" Morals is the butter for those who have no bread."
— B. Traven
User avatar
The Consul
 
Posts: 1247
Joined: Fri Mar 26, 2010 2:41 am
Location: Ompholos, Disambiguation
Blog: View Blog (13)

Re: Venezuela - U.S. Again Tries Regime Change...

Postby conniption » Sat Feb 23, 2019 5:08 am

An Ocean of Lies on Venezuela: Abby Martin & UN Rapporteur Expose Coup

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ii5MlQg ... e=youtu.be
Empire Files
Published on Feb 22, 2019
On the eve of another US war for oil, Abby Martin debunks the most repeated myths about Venezuela and uncovers how US sanctions are crimes against humanity with UN Investigator and Human Rights Rapporteur Alfred De Zayas.

_______

https://thesaker.is/sticky-open-thread-on-venezuela/

_______

https://www.moonofalabama.org/2019/02/v ... -book.html
conniption
 
Posts: 2480
Joined: Sun Nov 11, 2012 10:01 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: Venezuela - U.S. Again Tries Regime Change...

Postby Sounder » Sat Feb 23, 2019 9:10 am

I love it when 'our' people are bumbling idiots.


https://www.mintpressnews.com/venezuela ... ca/255401/

Faria’s first day as the Twitter-proclaimed ambassador quickly deteriorated into a humiliating debacle.

Costa Rica might have recognized Guaido as President of Venezuela on January 23rd, but her brazen move took the country’s Foreign Ministry by surprise. Speaking to reporters, Costa Rican Vice Minister Lorena Aguilar announced that her office “deplored the unacceptable entry” into Venezuela’s Embassy in Costa Rica “by diplomatic personnel of the government of interim President Juan Guaidó.” Aguilar went on to express a “strong rejection of the performance of the diplomatic representative María Faría”.

On February 15th, Costa Rica gave diplomats representing the internationally recognized government of Nicolas Maduro 60 days to leave the country — meaning they legally represented Venezuela in San Jose until April 21st. Aguilar accused Faria of disrespecting that diplomatic deadline with her stunt.

In a letter to reporters, Faría’s staff apologized for cancelling a press conference scheduled for Wednesday afternoon, announcing she will spend Thursday discussing her unilateral takeover of the Embassy with Costa Rican Foreign Minister Manuel Ventura Robles. It was safe to assume the meeting would include a crash course in international law for the ambitious social media diplomat.
Sounder
 
Posts: 4054
Joined: Thu Nov 09, 2006 8:49 am
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: Venezuela - U.S. Again Tries Regime Change...

Postby conniption » Sat Feb 23, 2019 6:30 pm

strategic culture

From Madero to Maduro: Lessons of the Mexican Revolution for 21st Century Venezuela

Image

Martin SIEFF
21.02.2019


Just over 100 years ago, Mexico had a popular, much beloved democratically elected President determined to reduce foreign influence and obscene profits flowing out of the country and raise the standard of living for his people. The US financial interests on Wall Street orchestrated a military coup and made sure he was brutally murdered.

The president obviously was not Nicolas Maduro of Venezuela, who has been set up to receive the same treatment this year, but his name was remarkably close – Madero not Maduro. The parallels and contrasts between the two men are thought-provoking.

Unfortunately poor Francisco Madero, an idealistic reformer who ruled as President of Mexico from 1911 to 1913 did not have the tough political street smarts and plain common sense that Venezuela’s Maduro has exhibited throughout his long, controversial but undeniably successful career.

Madero naively trusted in the army commander-in-chief he had inherited from his predecessor President Porfirio Diaz, General Victoriano Huerta. Huerta had prospered throughout the long 35-year rule of Diaz from 1876 to 1911 by carrying out genocidal campaigns for him against the Yaqui Indians and the Mayans.

In 1913, Wall Street interests enthusiastically supported Huerta when he carried out a coup against the innocent Madero. Woodrow Wilson, the US president of the day was an exceptionally ugly racist who despised the Mexican people and at first went along with Huerta’s coup.

The huge financial and mining interests in New York were eager to continue plundering Mexico’s resources while more than 90 percent of its people lived virtually as slaves in appalling poverty under Diaz.

In the last decade of Diaz’s rule – securely supported by the Wall Street financial robber barons, as historian Matthew Josephson called them and by the complacent administrations of Theodore Roosevelt and William Howard Taft - at least 600,000 people were worked to death as real slaves on the estates of Diaz’s supporters. Not a whisper of disapproval was heard from Washington.

Huerta ruled with his usual mindless thuggish brutality for less than a year and a half before provoking such national revulsion that he was ousted in a brief and bloody civil war. He fled of course to the United States but then made the mistake of alienating US business and military leaders alike by openly embracing Imperial Germany to plot his militaristic comeback.

Huerta died in loose US military custody in 1916 after a night of dining out and carousing. Poisoning by the Americans was widely suspected but the cause may well just have been heavy drinking. His autopsy revealed extreme cirrhosis of the liver.

To this day Huerta is reviled as the murderous mass killer and cowardly murderer and tool of cynical foreign interests he was while the well-meaning, but tragically ineffectual Madero is genuinely loved by the people of Mexico. The days from the start of Huerta’s coup to the president’s murder – gunned down by an impromptu firing squad of assassins by night along with his own brother and vice president are remembered as La Decena Tragica, The Ten Tragic Days.

In the years that followed, Mexico endured all the horrors of a collapsed state with rival feuding bands slaughtering each other and everyone else they came across. The population of the country plummeted from 15 million in 1910 to 11.6 million a decade later. Factoring in how many deaths were masked by the high birth rate, well over four million people, or more than 25 percent of the total population died in the years of anarchic violence that Huerta’s murder of President Madero set in motion.

La Decena Tragica continues to reverberate in Mexico to this day. When current President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador continues to withstand massive pressures from the Trump administration to recognize their preferred puppet, Juan Guaido as Washington’s preferred figurehead president of Venezuela, he is heeding his people’s reverence for martyred President Madero and remembering the bloodbaths and chaos that the hated Huerta unleashed in his place.

Madero naively trusted in the honor of his army commander, the murderous Huerta. By contrast, President Maduro in Venezuela, like his political mentor and predecessor Hugo Chavez, has taken care to always have an army high command loyal to the democratically elected national civilian leadership. Nevertheless, today, US leaders have openly called on Venezuela’s military leaders to scrap their own cherished constitution and political processes and violently topple President Maduro – All of course in the name of their usual mythical and never-defined “freedom.”

However, Bloomberg News pointedly noted in a recent report that in a Venezuelan military establishment of more than 2,000 generals and admirals, only a single officer who did not even command any troops has sworn allegiance to National Assembly Speaker Juan Guaido, the farcical boy toy whom the Trump administration is trying to set up as “president” of Venezuela in Maduro’s place.

It is just as well. The precedent of Mexico more than a century ago teaches us that if the US plot to topple President Maduro were to succeed, as the one to remove and murder President Madero did so tragically 106 years ago, then civil war, chaos and the violent death of multiple millions of innocent people would rapidly follow.

In the seven years following the murder of Francisco Madero, more than a quarter of the population of Mexico were slaughtered or starved to death. The history of states where 21st century US administrations have successfully orchestrated “regime change” makes clear that Venezuela would suffer a similar fate.

Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya, Yemen, South Sudan and Ukraine remain appalling object-lessons to the world in US criminal incompetence – at the very least – in “nation-building.” The consequences of the endless failed attempts to topple the government of Syria tell the same terrible story.

The bullets that slammed into gentle, naïve little President Madero more than a century ago continue to ricochet in our own bloodstained age.
_______

Martin Sieff - During his 24 years as a senior foreign correspondent for The Washington Times and United Press International, Martin Sieff reported from more than 70 nations and covered 12 wars. He has specialized in US and global economic issues.

https://www.strategic-culture.org/news/ ... zuela.html
conniption
 
Posts: 2480
Joined: Sun Nov 11, 2012 10:01 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: Venezuela - U.S. Again Tries Regime Change...

Postby conniption » Sat Feb 23, 2019 7:04 pm

MoA
(embedded links)

February 23, 2019

Venezuela - No More Than 20,000 People Came To Branson's Concert Stunt

The Washington Post writes:

The attention on Saturday remained immediately focused on the single largest staging ground for aid in Cucuta, Colombia — where a massive benefit concert hosted by British billionaire Richard Branson drew a crowd of more than 200,000 people Friday.


200,000 people!

Hmm ...

200,000 people?

Image
source - bigger

200,000 people??

Image
source - bigger

200,000 people???

Image
source - bigger

Dan Cohen was in the VIP area in front of the stage:

Dan Cohen @dancohen3000 - 3:50 utc - 23 Feb 2019
#VenezuelaAidLive organizers claim 317,000 people attended today’s event. The real figure is a tiny fraction of that. Here’s a photo I took of the crowd at 11am. I estimate no more than 10,000. That might be generous.


Image
bigger

10,000 people?

Let's check a map:

Image
source - bigger

The stage was build at the top right across both roadways with its front towards the southwest. There was room for a few hundred VIP and reporters right in front of it. The field where the plebs were kept away lies between the north to south treeline at the right and the north to south ditch with the two single trees. According to the Google map scale the field's northern edge is some 125 meters wide. The crowd was standing at the northern end of the field at a depth of about 50 meters. The density of the static crowd was low to medium with on average 2 to 3 people per square meter.

125m * 50m = 6,250 m2 * 2.5 people/m2 = 15,625 people


One may generously add a count of one or two thousand for the people mingling around in the back of the public area. In total there may have been up to 18,000, but certainly no more than 20,000 people at the concert.

The show the British oligarch arranged was supposed to attract 250,000 people. Less than 8% of the expected crowd arrived. Branson claimed the concert would raise $100 million but did not explain by what magic that is going to happen. The idea failed to attract any globally known acts. That is probably thanks to Roger Waters who spoke out against the fake 'humanitarian' stunt.

The stage setup far away from the public area was unreasonable. The concert attracted only some local people who had nothing better to do. The whole thing was a complete fail.

The Washington Post's count of "200,000 people" is obviously an outrageous lie. But the Post agitated throughout the last 20 long years for regime change in Venezuela. It now sees a chance to achieve that. There is no way that it will let get facts in the way of it.

Posted by b on February 23, 2019

comments

https://www.moonofalabama.org/2019/02/v ... stunt.html
conniption
 
Posts: 2480
Joined: Sun Nov 11, 2012 10:01 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: Venezuela - U.S. Again Tries Regime Change...

Postby conniption » Sat Feb 23, 2019 8:47 pm

RT

Venezuela crisis: Border clashes, ‘masked thugs’, torched ‘aid’ & fake Red Cross

Published time: 24 Feb, 2019

Image
A man hurls stones at the Venezuela border in Pacaraima, Brazil February, 23, 2019 © Reuters / Bruno Kelly

The US-backed opposition’s call for a “human avalanche” to force American aid into Venezuela has erupted in violent clashes. Tensions were running high and the opposition soon claimed that government forces have killed civilians.

Self-proclaimed “interim president” Juan Guaido had called on his followers to create a “human wave” and bring the “avalanche” of humanitarian aid across the borders from Brazil and Colombia on Saturday. He’d crossed into Colombia unmolested the day before, to attend a concert extravaganza in support of regime change and organized by British mogul Richard Branson. Rather than lead the charge across the bridges himself, however, Guaido was nowhere to be seen on Saturday afternoon, RT correspondent Dan Cohen reported from Cucuta, Colombia.

Also on rt.com Venezuelan government condemns US-orchestrated ‘propaganda show’ at Colombian border


Rocks, fire & tear gas

Opposition supporters clashed with Venezuelan border security forces in several hotspots on Saturday, pelting police officers with rocks and setting tires on fire. In one instance, protesters ripped up a tree and used it as a battering ram against Venezuelan police vehicles.

Also on rt.com Horrifying VIDEOS show RAMMING at Simon Bolivar bridge in Venezuela


While the Tienditas bridge – featured in a lot of Western media reports about the tensions on the Venezuela-Colombia border, but never opened for traffic – remained calm, there were several incidents at the other two bridges in the area, and police had to use tear gas on several occasions, Cohen said.

Also on rt.com Tensions flare at Venezuela-Colombia border amid aid row (VIDEO)


Fake Red Cross & torched ‘aid’ trucks

At least one truck attempting to get into Venezuela was apparently set on fire before it could cross the border. Opposition supporters circulated a photograph of the burning vehicle on the Francisco de Paula Santander bridge, though it was not clear who torched it and whether is was done deliberately or happened accidentally.

Also on rt.com FLAMES devour ‘aid truck’ during bridge stand-off on Venezuela-Colombia border (PHOTOS)


Meanwhile the world’s largest international aid organization has demanded that “unaffiliated” activists at the Venezuela-Colombia border not use their insignia, as it risks “jeopardizing our neutrality, impartiality & independence,” the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies said.

Also on rt.com Red Cross denounces unsanctioned use of its emblems to smuggle US aid to Venezuela


Armed ‘masked men’ & reports of casualties

With a lot of unconfirmed reports and videos circulating on social media, two people were reportedly killed in Santa Elena de Uairen, which is near the Venezuelan border with the Brazilian state of Roraima. One of the videos shows people being carried away after what were said to be clashes between security forces and Guaido supporters...

continues: https://www.rt.com/news/452275-venezuel ... -tensions/
conniption
 
Posts: 2480
Joined: Sun Nov 11, 2012 10:01 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: Venezuela - U.S. Again Tries Regime Change...

Postby conniption » Sat Feb 23, 2019 8:57 pm

off-guardian

Published on Feb, 24, 2019

Venezuela: An Open Letter to the UN Secretary General

Reblogged from the personal website of Prof. Alfred de Zayas, human rights lawyer and former UN Independent Expert. This is important – please share widely.

Image
Alfred de Zayas, human rights lawyer & UN independent expert on international order. His report on Venezuela has been buried by the MSM.

OPEN LETTER TO THE UNITED NATIONS SECRETARY GENERAL ANTONIO GUTERRES

AND TO THE HIGH COMMISSIONER FOR HUMAN RIGHTS MICHELLE BACHELET

from Alfred de Zayas, 23 February 2019

Dear Michelle Bachelet,

Dear Antonio Guterres

As former UN Independent Expert on the Promotion of a Democratic and Equitable International Order (2012-2018) I would like to urge you to once again make your voices heard and make concrete proposals for mediation and peace in the context of the Venezuelan crisis.

The most noble task of the United Nations is to create the conditions conducive to local, regional and international peace, to work preventively and tirelessly to avoid armed conflicts, to mediate and negotiate to reach peaceful solutions, so that all human beings can live in human dignity and in the enjoyment of the human right to peace and all other civil, cultural, economic, political and social rights. I am particularly worried by the Orwellian corruption of language, the instrumentalization and weaponization of human rights and now even of humanitarian assistance.

continues: https://off-guardian.org/2019/02/24/ven ... y-general/
conniption
 
Posts: 2480
Joined: Sun Nov 11, 2012 10:01 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: Venezuela - U.S. Again Tries Regime Change...

Postby JackRiddler » Sun Feb 24, 2019 5:49 am

conniption » Sat Feb 23, 2019 4:08 am wrote:An Ocean of Lies on Venezuela: Abby Martin & UN Rapporteur Expose Coup

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ii5MlQg ... e=youtu.be
Empire Files
Published on Feb 22, 2019
On the eve of another US war for oil, Abby Martin debunks the most repeated myths about Venezuela and uncovers how US sanctions are crimes against humanity with UN Investigator and Human Rights Rapporteur Alfred De Zayas.


Absolutely required viewing. You will learn things!

;-)
We meet at the borders of our being, we dream something of each others reality. - Harvey of R.I.

To Justice my maker from on high did incline:
I am by virtue of its might divine,
The highest Wisdom and the first Love.

TopSecret WallSt. Iraq & more
User avatar
JackRiddler
 
Posts: 15987
Joined: Wed Jan 02, 2008 2:59 pm
Location: New York City
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: Venezuela - U.S. Again Tries Regime Change...

Postby Elvis » Sun Feb 24, 2019 6:54 am

Conniption, you are rocking this topic (and others). Thank you.
“The purpose of studying economics is not to acquire a set of ready-made answers to economic questions, but to learn how to avoid being deceived by economists.” ― Joan Robinson
User avatar
Elvis
 
Posts: 7433
Joined: Fri Apr 11, 2008 7:24 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: Venezuela - U.S. Again Tries Regime Change...

Postby Grizzly » Sun Feb 24, 2019 10:51 am

https://www.reddit.com/r/conspiracy/comments/au40ji/bernie_sanders_the_maduro_government_mustallow/
Bernie Sanders "The Maduro government must...allow humanitarian aid into the country" - Roger Waters and Abby Martin respond "Bernie, are you f-ing kidding me! if you buy the Trump, Bolton, Abrams, Rubio line, “humanitarian intervention" "you know better than to endorse a stunt led by war criminals" (twitter.com)


I'm kinda with those guys, this makes the Bern, a bit tone def...

And G.Greenwald, chimes in ...

Image

Image
“The more we do to you, the less you seem to believe we are doing it.”

― Joseph mengele
User avatar
Grizzly
 
Posts: 4722
Joined: Wed Oct 26, 2011 4:15 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: Venezuela - U.S. Again Tries Regime Change...

Postby Belligerent Savant » Sun Feb 24, 2019 12:46 pm

.

Cross-post:

Belligerent Savant » Sun Feb 24, 2019 11:42 am wrote:.


Chris Murphy:

5/ Maduro is evil, and the U.S. should pursue a strategy to undermine him and prompt new elections. No one can defend what he has done to Venezuela. But it's quite a different thing for the U.S. to incite a civil war with no real plan for how it ends (sound familiar?).


What makes Maduro 'evil'? What has he done in Venezuela, specifically?

What about the SANCTIONS imposed on Venezuela by the U.S., and the resultant loss of lives/livilihoods of the Venezuelan people? Would that be considered "evil", especially if these sanctions were cynically and criminally imposed as a means to set up precisely this current "humanitarian" crisis and subsequent attempts by the U.S. [and their 'allies'] to [illegally] overthrow a sitting President of a sovereign State?

Chris Murphy either is ignorant of the larger picture or is being dishonest here. Common traits among those that take to Twitter.

A few excerpts from the report of the Independent Expert on the Promotion of a Democratic and Equitable International Order, Alfred-Maurice de Zayas (United States of America, Switzerland) on his visit to Venezuela and Ecuador form 26 November to 9 December 2017:

https://dezayasalfred.wordpress.com/201 ... d-ecuador/

In paragraph 36: “The effects of sanctions imposed by Presidents Obama and Trump and unilateral measures by Canada and the European Union have directly and indirectly aggravated the shortages in medicines such as insulin and anti-retroviral drugs. To the extent that economic sanctions have caused delays in distribution and thus contributed to many deaths, sanctions contravene the human rights obligations of the countries imposing them. Moreover, sanctions can amount to crimes against humanity under Article 7 of the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court. An investigation by that Court would be appropriate, but the geopolitical submissiveness of the Court may prevent this.”

In paragraph 37. “Modern-day economic sanctions and blockades are comparable with medieval sieges of towns with the intention of forcing them to surrender. Twenty-first century sanctions attempt to bring not just a town, but sovereign countries to their knees. A difference, perhaps, is that twenty-first century sanctions are accompanied by the manipulation of public opinion through ‘fake news’, aggressive public relations and a pseudo-human rights rhetoric so as to give the impression that a human rights ‘end’ justifies the criminal means. There is not only a horizontal juridical world order governed by the Charter of the United Nations and principles of sovereign equality, but also a vertical world order reflecting the hierarchy of a geopolitical system that links dominant States with the rest of the world according to military and economic power. It is the latter, geopolitical system that generates geopolitical crimes, hitherto in total impunity….” He concludes: “Economic sanctions kill.”

[...]

In paragraph 40 the independent expert calls for a renewal of dialogue between the government and the opposition parties. “There is nothing more in keeping with the letter and spirit of the Charter of the United Nations than mediation. For two years, the former Spanish Prime Minister, José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero (quoted in full in annex IV), with the support of the Vatican, headed a negotiating team in the Dominican Republic which facilitated talks between the Government of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela and the opposition. Negotiations advanced to a balanced document entitled “Agreement of Democratic Coexistence” (quoted in full in annex III) that should have been signed by all sides on 7 February 2018. The Government signed, but, as was reported, a telephone call from Colombia frustrated the two-year negotiating process with the instruction: “Don’t sign”. Some believe that certain countries do not want to see a peaceful solution of the Venezuelan conflict and prefer to prolong the suffering of the Venezuelan people, expecting that the situation will reach the “humanitarian crisis” threshold and trigger a military intervention.”

[...]

In paragraph 30 the expert notes: “The principles of non-intervention and non-interference in the internal affairs of sovereign States belong to customary international law and have been reaffirmed in General Assembly resolutions, notably 2625 (XXV) and 3314 (XXIX), and in the 1993 Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action. Article 32 of the Charter of Economic Rights and Duties of States, adopted by the General Assembly in 1974, stipulates that no State may use or encourage the use of economic, political or any other type of measures to coerce another State in order to obtain from it the subordination of the exercise of its sovereign rights.” In paragraph 31 he highlights chapter 4, article 19, of the Charter of the OAS, which stipulates that “No State or group of States has the right to intervene, directly or indirectly, for any reason whatever, in the internal or external affairs of any other State. The foregoing principle prohibits not only armed force but also any other form of interference or attempted threat against the personality of the State or against its political, economic, and cultural elements”.

User avatar
Belligerent Savant
 
Posts: 5262
Joined: Mon Oct 05, 2009 11:58 pm
Location: North Atlantic.
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: Venezuela - U.S. Again Tries Regime Change...

Postby Belligerent Savant » Sun Feb 24, 2019 1:31 pm

.

Also, here's an [imperfect] excerpt of the transcript for the video posted by conniption above:

https://youtu.be/ii5MlQgGXyk


Abby Martin:
Much everyone speaks with authority about the fact that there is a human rights crisis caused by the Maduro government. What is surprisingly absent
from the discourse is testimony from the human rights investigator designated by the UN to assess said crisis. Alfred De Zayas was the first UN investigator to go
to Venezuela in 21 years; he has written 13 reports for the UN Human Rights Council but his report on Venezuela was largely ignored.

Alfred De Zayas:
if you know a humanitarian crisis in Gaza, and in Yemen, and in Syria, and in Sudan, and in Somalia, you wouldn't say there is humanitarian crisis in Venezuela, and at no point when I was walking the streets in Venezuela did I feel threatened, or did I see violence, or did I consider that this country was undergoing a humanitarian crisis, but I see human rights more and more being instrumentalized to destroy human rights. There is a weaponization of human rights, I see the
rule of law being instrumentalized to destroy the rule of law, and unfortunately the complicity of the mainstream media. What I am saying to you is I think it would have been sensible to say this to the BBC, it would have been sensible to say this to the New York Times, and to the Washington Post, and to the Economist, and to the Financial Times, but at no time since I returned from Venezuela and since my report was officially presented to the Human Rights Council have I been approached by any of these organs who actually have a responsibility to the people of the United States to inform.

You know, many people will say the crisis cannot be blamed on the sanctions, of course; that sanctions are being used as a scapegoat for Maduro's economic failures. [I] offered to talk about the impacts of the sanctions thus far and the new sanctions that were just implemented on the state oil company.
What is particularly Machiavellian, what is particularly cynical, is to cause an economic crisis that threatens to become a humanitarian crisis. That's what the
United States has done through the financial blockade through the sanctions and then to say, 'oh we're going to offer you humanitarian help, we're sending over
so many tonnes of humanitarian assistance through US aid, we're sending it to Colombia and we're going to deliver it now'.


I think that here one guy [Juan Guaidó] though is being the, shall we say, the jockey; he is riding on the Trojan horse of the United States. But the solution of
the problem is much easier than the band-aid of sending some packages of food or of Medicine. The solution is in my report; what I told the Human Rights Council is that the financial blockade has had extremely adverse Human Rights impacts. Obviously the origin of the current economic crisis is in the fall, that dramatic fall, in the price of oil, but normally you will be able to fix that: a country as wealthy as Venezuela should have been able to borrow money on its enormous natural resources and then would have been able to buy and sell like anybody else, but no, the United States has made sure that wouldn't be an option, because of the threat of enormous penalties to the US Treasury, or the banks have been closing the accounts of the Venezuelan government and of the petróleos of Venezuela.

In July 2017, Citibank unexpectedly decided, without prior notice and arbitrarily, to close the bank accounts of the Central Bank of Venezuela and the Bank of Venezuela; in November 2017, again Citibank blocked the transfer for a shipment of more than three hundred thousand doses of insulin; In November 2017 the company Euroclear retained 1.65 billion dollars that the Venezuelan government had paid for the purpose of the purchase of food and medicine. Citgo, the Venezuelan state oil company based in the US, has not been able to transfer its profits outside the United States of America; It needs that money to buy food and medicine, and it is in the neighborhood -- I think by now -- of nine or ten billion dollars that have been withheld. Again, Wells Fargo Bank withheld and
cancelled payment of 7,500,000 made by Brazil to Venezuela for the sale of electricity in May 2018; the Venezuelan Minister of people's power informed that
a financial transaction amounting to seven million dollars for the purchase of dialysis supplies for patients, including children and adolescents that require such treatment, had been blocked .

So you see here the immorality of it, but not only the immorality of it, there is personal criminal liability for the impact of these sanctions. I mean, I am certain that
the increase in child mortality, the increase in maternal mortality, the increased deaths for lack of insulin, or lack of antiretroviral drugs, is a direct result of this blockage so that Venezuela has not been able to purchase what its people deserve
. It's not like the government doesn't want to distribute; it's
that the government is being -- through an external economic war -- is being asphyxiated, and that was the name of the game. What the United States intended to
do was to create a situation whereby the people or the military would topple the government and then the 1% could again come in and could again control the wealth of Venezuela.

Nobody cared in the 1980s and 90s that there were millions of Venezuelans dying of hunger and malnutrition; no one cared because it was a government that was palatable to Washington, and a government that was a right-wing government. The moment that a left-wing government came in power, priority number one in Washington was to topple it, and now you have the Bank of England seizing the gold right from Maduro, over a billion dollars worth, and threatening to give it to Juan Guaidó. That's yet another violation of international law. But try to bring the United States before the International
Criminal Court, or before the International Court of Justice
.

What I think is important now would be for the General Assembly to adopt the resolution condemning the sanctions and asking that the sanctions be lifted because sanctions kill. I would also like to see the prosecutor of the International Criminal Court investigate to what extent the deaths that already occurred in connection with the sanctions amount to a violation of article 7 of the statute of Rome article 7 defines crimes against humanity.

User avatar
Belligerent Savant
 
Posts: 5262
Joined: Mon Oct 05, 2009 11:58 pm
Location: North Atlantic.
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: Venezuela - U.S. Again Tries Regime Change...

Postby MacCruiskeen » Sun Feb 24, 2019 6:12 pm

Repulsive to read and especially hear: the BBC's incessant, uncritical use of that blatant propaganda term, "humanitarian aid".
"Ich kann gar nicht so viel fressen, wie ich kotzen möchte." - Max Liebermann,, Berlin, 1933

"Science is the belief in the ignorance of experts." - Richard Feynman, NYC, 1966

TESTDEMIC ➝ "CASE"DEMIC
User avatar
MacCruiskeen
 
Posts: 10558
Joined: Thu Nov 16, 2006 6:47 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

PreviousNext

Return to General Discussion

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 46 guests