Venezuela, Venezuela, Venezuela! Does
anybody know what’s really going on? While American President Donald
Trump wobbles the White House position and Russia’s alleged role,
western mainstream pundits act out a whacky war of imbecilic words.
Meanwhile, Venezuelan citizens starve in the streets of a country being
torn to shreds.
The Guardian runs a headline “Russia
urges US to abandon ‘irresponsible’ plan to topple Maduro,” and
underneath U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo does his version of a
Looney Tunes character jumping up and down about the U.S. not have a
monopoly on “messing up” Latin American countries. In The Guardian
piece, the Secretary of State is cited lambasting Russia for meddling,
saying: “We don’t want anyone messing around with Venezuela.” This
wobbly policy/news befuddlement came on the wings of President Trump and
Vladimir Putin holding a 90-minute phone call the in which the U.S.
leader understood Vladimir Putin was “not looking at all to get involved
in Venezuela, other than he’d like to see something positive happen.”
The Wall Street Journal reported on “Venezuela’s Rebellion That Wasn’t,”
and Bloomberg is telling the story of Canadian Prime Minister Justin
Trudeau trying to leverage Cuba out of the Venezuela affair?
Now to the point, Forbes’ BRICs expert Ken Rapoza spells out
many of the real cause of the Venezuela regime change in a post about
what Russia has to lose in the Latin American country. In short, there’s
money and prestige at stake in Nicolas Maduro’s broken country. But a
couple of $billions invested by Russia’s Rosneft is a drop in the bucket
compared to the bigger stakes the U.S. is betting on its regime change
doctrine. Rapoza cites Agathe Demarais, global forecasting director for
The Economist Intelligence Unit in London saying:
“In contrast with Syria, which hosts Russian military bases and lies on the periphery of Russia’s sphere of interests, Venezuela has limited strategic significance.”
The economist is clearly wrong since the
grand geo-strategic play is about energy and economic warfare. Syria,
Venezuela, Ukraine, the Arctic or Antarctic, we’re witnessing the most
refined form of warfare ever carried out on this planet. The Forbes
piece brings to light the role of Cuba’s Raul Castro in keeping Maduro
in power, but Russia needs a Washington puppet in power in Venezuela
like a hole in the head. The Venezuela takeover is about gas prices and
energy flows – period. It’s time analysts look at geo-policy in a more
holistic way. The west is applying the big squeeze to Russia, and the
last thing Washington needs Saudi Arabia’s last glugs of cheap heavy oil
competing with Venezuela’s. So few news reports dig in to show the real
story of the Latin American country surpassing the Saudis in proven oil
reserves. Just looking at Trump Tweets and gesticulations can speak
volumes about the Saudi role in all this. The 1.4 trillion barrels or
more of Venezuelan crude are quadruple what the Saudis have even
according to official estimates.........https://journal-neo.org/2019/05/07/on-venezuela-and-corralling-mother-russia/
No comments:
Post a Comment