Weekly Update --- Is Trump Really About to Attack Venezuela?
Is the CIA behind the suspicious power outage in Venezuela? It wouldn't be their first dirty trick.
Is the CIA behind the suspicious power outage in Venezuela? It wouldn't be their first dirty trick.
Is the CIA behind the suspicious power outage in Venezuela? It wouldn't be their first dirty trick.
Hello everybody and thank you for tuning in to the weekly report.
Is Trump really about to attack Venezuela?
Last week Secretary of State Mike Pompeo ordered the last of U.S. diplomats out of Venezuela, saying their presence was a constraint on U.S. policy toward the country.
The wording seemed intended to convey the idea that the U.S. is about to launch military action to place a Washington-backed self-appointed politician to the presidency.
Was it just bluster designed to intimidate?
Or is the Trump administration really about to invade another country that has neither attacked nor threatened the United States?
While U.S. administrations engaged in regime change have generally tried to mask their real intentions, the U.S.-backed coup is remarkable for how honest its backers are being.
Not long ago, the National Security Advisor to the President, John Bolton, openly admitted that getting U.S. companies in control of Venezuela oil was the administration's intent.
Trump administration officials have gone so far as mocking the suffering of Venezuelans when a suspiciously timed nationwide power failure heightens citizens' misery.
According to media reports, Vice President Mike Pompence is angry with the Venezuela coup leader Juan Guaido because he promised the whole operation would be a cakewalk, just like the neocons promised us about Iraq.
Guaido said hundreds of thousands of protesters would follow him to the Colombian border to liberate U.S. aid trucks just over the border, but no one showed up.
So Pompeo and the neocons made up a lie that Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro's thugs burned the aid trucks to prevent the people from getting relief from their suffering.
Even the pro-war New York Times finally admitted that the administration was lying.
It was the opposition protesters who burned the trucks.
Was the U.S. behind the takeover of Venezuela's power grid?
It would not be the first time the CIA pulled such a move, and U.S. officials are open about the U.S. goal of making life as miserable as possible for average Venezuelans in hopes that they overthrow their government.
Congress has, to this point, been strongly in favor of President Trump's regime change policy of Venezuela.
Sadly, even though our neocon foreign policy of interventionism has proven disastrous from Iraq to Libya to Syria and elsewhere, both parties in Congress continue to act as if somehow this time they will get it right.
I have news for them.
They won't.
Even weak congressional efforts to remind the president that Congress must approve military action overseas sounds like war cries.
In Representative Dave Cicillone's statement introducing his prohibiting unauthorized military action in Venezuela Act last week, he sounded more hawkish than John Bolton or Elliott Abrams.
The statement makes all the arguments in favor of a U.S. military attack on Venezuela and then reminds the President he needs authorization beforehand, as if that's going to be a hard sell.
Congressional Hawkishness00:00:44
So is President Trump about to attack Venezuela?
At a recent U.S. House hearing, one of the expert witnesses testified that such an invasion would require between 100,000 and 150,000 U.S. troops going up against maybe three times that number of Venezuelan troops in a country twice the size of Iraq with a lot of jungle, all for a prize that has nothing to do with U.S. security.
If the President makes such a foolish move, he might find himself in the current war cheerleaders in the Democratic Party changing their tune rather quickly.
Let's hope Trump changes his tune and returns to his promises of no more regime change wars.