US military intervention in Venezuela an option; Russia objects

US military intervention in Venezuela an option; Russia objects

by Joseph Anthony
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Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro attends a military exercise in Turismo, Venezuela February 3, 2019. Miraflores Palace/Handout via REUTERS ATTENTION EDITORS – THIS PICTURE WAS PROVIDED BY A THIRD PARTY

U.S. President Donald Trump said military intervention in Venezuela was โ€œan optionโ€ as Western nations boost pressure on socialist leader Nicolas Maduro to step down, while the troubled OPEC nationโ€™s ally Russia warned against โ€œdestructive meddling.โ€


The United States, Canada and several Latin American countries have disavowed Maduro over his disputed re-election last year and recognized self-proclaimed President Juan Guaido as the countryโ€™s rightful leader.

Trump said U.S. military intervention was under consideration in an interview with CBS aired on Sunday.

โ€œCertainly, itโ€™s something thatโ€™s on the โ€“ itโ€™s an option,โ€ Trump said, adding that Maduro requested a meeting months ago.

โ€œIโ€™ve turned it down because weโ€™re very far along in the process,โ€ he said in a โ€œFace the Nationโ€ interview. โ€œSo, I think the process is playing out.โ€

The Trump administration last week issued crippling sanctions on Venezuelan state-owned oil firm PDVSA, a key source of revenue for the country, which is experiencing medicine shortages and malnutrition.


Maduro, who has overseen an economic collapse and the exodus of millions of Venezuelans, maintains the backing of Russia, China and Turkey, and the critical support of the military.

Russia, a major creditor to Venezuela in recent years, urged restraint.

โ€œThe international communityโ€™s goal should be to help (Venezuela), without destructive meddling from beyond its borders,โ€ Alexander Shchetinin, head of the Latin America department at Russiaโ€™s Foreign Ministry, told Interfax.

France and Austria said they would recognize Guaido if Maduro did not respond to the European Unionโ€™s call for a free and fair presidential election by Sunday night.

โ€œWe donโ€™t accept ultimatums from anyone,โ€ Maduro said in a defiant interview with Spanish television channel Antena 3 carried out last week and broadcast on Sunday.


โ€œI refuse to call for elections now โ€“ there will be elections in 2024. We donโ€™t care what Europe says.โ€

EMBOLDENED OPPOSITION

The 35-year-old Guaido, head of the countryโ€™s National Assembly, has breathed new life into a previously fractured and weary opposition. Tens of thousands of people thronged the streets of various Venezuelan cities on Saturday to protest Maduroโ€™s government.

Guaido allies plan to take a large quantity of food and medicine donated by the United States, multilateral organizations and non-profit groups across the Colombian border into the Venezuelan state of Tachira this week, according to a person directly involved in the effort.

The group has not yet determined which border point it will cross, said the person, who asked not to be identified because he is not authorized to speak publicly about the issue.


It is unclear whether Maduroโ€™s government, which denies the country is suffering a humanitarian crisis, will let any foreign aid through.

The embattled president on Sunday promised peace for Venezuela without specifically responding to Trump.

โ€œIn Venezuela, there will be peace, and we will guarantee this peace with the civil military union,โ€ he told state television, in the company of khaki and black-clad soldiers who were earlier shown carrying guns and jumping from helicopters into the sea.

Maduro has overseen several such military drills since Guaido declared himself president to display he has the backing of the military, and that Venezuelaโ€™s armed forces are ready to defend the country.

Air Force General Francisco Yanez disavowed Maduro in a video this weekend, calling on members of the military to defect. But there were no signs the armed forces were turning against Maduro.


Venezuela has as many as 2,000 generals, according to unofficial estimates, many of whom do not command troops and whose defection would not necessarily weaken the ruling socialists.

The police have also fallen in line with Maduro.

A special forces unit called FAES led home raids following unrest associated with opposition protests in January, killing as many as 10 people in a single operation in a hillside slum of Caracas.

Venezuelaโ€™s ambassador to Iraq, Jonathan Velasco, became the latest official to recognize opposition leader Guaido this weekend.

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