ZH is unforgiveably biased about Venezuela.
Maduro To Generals: Prepare For War With "Criminal Empire" US
27
September, 2017
After
barely managing to scrape together the nearly $200 million needed to
make a bond payment earlier this month (the country made the payment
a week late), Embattled Venezeulan President Nicolas Maduro is
refocusing his attention on the US, warning military leaders Tuesday
to begin preparing for war with the US. Maduro's call to arms comes
after the US has repeatedly tightened sanctions against Maduro's
regime and the country's state-run oil company; earlier this week,
the Trump administration blocked Venezeulan officials from entering
the US as part of the White House's new “targeted” travel ban.
Trump has also repeatedly threatened a military intervention if
Maduro doesn't leave voluntarily.
Maduro
is probably still brooding over Trump’s call for the world
community to help restore “democracy and political freedoms” to
Venezeula by ousting Maduro (to which Maduro reportedly responded in
typical leftist fashion by comparing Trump to Hitler). Trump made
those remarks last week during his first address to the UN General
Assembly. Earlier this year, Trump said he wouldn't rule out a
military option for dealing with Venezuela, adding that the US has an
obligation to take of the country because it's "our neighbor."
Maduro
said Trump’s threats were the reason for him ordering the military
to be on alert.
"We
have been shamelessly threatened by the most criminal empire that
ever existed and we have the obligation to prepare ourselves to
guarantee peace," said Maduro, who wore a green uniform and a
military hat as he spoke with his army top brass during a military
exercise involving tanks and missiles. "We need to have rifles,
missiles and well-oiled tanks at the ready....to defend every inch of
the territory if needs be," he added.
Over
the summer, the US announced sanctions to prevent PDVSA, Venezuela’s
state-owed oil company, from issuing new debt (sanctions that
conveniently avoided existing bonds held by Goldman Sachs), while
also preventing Citgo, the US subsidiary of PDVSA, from repatriating
dividends.
The
US has also passed sanctions against many top Venezuelan officials.
Tensions between Maduro and Trump started escalating shortly after
Trump’s inauguration, when the US blacklisted Venezuelan Vice
President Tareck El Aissami for drug trafficking.
Maduro
referenced the sanctions during his speech at the military base. As
he spoke, Russian military planes flew in the sky as part of the
training exercise, according to Newsweek.
"The
future of humanity cannot be the world of illegal sanctions, of
economic persecution," Maduro said.
Of
course, Maduro doesn't have the manpower to stand up to the US’s
much-larger military. The embattled leader has managed to cling to
power in Venezuela despite mounting political and economic crises
that have inspired months of deadly anti-government demonstrations in
the streets of the capital, Caracas and many other cities around the
country.
As
Newsweek reports, Defense Minister Vladimir Padrino has backed Maduro
through the unrest, but Reuters reported back in August that there
may be growing support for a military-backed coup against Maduro,
whose approval rating remains at all-time lows, even as he has
succeeded in consolidating power and marginalizing his opposition.
The
country has managed to avoid financial calamity with the help of
Russia and China. However, Newsweek reports that China is beginning
to limit its exposure to Venezuela amid the mounting political
unrest.
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