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Contributor
I did not know Maria Corina Machado supports Trump's boat strikes.
Scrapping away my disdain for Trump, it is understandable that the US government, Venezuelans and Venezuela's neighbors want Maduro gone. Yes, the Trump administration put out a simple explanation for our involvement in Venezuela's affairs: Drugs. Drugs bad. But this is about the store of natural wealth within Venezuela, not just oil but gold and other minerals but mostly oil and what a Maduro regime would do with this wealth and how it might affect the western hemisphere. Consider an America hating pro-Iran, pro-China, pro-Cuba oil rich nation not halfway around the world. Should we get involved in this nation's affairs? To say any change in government in Venezuela should happen organically is wishful thinking. Two thirds of Venezuela's population opposed Maduro in the last election. Millions of Venezuelans have fled to neighboring countries. These countries have received little support from wealthy nations in assisting these displaced people. Maduro has disappeared thousands since the last election. The Maduro government is thoroughly corrupt: the upper ranks on the decentralized military, the intelligence service, drug trafficking guerilla groups and pro Maduro paramilitary forces (colectivos) all work to keep Maduro in power. They have all the guns. So even with Maduro's overthrow, it is farfetched to think a pro democracy government could take control. Not without some interim assistance, not financial assistance but physical enforcement, and therein lies the rub.
For now it's my understanding agentic AI is being employed within Venezuela to leverage discontent. Even this is tricky as checkpoints are set up and people's phones are opened to look for anything anti-government.
Aside from Machado's support, I think it is important to watch to what extent congressional Democrats are willing to cling to these highly questionable boat strikes. This will tell us how they view the larger picture.
Scrapping away my disdain for Trump, it is understandable that the US government, Venezuelans and Venezuela's neighbors want Maduro gone. Yes, the Trump administration put out a simple explanation for our involvement in Venezuela's affairs: Drugs. Drugs bad. But this is about the store of natural wealth within Venezuela, not just oil but gold and other minerals but mostly oil and what a Maduro regime would do with this wealth and how it might affect the western hemisphere. Consider an America hating pro-Iran, pro-China, pro-Cuba oil rich nation not halfway around the world. Should we get involved in this nation's affairs? To say any change in government in Venezuela should happen organically is wishful thinking. Two thirds of Venezuela's population opposed Maduro in the last election. Millions of Venezuelans have fled to neighboring countries. These countries have received little support from wealthy nations in assisting these displaced people. Maduro has disappeared thousands since the last election. The Maduro government is thoroughly corrupt: the upper ranks on the decentralized military, the intelligence service, drug trafficking guerilla groups and pro Maduro paramilitary forces (colectivos) all work to keep Maduro in power. They have all the guns. So even with Maduro's overthrow, it is farfetched to think a pro democracy government could take control. Not without some interim assistance, not financial assistance but physical enforcement, and therein lies the rub.
For now it's my understanding agentic AI is being employed within Venezuela to leverage discontent. Even this is tricky as checkpoints are set up and people's phones are opened to look for anything anti-government.
Aside from Machado's support, I think it is important to watch to what extent congressional Democrats are willing to cling to these highly questionable boat strikes. This will tell us how they view the larger picture.