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ckaihatsu
11th May 2016, 20:57
http://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2016/05/10/vene-m10.html


Venezuela on the knife’s edge as economy collapses

By Neil Hardt
10 May 2016

The free fall of the Venezuelan economy has produced an explosive situation with widespread repercussions for the Latin American region.

The Venezuelan bolivar has lost 98 percent of its value versus the US dollar since 2013, with inflation rising to roughly 600 percent by the end of 2015. Inflation is expected to double to above 1000 percent in 2016, with the IMF expecting growth to shrink by 10 percent this year after last year’s fall of 8 percent.

Poverty has skyrocketed since 2013, increasing from roughly 35 percent to roughly 80 percent today. Fifty-one percent of the population is in extreme poverty, up from less than 10 percent in 2012. Food riots, malnutrition, and disease are becoming more common due to an absence of basic consumer goods.

According to a recent study from the University of Simon Bolivar, only 19 percent of the population had enough to meet their basic needs. In 2015, only 52 percent of the population could afford to buy vegetables, 46 percent could buy sugar, and 32 percent could buy cheese and coffee. Nearly 20 percent of Venezuelans cannot even afford to buy rice.

The country’s infrastructure is collapsing. A shortage of electricity led the government to announce forced electricity blackouts beginning in April, and state-run industries are now closed five days a week in an effort to save energy. Last week, Venezuela’s largest beer producer, Empresas Polar, was forced to shut down production due to a lack of supplies.

The worsening economic situation has produced widespread opposition to the “Chavista” government of the Socialist Party of Venezuela (PSUV), which has been in power since Hugo Chavez’s first term as president began in 1999.

The PSUV government’s shortsighted and unplanned economic model was based on using high oil prices to enrich a layer of what is known as the “boliburguesia” [Bolivarian bourgeoisie] while buying political stability through moderate increases in social spending. When this nationalist program buckled under the impact of the international collapse in oil and commodity prices, the PSUV cut social spending and relied increasingly on state violence against strikes and protests.

Last week, for example, President Nicolas Maduro deployed the military to the streets of Maracaibo along the Northwest coast to quell riots in which dozens of shop windows were smashed and blockades set up. In a March poll, Maduro enjoyed the support of only 26.8 percent of the population—a figure that has likely fallen in the last two months.

However, only 57 percent of those polled said they would vote to have Maduro removed, an indication that hostility to Maduro does not equate to support for the right-wing opposition. The CIA supported Democratic Unity Roundtable (MUD) is widely disliked by Venezuelan workers, who recall the role of leading opposition figures in murdering hundreds of workers and youth during the 1989 Caracazo protests, as well as for their support for the US-backed coup attempt of April 2002 in which dozens of demonstrators were killed.

The opposition recently launched its official campaign to remove Maduro from office. On May 2, they delivered almost 2 million signatures to the National Election Institute (INE), well above the 200,000 required, in a petition to call for a recall referendum against Maduro. Once the petition is accepted, the opposition would be required to collect 4 million signatures to force a referendum. If the referendum is held and if Maduro is recalled before the date at which Maduro completes the fourth year of his six-year term, new elections will be held. If a referendum is held and Maduro is recalled after the cut-off date, Maduro’s vice-president Aristobulo Isturiz would take power until the 2019 elections.

Setting the stage for a constitutional crisis similar to that unfolding in neighboring Brazil, this is further complicated by the fact that the commencement of Maduro’s term in 2013 is disputed. While Maduro began serving as acting president in January due to Chavez’s poor health, his official term arguably began after the March elections.

The opposition has denounced the Chavez government’s INE as filled with government sympathizers and has called for massive demonstrations if the recall process is halted or prolonged by the INE. In reply, Maduro stated he would call for large counter-protests to what the government describes as a “coup.”

Meanwhile, the Maduro government has significantly depleted currency and gold reserves and has prioritized paying off debt at the expense of consumer goods importation, which has produced scarcities for millions of Venezuelan workers.

There are increasing concerns that Venezuela will be unable to meet bond payments, triggering a domino effect with repercussions across Latin America and the world.

The Center for Strategic and International Studies published an article on May 2 titled “Venezuela’s impending collapse,” in which the US government-linked think tank noted that Venezuela must meet $10.5 billion in debt servicing costs this year. The article notes that the government will have to squeeze imports in order to service its debt, which “raises the question of whether the government could endure further shortages in basic supplies. Given the choice between default and political suicide, the Maduro government would likely choose default.”

In response to the crisis, the United States is engaged in operations aimed at removing Maduro without triggering a social explosion. Speaking in April, Secretary of State John Kerry told the Miami Herald: “We are prepared to help Venezuela get back on its feet economically. But we’ve got to have an executive authority in Venezuela which is ready to respect the people and respect the rule of law.”

Such “help” from the United States would have disastrous implications for Venezuelan workers and youth. After over a century of imperialist subjugation, South America is subject to a renewed pivot by the US to the region, aimed at eliminating Chinese influence and providing new exploitative opportunities for Wall Street and US corporations. Nothing, not the least military invasion, is off the table for US imperialism in its attempts at world domination.

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LionofTepelenë
11th May 2016, 22:36
Holy shit, I didn't know the situation in Venezuela was that bad. But my question is: how did this happen? I would really like a more detailed explanation on this. But what is more dangerous is the US's response, which frankly will most likely intensify the situation. If the US does in fact decide to fund a coup, then Venezuela is really in a bad situation.

Prof. Oblivion
12th May 2016, 06:52
Great example of a complete failure. This was a "revolution" led from a bureaucratic sector of the state. It's no surprise it got as bad as it did, and it's no surprise that those same bureaucrats are in so much denial - their existence is on the line. The Bolivarian "movement" bought off a section of the population with oil revenue and when that collapsed so did the entire movement and economy. Turns out you can't buy your way to socialism...

ckaihatsu
12th May 2016, 16:04
If the US does in fact decide to fund a coup, then Venezuela is really in a bad situation.


Well, the U.S. has been funding attempts at overthrow in Cuba and Venezuela for decades now, so nothing's really different in terms of imperialist hegemony. Standing against U.S.-backed coups is really a no-brainer for the bulk of the population, so I doubt that the worsening *economic* situation in Venezuela will affect the fundamental *geopolitics*.





The Bolivarian "movement" bought off a section of the population with oil revenue and when that collapsed so did the entire movement and economy. Turns out you can't buy your way to socialism...


The thing, too, is that world economics has been revolving around 'commodities' (raw materials) lately, which is usually more typical of an *underdeveloped* and *developing* economy, not a mature entity as the global capitalist economy of the 21st century.

The growth of the BRICS as a whole was premised on this 'commodities' orientation, but now they're all hitting the wall as prices have plunged.

Sinister Cultural Marxist
13th May 2016, 02:03
Holy shit, I didn't know the situation in Venezuela was that bad. But my question is: how did this happen? I would really like a more detailed explanation on this. But what is more dangerous is the US's response, which frankly will most likely intensify the situation. If the US does in fact decide to fund a coup, then Venezuela is really in a bad situation.

Their "economic planners" made some pretty glaring mistakes. One of those mistakes is insufficient investment in their energy sector. The last time it was El Niño there was an energy crisis since their power is mostly hydroelectric, and El Niño causes drought in Venezuela. There's another El Niño, and another energy crisis, except this time oil prices are so low that other sectors are facing problems. Also, they rely too much on a single commodity, using money from oil to compensate for low productivity in other sectors. This, mixed with price controls, means there are insufficient imports to meet demand whenever oil prices drop. This crisis was predictable - the problem is Maduro lacks the political capital to survive such a crisis, unlike Chavez who had gained a kind of cult status.

A part of the problem is that they maintain a contradictory mixed state-private economy with only a few sectors nationalized. This means the state relies on price controls to keep most commodities affordable. Whenever the controlled price doesn't rise fast enough, there are supply bottlenecks. If the state owned a bunch of toilet paper factories, they could sell toilet paper at whatever price they pleased, but because private companies supply these commodities, they cannot exercise that kind of control. Without oil prices being high, the state cannot import these goods to compensate without just going into debt.

Venezuela had some successes, but I think it shows some good examples for state planners for what *not* to do if you are managing an economy. For one thing, make sure there is an energy surplus, so whenever one form of energy is in crisis, you can compensate. For another, make sure domestic production can cover shortfalls whenever oil prices go low.

Red Terror Dr.
13th May 2016, 22:46
It's the CIA destabilizing the country. Just read Inside the Company: CIA Diary by Phillip Agee

Sinister Cultural Marxist
14th May 2016, 01:29
It's the CIA destabilizing the country. Just read Inside the Company: CIA Diary by Phillip Agee

US foreign policy organs (among others like the Colombian elite) certainly have had their influence, but we should not remain uncritical of Maduro and Chavez before him. They have made a number of mistakes - the CIA, for all its power, cannot control the weather that caused the drought, though the Venezuelan state should have predicted and planned for it considering it is a cyclical weather patter.

ckaihatsu
15th May 2016, 17:08
Important videos and update on Venezuela


Family members of the victims of right-wing attacks in Venezuela speak out

Two family members of the victims of right-wing violence in Venezuela recently toured the United States. They spoke to several audiences, including U.S. Congress members in Washington and legislators in Sacramento. In the videos below, you can hear their testimony at a forum co-sponsored by our committee. The top video is a powerful documentary they produced about the terrorist violence known as "guarimbas."

apva3_-yoYI
Documentary of the Committee of Victims of Violent Protests (Guarimbas)

Testimony of Desirée Cabrera
Testimony of Desirée Cabrera
Testimony of Luis Durán
Testimony of Luis Durán


Venezuelan right-wing recall campaign against President Maduro is latest U.S. gov't tactic

http://files.ctctcdn.com/c8e6c4b6001/b7ea9baf-6485-4c61-85a5-ae00ef279c0d.jpg

In their latest attempt to topple the democratically elected government of Venezuela, right-wing forces are mobilizing to revoke President Nicholas Maduro's presidential mandate...This latest ploy must be seen within the context of a total war strategy that has been imposed against the Bolivarian government. The U.S.-backed opposition strategy includes a media war, a diplomatic war, an economic war, a political war and outright terrorist assassinations.
...
The intensified efforts of Venezuela's enemies to undo nearly two decades of progress means that the movement in defense of Venezuelan self-determination is more important than other. The Cuba-Venezuela Solidarity Committee calls upon anti-imperialists across the U.S. to unmask Washington's true intentions, agitate against the recall referendum and stand with the Bolivarian revolution!

Click here to read our full analysis (http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001-mSCxquvpic3mcA4bg_rBubNB--1gZuebr6w9OboIa9o7mZZK_ZTC15m9gsQaV3J3T2iNIuG2LG1b 0wNW0kQ_BzobsPlW6gJHy74uiL7WwBNNtyyCh2bKf9K4I4TT08 8DyuDHIvxKg7W92GzIQgzxtb6RLuEm5Wx7nxfeui_oKvjb24BB oUgiUmC3ByOxM5MRaG-51hLsu1QLCzeaHE11R2c7vjoKabOhj5cy8jyJVTtZGmYPrTqDN JKjCLQZHgmHIHihVGeIFhQ0dmHGJoIExOxYDK9J1U07a4D0Myj Cxf5tBO6UUsQOO7D77ef-bDw&c=LAOeXAKUtwFYN0f0gjA8d0COtfSKgtbSs0A0muw_lr2xJ14C qhuM4Q==&ch=DnfWtTP7_HbOnDVFQO6urT__VJyOvuc8T4ENeKokectNQf8 V0gBOhg==)

Please give a donation if you can...
to the Cuba and Venezuela Solidarity Committee.

DONATE (http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001-mSCxquvpic3mcA4bg_rBubNB--1gZuebr6w9OboIa9o7mZZK_ZTC2yuZnKGDr-Fuxw-DW4h7pdHij20kXW9OLTAmiFFva8EG_lCjPoLYYCCwkqQql36hb hFw0VmVYJA4t92oLVDfPoYpvCN6q0x2pb74IYEhV62foQBugRf uMcXnzl-7CgWBEX8vRz4yNzOPwGh1HazOZ-sXcYrV4-oXQ==&c=LAOeXAKUtwFYN0f0gjA8d0COtfSKgtbSs0A0muw_lr2xJ14C qhuM4Q==&ch=DnfWtTP7_HbOnDVFQO6urT__VJyOvuc8T4ENeKokectNQf8 V0gBOhg==)

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pastradamus
16th May 2016, 01:13
Great example of a complete failure. This was a "revolution" led from a bureaucratic sector of the state. It's no surprise it got as bad as it did, and it's no surprise that those same bureaucrats are in so much denial - their existence is on the line. The Bolivarian "movement" bought off a section of the population with oil revenue and when that collapsed so did the entire movement and economy. Turns out you can't buy your way to socialism...

I'm very sad to say I agree with the above poster. He hits the nail on the head here. Albeit may though - I reckon Chavez would have fixed this, Maduro is a weak president.

- - - Updated - - -


It's the CIA destabilizing the country. Just read Inside the Company: CIA Diary by Phillip Agee

No. I don't have time for that. Elaborate comrade.

Sentinel
16th May 2016, 20:55
It seems the PSUV counteroffensive has now begun, and with socialist measures none the less. Maduro has yesterday ordered factories shut down as part of the rightwing oppositions economic warfare to be seized and handed over to the workers, saying it is time to step up the game and radicalise the revolution further:


Maduro Orders Shuttered Factories Seized and Given to Workers



http://www.telesurtv.net/__export/1463326278272/sites/telesur/img/news/2016/05/15/maduro_communal_power_14-05-2016.jpg_1718483346.jpg




Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro waves to a crowd that had assembled to show support for emergency measures announced by the government, Caracas, Venezuela, May 14, 2016. | Photo: AVN
“I'm ready to do it to radicalize the Revolution,” said Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro. "Those who don't want to work can leave," he said.

Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro on Sunday told a crowd of supporters that in order to increase productivity and help alleviate basic products scarcity, all businesses and factories closed down by their owners would be given to the workers so production could be restarted.


RELATED:
Chavistas Rally in Support of Maduro's Emergency Measures (http://www.telesurtv.net/english/news/Chavistas-Rally-in-Support-of-Maduros-Emergency-Measures-20160514-0008.html)

“A stopped factory (is) a factory turned over to the people, the moment to do it has come, I'm ready to do it to radicalize the Revolution,” said Maduro.
Maduro has accused the factory owners of deliberately sabotaging production in order to cause harm to the government.
The demonstration was organized in support of the "communal economy,” which are small and medium production projects supported and coordinated by community councils and communes. These instances of grassroots and direct democracy are collectively known inside Venezuela as the “Communal Power.”

“I'm ready to hand over to the Communal Power any factory stopped by any rich person in this country … Whoever doesn't want to work should leave and those who do are welcome, we will go united. This country needs all of its economic structure to be functioning,” stated President Maduro.

The president said he would approve the funding of seven large-scale projects under Communal Power in order to kick-start food production and distribution.
Maduro declared a 60-day state of emergency (http://www.telesurtv.net/english/news/Nicolas-Maduro-Declares-Emergency-to-Face-Foreign-Intervention-20160514-0002.html) on Friday, in part to address a shortage of food and medicine in the country.
The decree gives the president greater discretion to use funds to address the severe shortages and drought that Venezuela faces.
The president said the decree has three main objectives: to boost domestic production, to strengthen the new system of food distribution direct to people's homes, and to strengthen the social programs or “missions."
The Venezuelan government is trying to steer food production and distribution directly into the people's hands through what are known Local Committees for Supply and Production, or CLAP. Venezuelans have recent experience in handling the distribution of food. In 2002, oil production was paralyzed, which crippled the economy. As a result, the people took charge and ensured that what was available was distributed to those in need.

http://www.telesurtv.net/english/news/Maduro-Orders-Shuttered-Factories-Seized-and-Given-to-Workers-20160515-0016.html

Prof. Oblivion
17th May 2016, 15:44
It seems the PSUV counteroffensive has now begun, and with socialist measures none the less. Maduro has yesterday ordered factories shut down as part of the rightwing oppositions economic warfare to be seized and handed over to the workers, saying it is time to step up the game and radicalise the revolution further:



http://www.telesurtv.net/english/news/Maduro-Orders-Shuttered-Factories-Seized-and-Given-to-Workers-20160515-0016.html

If Maduro is so revolutionary why is he going to such extreme lengths to pay international creditors? Is that part of "radicalizing the Revolution" as well?

http://www.cnbc.com/2016/02/29/venezuela-is-making-surreal-suicidal-debt-payments.html

The move to seize closed factories is a desperate attempt to hold onto their base, a base that is revolting against them. And what's the point of it all? Maybe the factory workers in the newly seized factories will be able to work two days a week (http://money.cnn.com/2016/04/27/news/economy/venezuela-2-day-work-week/)? Why does it matter who owns the factories when they sit idle regardless? Even if they were operating, what're the workers going to do, work for a wage that is essentially worthless due to the inflation caused by Maduro and his cronies?

The economy is in shambles. Yes, the CIA is probably operating in Venezuela, but the CIA didn't cripple the economy, the corrupt Bolivarian bureaucracy did. Anyone that supports this government is complicit with the immense poverty created by them. They were never a "revolutionary" group. There was no revolution. It was all a sham. These are left-liberals who saw that they could buy their way to power while oil was riding high.

Sentinel
17th May 2016, 21:19
If Maduro is so revolutionary why is he going to such extreme lengths to pay international creditors? Is that part of "radicalizing the Revolution" as well?

http://www.cnbc.com/2016/02/29/venezuela-is-making-surreal-suicidal-debt-payments.html

The move to seize closed factories is a desperate attempt to hold onto their base, a base that is revolting against them. And what's the point of it all? Maybe the factory workers in the newly seized factories will be able to work two days a week (http://money.cnn.com/2016/04/27/news/economy/venezuela-2-day-work-week/)? Why does it matter who owns the factories when they sit idle regardless? Even if they were operating, what're the workers going to do, work for a wage that is essentially worthless due to the inflation caused by Maduro and his cronies?

The economy is in shambles. Yes, the CIA is probably operating in Venezuela, but the CIA didn't cripple the economy, the corrupt Bolivarian bureaucracy did. Anyone that supports this government is complicit with the immense poverty created by them. They were never a "revolutionary" group. There was no revolution. It was all a sham. These are left-liberals who saw that they could buy their way to power while oil was riding high.

I apologise as I made kind of a pure news post without outlining my views very much. I am hardly a supporter of the PSUV bureaucracy, but I do however support any socialist measures by it. Such as nationalizing companies, especially under workers control. I would in fact support such a move if it was by Lucifer himself, while not necessarily endorsing him.

As for how effective the measure will be unless things go further, well that is kind of the thing. I firmly believe we are to support reforms that benefit workers, not to mention empower them - while never neglecting to point out they aren't enough as long as the capitalist system remains.

We have already seen that Maduro would not (did not) take this move without being pressured, that much is simply obvious.

But as for the character of the chavistas and others like them, besides concrete gains for workers accomplished, which in Venezuela are many but far from enough or revolutionary per se, we also have to look at movements in the sense of where they may go due to pressure from the working class and their more radical wing and periphery, rather than the ideological purity of the leadership which tends to act as a brake for them at best.

They are to either become radicalized by pressure or showed aside if they fail to.

Prof. Oblivion
18th May 2016, 02:42
I apologise as I made kind of a pure news post without outlining my views very much. I am hardly a supporter of the PSUV bureaucracy, but I do however support any socialist measures by it. Such as nationalizing companies, especially under workers control. I would in fact support such a move if it was by Lucifer himself, while not necessarily endorsing him.

As for how effective the measure will be unless things go further, well that is kind of the thing. I firmly believe we are to support reforms that benefit workers, not to mention empower them - while never neglecting to point out they aren't enough as long as the capitalist system remains.

We have already seen that Maduro would not (did not) take this move without being pressured, that much is simply obvious.

But as for the character of the chavistas and others like them, besides concrete gains for workers accomplished, which in Venezuela are many but far from enough or revolutionary per se, we also have to look at movements in the sense of where they may go due to pressure from the working class and their more radical wing and periphery, rather than the ideological purity of the leadership which tends to act as a brake for them at best.

They are to either become radicalized by pressure or showed aside if they fail to.

Maduro et al need to be exposed for the corrupt bureaucrats they are. That is the pressure that needs to be placed.

TheIrrationalist
19th May 2016, 16:41
Maduro et al need to be exposed for the corrupt bureaucrats they are. That is the pressure that needs to be placed.

they are still lot less corrupted bureaucrats than the cia backed neoliberal elite that has been calling for the military to intervene.

ckaihatsu
19th May 2016, 17:20
http://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2016/05/17/vene-m17.html


Maduro government imposes state of emergency in Venezuela

By Bill Van Auken
17 May 2016

Venezuela was placed under a nationwide “State of Exception and Economic Emergency” Monday as its government continued to face both social unrest created by the country’s economic meltdown and a drive by the political right to oust President Nicolas Maduro.

While the Venezuelan president said that the decree was necessary to confront “international and national threats against our fatherland,” including both military intervention from abroad and a coup at home, the most pressing challenge to his government is coming from Venezuelan workers and poor who are unable to live under conditions of massive poverty, soaring prices and growing unemployment.

The country’s economy has plummeted in tandem with the price of oil, which is now selling for roughly one third of what it cost in 2014 and accounts for 95 percent of export earnings.

Recent weeks have seen a growing wave of looting by people frustrated with their inability to either find or afford basic foods and other necessities of life. Crowds have stormed supermarkets, shopping centers and government food dispensaries across the country.

With the value of the country’s minimum wage now reaching only $40 a month, large sections of the population are reduced to eating two or fewer meals a day, with meat, chicken, fish and other sources of protein well beyond their reach.

“We are officially declaring May as the month that [widespread] hunger began in Venezuela,” said Oscar Meza, Director of the Documentation Center for Social Analysis of the Venezuelan Federation of Teachers.

Meanwhile the state-run health care system is in a state of collapse. Venezuelan government figures cited by the New York Times show that the mortality rate among infants under a month old has increased by more than a hundredfold since 2012, while there are five times as many deaths of mothers giving birth in hospitals. These death rates reflect a lack of basic medicines and supplies as well as the effects of continuous daily blackouts that shut down incubators and other equipment.

Workers throughout the country have suffered devastating cuts in real wages, with inflation pegged at 700 percent this year and projected to rise as high as 1,642 percent next year.

While the only sector to have received wage increases commensurate with the soaring inflation rate is the military, the government has sought to freeze existing contracts and resisted negotiating new ones.

There are increasing signs of working class militancy amid these catastrophic conditions. Workers at the Central University of Venezuela have continued job actions, blocking all of the main entrances to the facility on Monday with picket lines and burning tires. Meanwhile, the country’s electrical workers announced plans to launch a nationwide general strike by next week after five years in which the government has refused to negotiate a new contract.

The conditions are developing for a social explosion on the scale of the Caracazo of 1989, the mass uprising against IMF-dictated austerity measures—imposed during a previous fall in oil prices—that the government attempted to drown in blood.

In announcing the state of emergency last Friday, President Maduro warned that “Washington is activating measures at the request of Venezuela's fascist right, who are emboldened by the coup in Brazil.”

The right-wing opposition, organized in the MUD (Democratic Unity Roundtable) electoral coalition is attempting to organize a recall vote that would force new elections. The MUD, which won a super-majority in the federal legislature last December, has reportedly collected nearly two million signatures supporting a recall, but leading government officials have accused it of fraud and warned that the vote will not take place.

The collaboration between the MUD and US government agencies is undeniable, with the American embassy openly supporting its activities and outfits like the National Endowment for Democracy funneling money to the political right.

Support for ousting the Maduro government, however, has spread far beyond the MUD’s well-heeled upper middle class constituency, with polls showing the president’s popularity rate plummeting to anywhere between 15 and 25 percent.

Justifications given for the state of emergency were less than convincing. Maduro and his supporters cited statements made by Alvaro Uribe, the former right-wing president of Colombia, at a conference in Miami last week rhetorically calling for foreign military intervention in Venezuela to aid the opposition. It also pointed to a background briefing given by two US intelligence agents who speculated that Maduro could be brought down, including by a coup from within his own party or the military.

It is entirely possible that the Maduro government will use the state of emergency to suspend the constitutional right to seek a recall vote and thereby derail the right’s campaign. This, however, will do nothing to dampen the anger of millions of Venezuelans over their inability to secure food and health care for their families.

In addition to the state of emergency, Maduro has announced plans to hold military exercises next weekend “to prepare ourselves for any scenario.”

The scenario of mass social upheavals is far more likely than that of a foreign invasion, and there are growing signs that the government is resorting to repression against the working class to sustain itself in power.

The turn to the military comes on the heels of “Operation Liberation of the People” launched last year, which has seen police and military collaborating in mass arbitrary arrests and extra-judicial executions in the name of a war on crime waged in poor and working class neighborhoods. Last Tuesday, a crackdown resulted in the arrest of 1,130 people and killing of at least nine.

Under the severe impact of the global capitalist crisis on Venezuela’s economy, the economic and political setup introduced in Venezuela 17 years ago with the coming to power of the former army officer Hugo Chavez has reached an impasse.

The right-wing corporate media internationally has gloated over the deepening crisis of the Maduro government and the growing hunger and misery of the Venezuelan masses, proclaiming both a manifestation of the “failure of socialism.”

This is a lie. While the late Chavez and his successor Maduro proclaimed their policy to be that of “Bolivarian socialism” or “Twenty-first century socialism,” they have led a capitalist government that has defended private property in an economy in which a greater share of production was in the hands of the private sector than before Chavez became president.

The limited social assistance programs initiated under Chavez served, as he himself boasted, to protect the rich by reducing the immense class tensions in what historically has been one of the continent’s most unequal nations.

Meanwhile, on the strength of rising oil prices, the financial sector reaped record profits, while a layer known as the boliburguesia, composed of government officials and businessmen with ties to the government, enriched themselves off of corruption, smuggling and currency manipulation schemes that siphoned hundreds of billions of dollars out of the economy.

As the present crisis demonstrates, the government failed to either develop vital infrastructure or diversify the national economy to reduce its dependence upon oil exports, 40 percent of which went to the US market.

With the collapse in oil prices, the ability to maintain social programs and subsidized imports has evaporated, and the full weight of the crisis is being imposed upon the backs of the working class.

Reduced revenues that could go to buy desperately needed food and medicine are instead being directed by the Maduro government to meet interest and service charges on Venezuela’s debt to the international banks. It has rigorously denied reports that it will default on some $10.5 billion in debt servicing costs that come due this year.

The White House Monday declared itself to be “quite concerned about the wellbeing of the people of Venezuela” and called for all “interested parties” to “work together peacefully to try to find solutions.”

This is so much eye wash. Washington views the intense crisis in Venezuela, Brazil and elsewhere on the continent as an opportunity to reassert US hegemony in Latin America, counter the growing influence of China and inflict blows against the working class.

Copyright © 1998-2016 World Socialist Web Site - All rights reserved

ckaihatsu
19th May 2016, 20:33
Instability confronting Bolivarian Venezuela and the road ahead

By David Hoskins


Washington, DC - On May 14 Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro declared a constitutional state of emergency in that country. CNN reports indicate that there have been marches in support of the government’s push for a “state of constitutional exception and economic emergency” to last until July.

Widespread reporting in the establishment media indicates that the Venezuelan people are currently in the midst of confronting a serious set of economic and political challenges. Even if such reports are sometimes exaggerated for propaganda purposes against the Venezuelan government, a picture is emerging of a country dealing with shortages in many basic food and consumer items, increasing power blackouts and inflation.

The instability many Venezuelans feel under the weight of such conditions is compounded by a drive for a recall referendum on President Maduro, who opposition forces in Venezuela blame for a deteriorating economy. This is a charge that Maduro’s government and his supporters strongly refute. If anything, they point to the right-wing opposition taking control of the National Assembly following the 2015 elections as an important factor contributing to the current instability.

Yet, the establishment press in the U.S. encourages the narrative that Venezuela’s economic woes are the result of mismanagement by President Maduro and the Bolivarian government. This blame is reinforced with headlines like “Venezuela’s crisis: President Maduro must put the Venezuelan people ahead of political expediency” in the Houston Chronicle to the Atlantic’s “Venezuela is falling apart: Scenes from daily life in the failing state.” Similar themes are reiterated daily across the rest of the establishment media in print, radio, television and online.

The truth is, however, that the economic and political instability in Venezuela is the result of something far more nefarious than incompetence on the part of the country’s current government. Rather, it is the intended consequence of a deliberate campaign of sabotage against Venezuela’s economy and government by that country’s right-wing capitalist oligarchy with the support, sometimes open and sometimes hidden, of U.S. imperialism.

But in order to adequately explain why a capitalist oligarchy would destroy its own country’s economy, it is important to review a little bit of Venezuela’s recent history.

Venezuela’s Bolivarian Revolution brings a decade of struggle and progress

In 1998, former President Hugo Chavez was elected for the first time. His election was a repudiation of the economic and political control of Venezuela’s ruling oligarchy. It also corresponded with the full emergence of a modern Bolivarian Revolution, which is national democratic in character and backed by the Venezuelan masses to increase economic sovereignty, overcome the legacy of imperialist exploitation, and ensure that the Black, Indigenous and Mestizo (people who, like Maduro himself and Chavez before him, are of at least partial European and partial Indigenous ancestry) majority of Venezuelans no longer live under the yoke of a mostly white, European-descended oligarchy.

In the process, the Bolivarian Revolution has brought more than a decade of measurable progress to the Venezuelan people. According to a report by the Center for Economic and Policy Research, the Bolivarian Revolution nearly halved Venezuela’s poverty rate - from 61% in 1997 to 32% by the end of 2011. Extreme poverty declined by two-thirds from 30% to 9% over this same period.

The Bolivarian Revolution has also enabled the country’s homeless to seize vacant buildings and convert them into homes even as the progressive government in that country has built hundreds of thousands of public housing units, often on unproductive land technically ‘owned’ by Venezuela’s elite. Since 2011, Venezuela’s housing mission has built more than 1 million new homes, according to reports from Xinhua News Agency and Telesur. President Maduro has vowed to expand the housing mission’s capacity and provide low-cost housing to 40%of Venezuelans by the end of the decade. This does not account for other gains made, including expanded health care access that has been provided in collaboration with socialist Cuba.

But if the Bolivarian Revolution has proven its ability to accomplish so much for the masses of Venezuela in such a short period of time, why is it currently confronting economic and political instability?

National oligarchy and U.S. imperialism work to undermine Bolivarian Revolution

The main factor contributing to Venezuela’s current instability is a capitalist oligarchy working in collaboration with U.S. imperialism to sabotage and defeat the Bolivarian Revolution. This is not a new occurrence.

According to the Centre for Research on Globalization, the economic and political elite that ruled Venezuela for the 40 years prior to the election of Chavez have been unhappy with the progress of the Bolivarian Revolution, particularly with the renationalization of the oil industry, redistribution of oil profits, and other key reforms.

In 2002, the conflict between the Bolivarian government and the oligarchy’s drive to maintain its privileges spilled out into the open in a big way. The industry bosses in Fedecamaras (the national association of business), the imperialist-aligned Confederation of Workers of Venezuela (CTV), and a section of the military hatched the first of many coup plots and briefly ousted Chavez.

The ouster came after the bosses had enforced a business lockout in order to create an atmosphere of economic instability. On April 14 of that year, just two days after the initial coup, Chavez was returned to office on the wings of a popular uprising against the coup government led by Pedro Carmona, a member of the Caracas business elite.

A 2004 New York Times report shows that the CIA was intimately aware of the details of the coup plot, but withheld most information from Venezuela’s government. The report goes on to confirm that the Bush administration blamed Chavez for his own ouster and denied knowing anything about the attempted coup after its execution. A 2002 report in the Guardian newspaper serves as a reminder that the U.S. immediately endorsed the Carmona government for the 48 hours it held power before the popular uprising restored Chavez to office.

It is worth noting that the CTV union federation is viewed by many Venezuelan workers as corrupt. The CTV’s support of the anti-Bolivarian 2002 coup was likely reinforced by its ties to the AFL-CIO’s ironically named ‘Solidarity Center.’ The Solidarity Center operates as a State Department front and uses its influence with international labor unions to push U.S. foreign policy around the world.

In fact, the Solidarity Center’s own 2011 annual report lists organizations such as the National Endowment for Democracy, U.S. Agency for International Department, and U.S. Department of State as financial supporters. According to the 2011 report, 94% of the Solidarity Center’s funding came from federal awards. Less than 2% came from unions.

Rank-and-file trade unionists across the U.S. have long demanded that the AFL-CIO dismantle the Solidarity Center. A key source of outrage for these progressive trade unionists is the Solidarity Center’s ties to the State Department and its willingness to interfere with progressive governments such as that in Venezuela.

U.S., right-wing oligarchy intensify sabotage after failed coup

The economic and political sabotage against the Bolivarian Revolution has not been confined to the events of 2002. Ever since the mass uprising reinstalled Chavez to the presidency, Venezuela’s oligarchy has worked hand-in-glove with U.S. imperialism to stall, thwart, reverse and overthrow Venezuela’s Bolivarian government- then under the leadership of President Chavez and today under that of President Maduro.

The Council on Hemispheric Affairs has pointed to research indicating that in Venezuela a “scarcity of basic consumer goods spikes around important elections, as businesses seek to pressure voters” into voting against their own interests and against the Bolivarian Revolution.

In 2004, having failed to oust him by force two years earlier, Venezuela’s oligarchy forced a referendum to recall Chavez from office. According to BBC News, Chavez won the recall election with 58% of the vote, and his opponents rejected the outcome and alleged fraud even though international observers confirmed that there had been a fair election. Unable to oust him by force or recall him at the ballot box, the right-wing opposition attempted to undermine the legitimacy of the entire formal democratic process — a process the oligarchy itself had set up — by boycotting the National Assembly elections in 2005.

Providing every detail of the economic and political sabotage carried out against the Bolivarian Revolution would be more fitting for a book than a single article. Suffice it to say there has been a lot, even recently. A 2013 Telegraph report indicates that President Maduro presented photographs of cut conductor cables as evidence of government claims that an earlier electricity blackout had been the result of saboteurs hoping to influence the outcome of that year’s municipal elections. In 2014, CNN reported that Venezuela had arrested three air force generals accused of plotting a coup to overthrow Maduro.

Fast forward to today and we see that Venezuela may be at a crossroads. With a state of emergency declared, with economic and political instability continuing to roil the country, and with the forces of oligarchy in full and open mobilization after the right-wing opposition’s taking of the 2015 National Assembly elections for the first time in 16 years, the path that the Bolivarian Revolution and its supporters in the Maduro government take next could be determinative.

Cuba or Chile – which way forward for Venezuela?

The Bolivarian Revolution in Venezuela has been a national democratic revolution. At the same time, it has often exposed a socialist orientation, is firmly allied with socialist Cuba, and is led in large part by the United Socialist Party of Venezuela (PSUV), the largest Bolivarian party in the country, with strong support from the Communist Party of Venezuela (PCV), an independent Marxist-Leninist party with a strong working-class base.

Yet the Bolivarian Revolution has not yet transitioned from the phase of national democratic revolution to that a socialist revolution and much of the economy is in the hands of the oligarchy. A socialist revolution would eliminate all of the right-wing oligarchy’s claims to political power, take firm hold of the commanding heights of the economy and establish a new political system based upon power of the working class and its allies.

There are strong indications that President Maduro knows what needs to be done. According to BBC News, during a weekend rally in Caracas, Maduro said, “We must take all measures to recover productive capacity which is being paralyzed by the bourgeoisie. Anyone who wants to halt [production] to sabotage the country should get out, and those who do must be handcuffed…We’re going to tell imperialism and the international right that the people are present, with their farm instruments in one hand and a gun in the other…to defend this sacred land.”

While the decision to push toward a socialist revolution is not without risk, the history of Latin American national democratic struggles shows that the decision not to is at least as risky.

The divergent outcomes of the revolutionary struggles in Cuba and Chile provide useful case studies for understanding the dilemma eventually presented to all such struggles: move toward socialism or face the likelihood of political overthrow and reaction at the hands of a right-wing oligarchy allied with U.S. imperialism.

Cuba, under the leadership of Marxist-Leninists, took the road of socialist revolution and Chile did not.

Today, Cuba is a politically stable country that can point to myriad social gains for its people. Cuba has a child mortality rate that is lower than in the U.S., one of the lowest rates of deaths from infectious diseases in the western hemisphere, and a 100% full adult literacy rate - the highest in the western hemisphere. As a strong ally of Venezuela, Cuba has certainly shared the lessons of its own historical experiences.

The story of Chile is very different. Much like Venezuela today, right-wing forces in Chile allied with U.S. imperialism took actions to undermine the economy in order to destabilize the elected government of socialist President Salvador Allende. Declassified CIA documents reveal that President Nixon ordered U.S. intelligence to make Chile’s economy “scream” in order to create instability and pave the way for a coup that would restore Chile’s powerful business elite to power.

And that is exactly what happened.

On Sept. 11, 1973, Chile’s armed forces overthrew the elected Marxist government of President Allende. General Augusto Pinochet succeeded Allende and established a brutal military dictatorship that served the interests of the business elite and terrorized socialists, communists, trade unionists, student groups and other progressive social forces in Chilean society for the next 17 years. Chile is still recovering from the scars of this mark on its history.

Cuba had tried to warn Allende that he would have to push the revolution forward and use force to defend it. Fidel Castro even went so far as to give Allende an AK-47 automatic rifle as a gift when advising him about the dangers of the Chilean bourgeoisie.

If the current instability in Venezuela is as serious as it looks on paper, the Bolivarian Revolution in that country may be coming to a fork in the road. The workers, the oppressed, and other progressive forces of the world hope that it can and will take the path of socialist Cuba. No matter what happens, these same forces, including Freedom Road Socialist Organization in the U.S., stand in solidarity with the Venezuelan people and their Bolivarian Revolution against the machinations of the right-wing oligarchy and U.S. imperialism.

Read more News and Views from the Peoples Struggle at http://www.fightbacknews.org. You can write to us at [email protected]

Tio Pepe
28th May 2016, 17:00
The Bolivarian revolution achieved many great things, but they must now take the next step. You cannot ultimately win an economic war if the means of production are in the hands of the oligarchy. As the saying goes; "He who half makes a revolution digs his own grave"

aztecobolshevik
1st June 2016, 04:40
When you make a revolution you go big or go home. Venezuela right now is doing neither. Also, its pretty hard to have Chavismo without Chavez.
Apparently I can't post links yet so I will just tell you the name of the article. "
Venezuela – A Last Warning"
by Jorge Martin is a very concise and detailed account.

ckaihatsu
1st June 2016, 16:11
[I]ts pretty hard to have Chavismo without Chavez.


It's pretty hard to have Chavismo (patronage) without *oil revenue*.

ckaihatsu
1st June 2016, 16:54
---





To be fair, the government’s concessions to the private sector are from time to time accompanied by threats of expropriation. These threats are never followed by actions. Thus on Friday, May 13, when president Maduro extended the Economic Emergency and decreed emergency powers for 60 days, he specifically warned that “any factory that a capitalist paralyses, we will take it over and hand it to the communal power”. Less than 48 hours later, in an interview with Reuters, the vice-president in charge of the whole economic area of the government, Perez Abad, reassured international capital by “ruling out the take over of plants which are paralysed for lack of raw materials”. In the same interview he stressed Venezuela’s intention to continue to pay its foreign debt obligations, religiously, in full and on time. He added that this would mean a further reduction in imports for 2016.




http://www.marxist.com/venezuela-last-warning.htm

aztecobolshevik
8th June 2016, 06:36
To be fair, I won't deny that patronage doesn't play a big role in Venezuela and in the PSUV, and certainly oil revenues are the biggest culprit, but Chavismo is much more.

ckaihatsu
8th June 2016, 13:46
[I]ts pretty hard to have Chavismo without Chavez.





It's pretty hard to have Chavismo (patronage) without *oil revenue*.





To be fair, I won't deny that patronage doesn't play a big role in Venezuela and in the PSUV, and certainly oil revenues are the biggest culprit, but Chavismo is much more.


Considering the outline of facts at post #20, from the same article you noted in post #18, I *don't see* what Chavismo is, in terms of *results*.

ckaihatsu
16th June 2016, 18:24
http://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2016/06/16/pers-j16.html


The Venezuelan working class at a crossroads

16 June 2016

Growing spontaneous working class demonstrations, road blockades, food warehouse break-ins and a national strike of bus drivers have raised the specter of social revolution in Venezuela.

The first five months of 2016 have seen an average of 19 protests per day over food scarcities and the breakdown of basic social services. Three demonstrators were killed during demonstrations last week as the Chavista government of President Nicholas Maduro ordered police and the national guard to break up demonstrations with force. Another demonstrator was killed on Tuesday, and videos showing the armed forces firing indiscriminately into crowds of civilians chanting “We want food” are being widely circulated on the Internet.

Conditions increasingly resemble those that erupted into the bloody caracazo of 1989, when masses of workers and urban poor descended on Caracas and other major cities in an outpouring of rage over an IMF austerity package imposed by the government of Carlos Andres Perez. Then, as now, oil prices had plummeted reducing the ability of the capitalist government to ameliorate the immense class tensions that pervade Venezuela, one of the most socially polarized countries on the planet.

It was fundamentally the caracazo that gave rise to the Chavista movement, which emerged first as a dissident faction of junior army officers, disgusted by the government’s use of the armed forces to shoot down thousands of Venezuelans in the street.

In 1992, the late Hugo Chavez, then a paratroop lieutenant colonel, led an abortive military coup. Under conditions in which all the major parties as well as the existing trade unions had been completely discredited, the uprising captured the popular imagination, and, after a brief imprisonment, Chavez was elected president in 1998 on a populist and left-nationalist platform.

The pro-capitalist, bourgeois nationalist policies of the ruling United Socialist Party of Venezuela (PSUV) have produced a social catastrophe for Venezuelan workers. For-profit corporations—both foreign and national—have shut down operations, throwing tens of thousands into destitution. A total absence of planned economic development has left the economy entirely dependent on oil exports and vulnerable to price fluctuations on the international capitalist commodity markets.

The private foreign and domestic banks remain in firm control of the commanding heights of the economy, while the Venezuelan government continues to slash desperately needed imports of food and medicine in order to continue funneling tens of billions of dollars to meeting interest payments to Wall Street bondholders.

Throughout 17 years of Chavez/Maduro rule, pseudo-left groups worldwide have heralded the PSUV as a model of “21st century socialism.” In reality, under the Chavistas, a new ruling class layer of financiers, politically-connected businessmen and contractors as well as top government officials has enriched itself at the expense of the Venezuelan masses. The minimal social assistance programs implemented during this period have proven woefully incapable of preventing roughly 80 percent of the population from living in poverty and 51 percent in extreme poverty.

Leading politicians in the right-wing opposition Democratic Unity Roundtable (MUD) have warned that the country is on the verge of “social explosion,” and that “society will erupt as a result of the growing daily tension.” They are seeking a recall referendum, not only to remove Maduro, but to provide an escape valve for the increasing social tensions.

Washington attempted to overthrow Chavez in a failed 2002 coup and has since designated the Venezuelan government as an “extraordinary threat to US national security.” For his part, Maduro only weeks ago was invoking a supposedly imminent US invasion to justify mobilizing the military in the face of mounting popular unrest.

Yet on Tuesday at a meeting of the Organization of American States in the Dominican Republic, Secretary of State John Kerry announced the US will be hosting high-level negotiations to mediate the political conflict in Venezuela and hopefully alleviate social tensions. After meeting with Venezuelan Foreign Minister Delcy Rodriguez, Kerry said Washington was determined to “improve the relationship” and “overcome the old rhetoric.”

For his part, Maduro called for the immediate exchange of ambassadors and voiced enthusiasm for the new talks with Washington. “I very much like President Obama,” he said Tuesday night. “He is a nice person ... Why can’t I say that?”

What brings the two sides together is their mutual fear of and hostility towards the Venezuelan working class. While US imperialism has long viewed the Chavez-Maduro government as an irritant that it would like to eliminate, it has no interest whatsoever in achieving this aim by means of a mass revolt from below.

The US ruling class, as well as the Latin American bourgeoisie, are well aware that the grievances of Venezuelan workers are shared by workers throughout the hemisphere. In Brazil, Chile, Bolivia, Ecuador, Argentina, and across Central America and Mexico, strikes and protests are growing in frequency and intensity. Latin America today is the most unequal region of the world, a social powder keg waiting to explode.

The emergence of the class struggle, moreover, is not limited to Latin America. It is a global phenomenon, marked by the French movement against the Khomri Law and the strike wave in Belgium, as well as the strikes of telecommunication workers in the United States and the millions of votes for a self-proclaimed “socialist” presidential candidate, Bernie Sanders.

The Venezuelan working class is at a crossroads. It faces hostile enemies in the Maduro government, the military, the right-wing official opposition, the trade unions, and in the form of US imperialist intervention. The Venezuelan pseudo left, epitomized by groups like Marea Socialista and the International Marxist Tendency, blames the working class for the crisis of the Venezuelan bourgeois government and seek to bolster waning illusions in the PSUV.

Seventeen years of PSUV rule shows that workers can trust no section of the bourgeoisie—no matter whether they clothe themselves in radical phraseology—to represent their class interests. The brutal suppression of the caracazo in 1989 points to the stark dangers in the present situation. Today, just as then, the Maduro government ultimately relies on the military to drown a revolutionary uprising in blood. US imperialism, for all its democratic and human rights pretensions, will support whatever measures are required to uphold private property and profit interests.

Workers and youth can rely only on their independent mobilization to meet the need for food, healthcare, and other basic necessities of life that the capitalist system is unable to provide.

The International Committee of the Fourth International calls on workers and youth to form neighborhood and workplace committees to seize food warehouses from private hoarders, black marketeers, and the ruling party-controlled food distribution committees (CLAP), and to distribute food to all those in need.

Factories and workplaces must be seized from private and state owners and placed under the democratic control of the working class so that production can be directed to meet the basic needs of the population. Strike committees must be formed to coordinate work stoppages in key industries across the country.

Workers must prepare to defend themselves from PSUV paramilitaries and from the police and military. But most importantly, workers must arm themselves theoretically with an independent, internationalist socialist program. The World Socialist Web Site encourages workers and youth in Venezuela to contact us today and fight for the establishment of a section of the International Committee of the Fourth International.

Neil Hardt

Copyright © 1998-2016 World Socialist Web Site - All rights reserved

RedSonRising
15th August 2016, 05:34
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/jul/12/venezuela-seizes-kimberly-clark-plant-as-country-plunges-deeper-into-crisis

Freeloader
15th August 2016, 16:03
Well...at least they nationalized something i guess. Even though, it had practically shut-up shop before they did.

ckaihatsu
15th October 2016, 15:38
Venezuela Weekly 10.14.2016


Alliance for Global Justice


Venezuela Weekly 10.14.2016

This weekly email contains a few useful articles on Venezuela that contain bite-sized dose of the truth so that you can fight the disinformation in your own community, that so much of the media, including alternative media are putting out.

It is AfGJ's conviction that we in the US defend Venezuela's sovereignty and recognize that the Bolivarian Revolution has improved the lives of its citizens, led the movement toward Latin America integration, and is building participatory democracy structures that are an example for us in the US as well. -AfGJ staff

AFGJ Friends – we would like to include statements, events, and actions in solidarity with Venezuela. If you are aware of any or are planning any, please send them to us: [email protected] These may also be used as part of the redesigned international solidarity page on Venezuelanalysis.com

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Venezuela's Indigenous March to Celebrate Indigenous Resistance Day (http://org2.salsalabs.com/dia/track.jsp?v=2&c=HAsDfgWv%2B2YG7V2G0tg676UHM3m0gGA7)

Venezuela Sends a Shipload of Humanitarian Aid to Cuba (http://org2.salsalabs.com/dia/track.jsp?v=2&c=JEzflxxjVGn7ebAo4DkPCMFbZVAHIz9M)

Venezuela Sends a 50 Person Medical Team and 700 Tons of Aid to Haiti for Hurricane Relief (http://org2.salsalabs.com/dia/track.jsp?v=2&c=1YRljpHrM3OItXmarzG8JMFbZVAHIz9M)

Venezuela Graduates 5000 New Doctors (http://org2.salsalabs.com/dia/track.jsp?v=2&c=KgFFatmdF7pheUbMfMIMNcFbZVAHIz9M)

Venezuela Anti-Monsanto Guardians of the Seeds Conference (http://org2.salsalabs.com/dia/track.jsp?v=2&c=XYv4XPD0dfHKLXuMeC7ZQMFbZVAHIz9M)

The US Government/Corporate Media Psychological War on Venezuela (http://org2.salsalabs.com/dia/track.jsp?v=2&c=TCRcnZu%2BSEKKOJeslxOXvsFbZVAHIz9M)

Links: "Exposing the Devil: US Foreign Policy Towards Latin America" (http://org2.salsalabs.com/dia/track.jsp?v=2&c=vZatRH2ZqgyocTjtTJJ1UMFbZVAHIz9M)





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