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Nbadan
04-22-2013, 11:35 PM
Whomever is advising the Obama Administration on this needs to be canned...

The United States shows its contempt for Venezuelan democracy
Washington's clumsy efforts to de-legitimise Venezuela's election mark a escalation of its push for regime change
Mark Weisbrot
guardian.co.uk, Monday 22 April 2013 13.53 EDT


While most of the news on Venezuela in the week since the 14 April presidential election focused on the efforts of losing candidate Henrique Capriles to challenge the results, another campaign, based in Washington, was quite revealing – and the two were most definitely related. Without Washington's strong support – the first time it had refused to recognise a Venezuelan election result – it is unlikely that Capriles would have joined the hardcore elements of his camp in pretending that the election was stolen.

Washington's efforts to de-legitimise the election mark a significant escalation of US efforts at regime change in Venezuela. Not since its involvement in the 2002 military coup has the US government done this much to promote open conflict in Venezuela. When the White House first announced on Monday that a 100% audit of the votes was "an important, prudent and necessary step", this was not a genuine effort to promote a recount.

It amounted to telling the government of Venezuela what was necessary to make their elections legitimate. They also had to know that it would not make such a recount more likely. And this was also their quick reply to Nicolás Maduro's efforts, according to the New York Times of 15 April, to reach out to the Obama administration for better relations through former Clinton energy secretary, Bill Richardson. But the Obama team's effort failed miserably. On Wednesday, the government of Spain, Washington's only significant ally supporting a "100% audit" reversed its position and recognised Maduro's election. Then the secretary general of the Organisation of American States (OAS), José Miguel Insulza, backed off his prior alignment with the Obama administration and recognised the election result.

It was not just the left governments of Argentina, Brazil, Ecuador, Bolivia, Uruguay and others that had quickly congratulated Maduro on his victory; Mexico, Colombia, the Dominican Republic, Guatemala, Haiti and other non-left governments had joined them. The Obama administration was completely isolated in the world.

More:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2013/apr/22/united-states-contempt-venezuelan-democracy

We support spreading democracy which is convenient for us in the global economy

velik_m
04-23-2013, 01:30 AM
More importantly if weakens the venezuelan opposition, as they are now more easily portrayed as agents of USA.

boutons_deux
04-23-2013, 05:06 AM
"The United States shows its contempt for Venezuelan democracy"

the VRWC/1%/corporations have total contempt for now-mythical American democracy. The last thing they can want, the first thing they subvert is true "people power"

DUNCANownsKOBE
04-23-2013, 08:58 AM
Any Democratically elected official who nationalizes his country's oil supply in order to give it back to the people risks being fucked with by the US. That's how it's been for decades, tbh.

boutons_deux
04-23-2013, 09:26 AM
Any Democratically elected official who nationalizes his country's oil supply in order to give it back to the people risks being fucked with by the US. That's how it's been for decades, tbh.

CIA/UK did it 60 years ago in Iran, installed a dictator. Then Iran raped US embassy, installed a theocracy, and is still a pain in the ass to USA today, and no us/uk oilcos there.