Stabroek News

Maduro’s military stands in the way of a Bolivia repeat in Venezuela

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CARACAS, (Reuters) - Venezuelan opposition leaders looking to oust their country’s socialist government can perhaps take some hope from the resignatio­n of its leftist ally in Bolivia, President Evo Morales, on Sunday after weeks of street protests.

But one key factor makes the Bolivia playbook a difficult one to carry out against Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro: Venezuela’s armed forces have consistent­ly refused to take the side of protesters as Bolivia’s military did on Sunday.

Venezuela’s barracks have stood by the ruling Socialist Party despite a crippling economic meltdown, two waves of major protests in 2014 and 2017 and broad condemnati­on of Maduro’s 2018 re-election that was widely described as fraudulent.

Even though opposition leader Juan Guaido has been recognized by more than 50 countries as Venezuela’s legitimate president, his efforts to court the armed forces have not been enough to sway their allegiance to Maduro.

Dozens of active military officers on April 30 joined Guaido in the streets of Caracas to call on military commanders to disavow Maduro, but the uprising fizzled out as military top brass declared loyalty to the president.

A Reuters Special Report found that Venezuela’s armed forces have been heavily influenced by the presence of Cuban intelligen­ce agents who closely monitor the communicat­ions of officers suspected of dissent.

In addition, late socialist leader Hugo Chavez’s overhaul of the armed forces starting in the early 2000s fractured the chain of command and boosted the political allegiance of top officers.

Bolivia’s military has never had the same ideologica­l links to the ruling party or its leftist politics, said Franklin Pareja, a professor at Universida­d Mayor in San Andres de Bolivia.

“In Bolivia there has never been a civil-military government,” he said. “The armed forces have always been lavishly remunerate­d, but there has never been political conviction about the process or active participat­ion in the government.”

Bolivian armed forces commander Williams Kaliman on Sunday publicly called on Morales to step aside, giving momentum to street protesters alleging fraud at an October presidenti­al election that Morales was judged to have narrowly won.

That move by the military was in stark contrast to Venezuelan Defense Minister Vladimir Padrino’s repeated oaths of allegiance to Maduro despite violent street protests, complaints of voter fraud and broad internatio­nal condemnati­on.

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