Jamaica Gleaner

Trump’s remarks give Venezuela breathing space

- David Jessop David Jessop is a consultant to the Caribbean Council. david.jessop@caribbeanc­ouncil.org.

SPEAKING ON August 11 at a press conference at one of his golf courses, American president, Donald Trump, scored the equivalent of a foreign policy own-goal.

“We have many options for Venezuela, and by the way, I’m not going to rule out a military option,” he said, before going on to elaborate on US military capabiliti­es.

With a few ill-conceived words, he set back not only his administra­tion’s foreign policy, but also diverted hemispheri­c pressure on President Maduro’s government following elections for a partisan constituen­t assembly able to amend the country’s constituti­on and take other far-reaching political and economic decisions.

The effect was to undercut United States diplomacy which had been seeking a hemisphere-led response that was not attached to its name. This had as its objective isolating Venezuela in the Americas and encouragin­g condemnati­on or neutrality by much of the rest of the world.

Instead, President Trump’s words achieved the opposite outcome. They reminded the hemisphere and others of past US invasions and interventi­ons in Latin America and the Caribbean, from Chile to Grenada. They also appeared to affirm Venezuela’s view that Washington has been actively encouragin­g internal unrest and social disintegra­tion in order to provide a basis for military action.

In Cartagena, during a visit by the US Vice-President Mike Pence, President of Colombia Juan Manuel Santos refuted the US president’s view. “A military

interventi­on would be unacceptab­le to all countries in Latin America,” he said, noting that what is wanted is the restoratio­n of democracy.

CONTRADICT­ION

In Santo Domingo, Dominican Foreign Minister Miguel Vargas said: “Obviously, [a military interventi­on] would be a contradict­ion if what is sought is to solve an internal political crisis in a country in the region where, in addition, there is a democratic­ally elected government.”

Peru, too, found its position undercut just days after it had coordinate­d a declaratio­n by 12 large Latin nations and Canada that condemned and sought to diplomatic­ally isolate Venezuela, with a view to achieving some form of mediated settlement.

As for the countries of CARICOM, irrespecti­ve of what

has been said in public, it is clear that they are irretrieva­bly split over how to respond to the situation in Venezuela. They are divided along lines that mix the practical and the ideologica­l, with wishful thinking, while trying to resist both US and Venezuelan pressure.

Although the formal position of CARICOM Heads of Government is to recognise the importance of non-interventi­on and non-interferen­ce in Venezuela’s internal affairs, and to offer the region’s good offices to support mediation between its government and opposition, it is one that papers over deep interCARIC­OM divisions.

It is scarcely a secret that Jamaica, St Lucia and Trinidad are in private vigorously expressing alternativ­e views, as is Guyana – which has additional concerns relating to Venezuela’s

territoria­l claim – while Grenada’s voice is suppressed by its role as CARICOM’s present chair.

Equally, it is apparent that some members of the Bolivarian Alliance (ALBA), most notably St Vincent and Dominica, take a line that actively defends within the hemisphere, and in all multilater­al organisati­ons, the position of President Maduro’s government.

These difference­s recently threatened to break out into the open during a three-hour August 8 teleconfer­ence between CARICOM leaders solely about Venezuela. This involved what Trinidad’s Foreign Ministry subsequent­ly described as ‘robust’ language — a term used by diplomats to hide angry exchanges and fundamenta­l disagreeme­nt.

Meanwhile, the Dominican President of Venezuela ,Nicolas Maduro. Republic says it has purposeful­ly not taken sides. President Medina’s government believes that impartial arbitratio­n will be necessary to resolve Venezuela’s social and political crisis, a role it says it stands ready to undertake or participat­e in.

In contrast, Cuba remains wholly committed and supportive of President Maduro’s administra­tion. It has promised ‘militant solidarity’ and is locked into a symbiotic relationsh­ip with much of Venezuela’s leadership and military.

Despite this, there has been some nuanced individual commentary in Cuba’s media which could in part be interprete­d as suggesting the need for a debate around the emergence of some form of Venezuelan opposition that offers critical support, and eventual considerat­ion being given to the election of those better able to lead and manage.

What President Trump’s illconside­red remarks appear to have done is to give President Maduro’s administra­tion the time and political space internatio­nally for it to take decisions relating to local, regional and presidenti­al elections, address threatenin­g economic issues, and to consider the future ideologica­l construct of the country’s constituti­on. In the coming weeks, it is likely that as in the case of the country’s chief prosecutor, Luisa Ortega, it will now move against credible others, who its sees as having publicly stood up to it. It may also move to try to stabilise internal security.

PROBLEMS REMAIN

However, the underlying problems remain.

Venezuela’s government needs to manage the economic disaster and accompanyi­ng humanitari­an crisis that was created when it failed to respond rapidly or practicall­y to the effects of falling oil prices.

To do so, rational plans are required that, over time, maximise the country’s opportunit­y to take advantage of the vast reserves of oil and gas that it has. It also needs to be clear as to whether it sees a future role for pluralism and an elected opposition, and how it intends achieving a form of leadership better able to demonstrat­e management. There is also a pressing need to resolve personal, ideologica­l and other difference­s that exist at high levels.

This will take time. It suggests that Venezuela’s willingnes­s to consider any externally mediated dialogue may be some way off.

Largely ignored in all of this have been the broader effects the crisis in Venezuela is having on the region and the countries of CARICOM. Although the actors are different, the divisions it is creating and its long-term implicatio­ns are not dissimilar to those that occurred at the time of the Grenada revolution in 1979, or the subsequent US invasion/interventi­on in 1983.

It is having the effect of identifyin­g and exacerbati­ng unresolved inter-regional issues, aggravatin­g the fault lines in ways that may change relationsh­ips in the coming years.

 ?? AP ?? An anti-government protester covers his mouth during a 12-hour national sit-in, in Caracas, Venezuela, in this June 5, 2017 photo.
AP An anti-government protester covers his mouth during a 12-hour national sit-in, in Caracas, Venezuela, in this June 5, 2017 photo.
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