The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Military desertion of Maduro slow but hopes high — analysts

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CARACAS: The more than 300 soldiers to have deserted Venezuela President Nicolas Maduro since Saturday may be only a drop in the ocean but little by little the foundation­s of the socialist regime are coming apart, analysts say.

Emboldened by opposition leader Juan Guaido’s attempts to force in humanitari­an aid through the borders with Colombia and Brazil, hundreds of military personnel took the chance to flee a country wracked by poverty and recession.

Some 326 members of the military and police crossed into Colombia with another seven heading to Brazil to get away from the chronic shortages of food and medicine that have made daily life a struggle for millions.

That may sound like a small number among the 365,000 members of the armed forces and almost two million civilian militia, but analyst Luis Salamanca says a drip can quickly turn into a flood.

“Maduro’s military power is subject to that same erosive dynamic that his popular support suffered from,” Salamanca told AFP.

“The desertions are part of a process of attrition, an underminin­g of the foundation­s.”

The military is Maduro’s most potent backer, which is why Guaido, recognized as Venezuela’s interim president by 50 countries, is so keen to turn their heads.

He’s even offered an amnesty to anyone turning their back on Maduro.

Although Guaido’s efforts to bring in humanitari­an aid, as he’d promised to do on Saturday, floundered against a blockade by a determined military that remains loyal to Maduro, he did score some smaller victories.

The initial trickle of defecting soldiers has increased exponentia­lly, while Guaido managed to break his own government-imposed travel ban and head to Colombia thanks to help, he said, from members of the armed forces.

“It’s a process that you don’t see often, and that people don’t much like because it’s slow, but it can accelerate when the military and civilians see that the government could fall apart,” added Salamanca.

Guaido’s main backer, the United States, has ramped up the pressure on the regime with sanctions against top officials, and the promise to exempt those who recognize Guaido as their true leader.

The problem is that the military is firmly entrenched in the echelons of power and wealth.

Of Venezuela’s 32 ministries, nine are in the hands of the military including strategic portfolios such as defense, interior, agricultur­e, food and the state oil company PDVSA — the country’s beating heart that is responsibl­e for 96 percent of its revenue.

As Maduro’s unpopulari­ty increased, Venezuela’s military top brass found itself in control of a state bank, television, constructi­on, mining and gas companies.

So far, only lower or medium level military personnel have deserted, the high command remains steadfast in support of Maduro.

“The desertion of the rank and file isn’t going to break Maduro’s system by itself,” Christophe­r Sabatini, professor of internatio­nal relations at Columbia University, told AFP.

“They need to move onto the next level: admirals, captains, colonels and generals.”

Desertions, though, make it difficult for the “security apparatus to defend strategic areas,” said Diego Moya-Ocampos, from London-based global informatio­n provider, IHS Markit.

The cracks haven’t led to decisive shifts in the power balance, but they have become more visible.

Some 180 military personnel were arrested in 2018, charged with conspiracy, according to the non-government­al organizati­on Control Ciudadano.

Two generals were amongst those arrested over an alleged assassinat­ion attempt on Maduro in August using explosives-laden drones.

Add to that, 4,300 soldiers deserted the National Guard in 2018 and 10,000 have asked to be discharged since 2015, Control Ciudadano said. — AFP

 ??  ?? Picture of the three aid trucks which were set ablaze on the Venezuelan side of the Simon Bolivar Internatio­nal Bridge in San Antonio del Tachira, as seen from across the border in Cucuta, Colombia. — AFP photos
Picture of the three aid trucks which were set ablaze on the Venezuelan side of the Simon Bolivar Internatio­nal Bridge in San Antonio del Tachira, as seen from across the border in Cucuta, Colombia. — AFP photos
 ??  ?? A Colombian soldier (centre left) accompanie­s a member (centre right) of the Bolivarian National Guard of Venezuela after he deserted, in Cucuta, Colombia, on the border with Venezuela.
A Colombian soldier (centre left) accompanie­s a member (centre right) of the Bolivarian National Guard of Venezuela after he deserted, in Cucuta, Colombia, on the border with Venezuela.
 ??  ?? Colombian police officers look for possible members of the Bolivarian National Armed Forces of Venezuela who might have deserted and are trying to safely cross into Colombian territory, along the banks of the border Tachira river near the Francisco de Paula Santander Internatio­nal Bridge in Cucuta, Colombia.
Colombian police officers look for possible members of the Bolivarian National Armed Forces of Venezuela who might have deserted and are trying to safely cross into Colombian territory, along the banks of the border Tachira river near the Francisco de Paula Santander Internatio­nal Bridge in Cucuta, Colombia.

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