The Day

U.S. may list Venezuela as a sponsor of terrorism

- By JOHN HUDSON and LENA H. SUN

The Trump administra­tion is preparing to add Venezuela to the U.S. list of state sponsors of terrorism in what would be a dramatic escalation against the socialist government of Nicolás Maduro, according to U.S. officials and internal government emails.

The list is reserved for government­s accused of repeatedly providing “support for acts of internatio­nal terrorism” and includes only Iran, North Korea, Sudan and Syria.

Republican lawmakers led by Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., have pushed for the designatio­n, citing Venezuela’s alleged ties to Lebanese Hezbollah, the Revolution­ary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, and other groups.

Republican­s have long accused Venezuela of having ties to terrorist organizati­ons. But experts have played down the threat and strength of those connection­s. They warn that a designatio­n that does not offer concrete evidence could weaken the legitimacy of the U.S. list, which critics say already is applied inconsiste­ntly.

“I suspect this will be based on hearsay and sources of questionab­le integrity,” said David Smilde, a senior fellow at the Washington Office on Latin America.

U.S. officials declined to say whether a final decision had been made about the designatio­n, but in recent days the State Department has asked for feedback on the proposed move from various agencies, including the Department of Health and Human Services, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which is part of HHS, and the U.S. Agency for Internatio­nal Developmen­t.

A State Department spokeswoma­n declined to comment on the pending decision, calling inquiries about the deliberati­ons a “hypothetic­al question.”

Rubio, a Cuban-American who organized a letter in late September calling for the terrorism designatio­n, has clamored for a tough U.S. posture toward Venezuela, a longtime backer of the Castro regime in Cuba.

The Trump administra­tion has imposed sanctions on a number of people in Maduro’s inner-circle, accusing the first lady, defense minister, vice president and other allies of helping the socialist leader “plunder” the nation’s wealth.

Officials have long said that further measures are under considerat­ion, including an embargo on Venezuelan oil. Despite sharply falling oil exports in recent years, Venezuela is the fourth-largest foreign supplier to the United States, which remains the largest purchaser of Venezuelan crude.

Adam Isacson, a Latin America expert, said the terrorism designatio­n might add momentum for any push for an oil boycott. Republican­s in Texas and Louisiana, which is home to refineries set up for Venezuela’s high-sulfur oil, have argued against such a boycott. “A terrorist sponsor designatio­n will make their lives more complicate­d,” Isacson said.

The move could limit U.S. assistance to Venezuela and prohibit financial transactio­ns as the country reels from hyperinfla­tion and extreme food and medicine shortages that have sent millions fleeing to neighborin­g countries. Many Venezuelan­s blame Maduro for rampant corruption across the government and mishandlin­g the economy.

The country’s health care system has virtually broken down, allowing once-eradicated illnesses such as measles and diphtheria to re-emerge.

Deliberati­ons on the potential U.S. move continued last week, when HHS officials were asked to assess the impact of a terrorism designatio­n on “HHS or CDC programmin­g of funding being carried out by a third party in that country,” according to emails sent among HHS officials.

Officials were asked to provide a response within 24 hours, something a senior HHS lawyer said was “probably not doable” because of the issue’s complexity, according to an official who saw the emails. The person spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the matter.

The emails did not specify the country, but a State Department desk officer identified the country as Venezuela in a telephone call last week with about 20 others from agencies that included HHS, CDC and USAID. The State Department officer, Elizabeth Williams, did not say when a decision on the terrorism designatio­n would be made, “she just said they expect to make a decision soon,” recalled an official who participat­ed in the call. Williams said she was only able to share limited informatio­n on the nonsecure telephone line.

Experts are divided on the wisdom of designatin­g Venezuela a state sponsor of terrorism, with some saying it could provide helpful pressure against the increasing­ly authoritar­ian Maduro regime, and others expressing concerns that it could play into Maduro’s anti-U. S. messaging or be used as a pretext for a U.S. military interventi­on.

President Donald Trump, publicly and privately, has raised the possibilit­y of U.S. military action in Venezuela, although aides have repeatedly dissuaded him.

U.S. officials secretly met several times with Venezuelan military officers who said they were plotting a coup against Maduro, but the Trump administra­tion ultimately rebuffed their requests for assistance.

Smilde fears that the designatio­n could “portray Venezuela as a threat to U.S. national security to legitimize a military option.”

“Many analysts in and around the U.S. government either think military interventi­on would be effective, or that a credible threat of force would get the Venezuelan government to buckle,” he said.

But such threats “contribute to the unity and coherence of the Maduro government and undermine opposition organizati­on and unity,” he said. “Since President Trump first suggested a military option in August 2017 the Venezuelan opposition has fallen apart.”

Others expressed measured support for a harder line against Maduro, who came to power in 2013, jailed political opponents and took over virtually all legislativ­e and judicial power in the country.

 ?? MANAURE QUINTERO/BLOOMBERG ?? Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro speaks during a news conference at the presidenti­al palace in Caracas, Venezuela, in September.
MANAURE QUINTERO/BLOOMBERG Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro speaks during a news conference at the presidenti­al palace in Caracas, Venezuela, in September.

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