The Welland Tribune

Why is Canada so hot under the collar about Venezuela?

- THOMAS WALKOM Twitter: @tomwalkom

For mild-mannered Canada, the denunciati­on of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro was unusually harsh.

“Today, Nicolas Maduro’s regime loses any remaining appearance of legitimacy,” Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland said Thursday in a statement marking the Venezuelan president’s inaugurati­on for a second term.

“Having seized power through fraudulent and anti-democratic elections,” Freeland went on, “the Maduro regime is now fully entrenched as a dictatorsh­ip …

“We call on him to immediatel­y cede power.”

Exactly why Justin Trudeau’s Canadian government is so hot under the collar about Maduro is unclear.

True, Venezuela is a mess economical­ly. In part, this is the result of outside pressure from those opposed to the regime. But in the main, the Maduro government’s sheer incompeten­ce is to blame.

Maduro himself has said that internal corruption is the biggest culprit.

True also that the election last summer that returned Maduro to power was flawed. But arguably so was the election last year of Brazil’s new right-wing president, Jair Bolsonaro. In that contest, Bolsonaro’s most formidable opponent, leftleanin­g Luis Inacio Lula da Silva, was barred from running.

Certainly, a country’s failure to follow democratic norms has not bothered Canada in other instances.

Ottawa does not question the legitimacy of China’s Communist president, Xi Jinping.

It gets along famously with Middle Eastern autocrats in the United Arab Emirates.

It has never fussed much about the fact that Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi seized power in a bloody military coup.

And while it has complained about the Saudi Arabian monarchy, it has never questioned the legitimacy of that undemocrat­ic regime. Indeed, it is famously supplying the Saudis with weapons.

What makes Venezuela so special? In part, the answer may be that Ottawa wants to stake out a position in Latin America. Canada is already an economic player in the region and hopes to do more business there.

In taking on Venezuela, Ottawa has allied itself not only with the new rightist government in Brazil but with other countries in the 14-member Lima Group, such as Argentina and Peru.

The third dynamic is the proverbial elephant in the room: the U.S.

America desperatel­y wants to see oilrich Venezuela under new management. U.S. President Donald Trump has mused about invading Venezuela. Former Secretary of State Rex Tillerson talked publicly of a coup, predicting that Venezuela’s military would successful­ly “manage a peaceful transition” to a new president.

Last fall, the New York Times reported that American officials had met secretly with Venezuelan coup plotters for more than a year, stopping only after Maduro’s security forces arrested most of the wouldbe putschists.

But the U.S. has to be careful. Its history of deposing government­s unfriendly to American business is not remembered fondly in Latin America.

In the event of a coup, it would be better for the U.S. if no fingerprin­ts were left that might implicate Washington.

And it would be better still if the fiercest rhetorical attacks on Maduro’s political legitimacy came from non-U.S. sources — like Canada.

So why is Ottawa so exercised about Venezuela? I suspect it’s not. I suspect it doesn’t much care what happens in that country.

But at time when Canada is increasing­ly offside from Trump’s Washington, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government is looking for areas in which it can demonstrat­e to the U.S. that it is still a staunch ally.

And Maduro is a convenient target.

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