The Columbus Dispatch

Left needs a robust foreign policy, starting with Venezuela

- Fareed Zakaria

The Trump administra­tion faces a test in Venezuela: It must pursue a foreign policy that helps usher out the odious regime of Nicolas Maduro without triggering a backlash against perceived American “imperialis­m.” It must support a political transition that doesn’t threaten the old guard so much that they fight to the end. And the U.S. must join with other nations to help a country that’s virtually been destroyed over the last decade.

All this requires careful diplomacy, multilater­alism and quiet pressure, not bombast.

But Venezuela also poses a challenge for the Democratic Party. Can it find its voice on Venezuela and foreign policy more generally? So far there are worrying signs that the new Democratic foreign policy could turn out to be a reflexive isolationi­sm that is not so different from President Donald Trump’s own “America First” instincts.

Rep. Tulsi Gabbard of Hawaii says, “The United States needs to stay out of Venezuela. Let the Venezuelan people determine their future.” Rep. Ilhan Omar of Minnesota says, “We cannot [hand-pick] leaders for other countries on behalf of multinatio­nal corporate interests.” Leftist hero Noam Chomsky and 70 other academics and activists have signed a letter largely blaming the crisis in Venezuela on U.S. actions.

Does one really have to explain that Venezuela’s problems are primarily caused by its nasty government? That the Venezuelan people have not been allowed to determine their own future or pick their own leaders for years, going back to Hugo Chavez’s rule? The current government has clung to power by rigging elections, crushing opposition parties, muzzling the media and using lethal force against protesters.

The Chavez-maduro regime has destroyed what was once Latin America’s richest nation, producing an almost unimaginab­le inflation rate of 1 million percent. (Prices double approximat­ely every 19 days.) The simplest, bleakest indicator of how bad things are in Venezuela is that since 2015 an estimated 3 million Venezuelan­s have fled the country.

But millions more Venezuelan­s are staying and fighting. They have come out in droves to vote against this government, almost defeating Maduro in 2013 despite an unfair election and successful­ly bringing an opposition parliament to power in 2015. For the last few years, Venezuelan­s have organized massive protests against the regime, enduring tear gas, arrests and killings. They have now rallied behind an opposition leader, Juan Guaido, and are using a constituti­onal process to shift control of the government from the regime to the elected parliament.

Over the years, the Venezuelan government has used its oil wealth to support anti-american movements throughout Latin America, from Cuba to Nicaragua. It has deep ties to drug trafficker­s. The Maduro regime is, not surprising­ly, being supported by a rogues’ gallery of strongmen, from Vladimir Putin to Xi Jinping to Recep Tayyip Erdogan to the Iranian mullahs.

There is a larger debate to be had about the path forward for a progressiv­e foreign policy. There is appropriat­e skepticism about a defense budget that is $700 billion and growing. There are lessons to be learned from the overextens­ion of American power abroad, from interventi­ons that have gone on too long. But the answer is surely not resolute inaction.

In a brilliant book released last year, “A Foreign Policy for the Left,” the political philosophe­r (and card-carrying leftist) Michael Walzer argues that the default position of the left has tended to be inaction. The world is complicate­d, American power can be misused, informatio­n is never enough, so best to just stay the hell out.

But those criteria could be a counsel for inaction at home as well. After all, a swift transition to Medicare for All also would be fraught with complexiti­es and risks.

Walzer makes a powerful case that “in a world beset by wars and civil wars, religious zealotry, terrorist attacks, far-right nationalis­m, tyrannical government­s, gross inequaliti­es and widespread poverty and hunger, [the world] requires intelligen­t leftist attention.

“Our deepest commitment is solidarity with people in trouble,” Walzer continues. Right now, there are millions in trouble in our hemisphere who are trying to help themselves. They deserve the active support of the American left.

Fareed Zakaria writes a foreign affairs column for The Washington Post. Email him at comments@fareedzaka­ria. com.

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