The Riverside Press-Enterprise

It’s wrong to turn to tyrants like Maduro for oil imports

- Agustina Vergara Cid is a junior fellow at the Ayn Rand Institute. Follow her on Twitter: @ agustinavc­id Sal Rodriguez can be reached at salrodrigu­ez@ scng.com. Michael Tanner is a Cato Institute senior fellow and heads research into a variety of domestic

When President Biden announced in early March that the United States would halt Russian oil imports, it was a welcome gesture for those of us who want the administra­tion to take a moral stance against Vladimir

Putin’s aggressive authoritar­ianism.

The White House said it was meant to “deprive President Putin of the economic resources” to continue his war on Ukraine, which Biden has repeatedly condemned.

But, immediatel­y after banning Russian energy imports, the Biden administra­tion turned to another autocratic regime for oil: Venezuela.

What this reveals about the Biden administra­tion is damning.

The outreach to Venezuela demonstrat­es that the administra­tion’s seeming moral stance against Russia is in fact unprincipl­ed. We lack a coherent foreign policy concerned with America’s long-term interests. Such a foreign policy would, at minimum, recognize the moral difference between free societies and dictatorsh­ips — and condemn, shun, ostracize the latter, not prop them up.

Nicolás Maduro’s regime in Venezuela is remarkably similar to Putin’s dictatorsh­ip in Russia. The Biden administra­tion knows this all too well: Venezuela is currently under U.S. sanctions because of its brutal violations of human rights, and an oil deal would require lifting those sanctions. Furthermor­e, the U.S. doesn’t even recognize Maduro as the country’s legitimate president. But Biden has decided to overlook those facts.

Maduro’s regime is a fullon dictatorsh­ip. Venezuela is a de facto one-party state, as the democratic process has been crushed by corruption, intimidati­on, bans on candidates and an ongoing presidenti­al crisis — in many respects, not unlike Putin’s Russia.

Maduro’s regime is notorious for unlawful and arbitrary arrests and killings of political opponents. The United Nations, despite usually providing cover for murderous regimes, produced a credible report showing that Venezuela carried out almost 7,000 extrajudic­ial executions of political dissenters between 2018 and 2019 — again, not unlike Putin.

Because of Maduro’s deliberate­ly exploitati­ve policies and repression, Venezuelan­s are starving. Infant mortality rates have substantia­lly increased in the last 15 years, despite a worldwide downward trend. That’s a result of a collapsed healthcare system, and the inability of par

ents to feed their children, due to abject poverty and hyperinfla­tion.

Moreover, Maduro, channeling his inner Putin, has threatened a neighborin­g country with invasion. Some analysts believe nearby Guyana may become the highest per-capita oil producer by 2035. Maduro has vowed to “reconquer” a resourceri­ch area of Guyana in a military conflict that has been brewing for years, which the current energy crisis may exacerbate.

Unsurprisi­ngly, Maduro is a fierce, unapologet­ic supporter of Putin: Venezuela and Russia have been allies for several years. Russia has aided Venezuela with billions of dollars in military support and other types of aid. And shortly after Russia’s invasion on Ukraine began, Maduro gave his “strong support” to Putin. They both also share a hatred of the West and of America in particular.

Why, then, does Biden’s administra­tion seem willing to turn a blind eye to Maduro’s brutality and seek an oil deal with a regime that may start a Russian-backed war against a sovereign country?

If Biden thinks it’s wrong to buy Russian oil and support Putin’s oppressive regime that crushes its own people and is devastatin­g Ukraine, he cannot honestly think it’s moral to condone Maduro’s regime, lift existing U.S. sanctions and prop it up with oil trade. An oil deal with Venezuela would mean bolstering Maduro’s dictatoria­l and self-proclaimed anti-american regime, providing it with millions of dollars.

Imagine America becoming even partially reliant on Venezuelan oil as it did with Russian oil. What would happen if a war broke out between Venezuela and Guyana, and/or if Venezuela becomes a threat to the U.S., backed by Russia? It’s hard to imagine a more shortsight­ed approach.

Pause to consider what message this Venezuela outreach broadcast to other authoritar­ian and dictatoria­l leaders around the world.

Biden’s outreach to Venezuela is the opposite of the principled, long-range thinking needed for a proper U.S. foreign policy.

Seeking to do businesses with a thug like Maduro, who openly hates the U.S. and is a close partner of Russia, is immoral and thus dangerous. We know all too well how destructiv­e it is to empower autocrats and dictators; the situation with Russia is one more reminder of that.

You might ask: is there some other source of oil that’s more morally justified?

Yes, there is, right here in the U.S. The government needs to liberate America’s hamstrung fossil fuel industry and embrace nuclear power. Making

that argument needs a column of its own but, for now, consider just how much the unsung innovators and pioneers in the energy space have achieved with the shale revolution, unlocking vast amounts of oil and gas despite crushing regulation.

We can accomplish much more freeing America’s energy sector from overregula­tion than turning to authoritar­ians like Maduro or Putin. was her “courageous” stand against what she thought were racist nooses in a park, but which a local Black man actually said was just workout equipment he and other community members used. Schaaf dismissed this, saying “intentions don’t matter” and calling for a hate crimes investigat­ion.

Yeah, I wouldn’t trust the folks in Oakland City Hall with the money they have right now.

So these lefty race-baiters are stirring up all this racial resentment so they can punish Black and Latino homeowners with even higher taxes so incompeten­t city government­s like the one in Oakland can waste a ton of money.

Welcome to the left’s vision for California.

Yeah, I’ll pass on that, thanks. those truly in need, while also encouragin­g recipients to take the sort of steps that will not only get them off welfare but out of poverty altogether. Liberal, conservati­ve or libertaria­n, that’s an outcome that should satisfy everyone.

One might call it a solution worthy of Einstein.

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