FrankPintor
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- May 14, 2019
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Guaido's claim to legitimacy expires with the election of a new National Assembly, scheduled for December. I'm not taking issue with you, I'm just pointing out the unfortunate reality: there's no opposition. And no, Maduro would be lucky to get 4% satisfaction.Regardless of who Guaido is and who funds him... what other official opposition exists in that so-called democracy of the people? Somehow I doubt the Maduro regime achieves 96% satisfaction of the people when even in utterly boring and perfect countries ruling parties fail to get more than 50-60%.
Venezuela is a humanitarian issue first and foremost and is a perfect example of a state hijacked by narcos and mafiosos who live with impunity and need chaos to keep the power their business needs to enrich themselves. In 2020 it has nothing to do with cold-war era paradigms or conspiracies.
Humanitarian issues, yes, mafiosos and enchufados yes, in spades... but narcos? The accusation has been out there for a long time, the "cartel de los soles" and so on.
But let's say you want to transport drugs, unless you create your own submarine navy (and I haven't seen reports of interceptions of submarines coming from Venezuela yet), you actually need a functioning transport system, cargo ships and planes, to move the stuff. And Venezuela doesn't have that. It's been practically cut off from the rest of the world for the last 5 years or so. Sure, you could load up a light plane from time to time, but it's small-time and in danger of being intercepted and shot down. Countries with big ports and airports and lots of traffic are much more useful, think Colombia, Ecuador, and Peru. The US navy has been cruising up and down the Caribbean in front of Venezuela's coast and all it's caught is covid. Sorry, I'm just not buying it.