Is Venezuela Really an ‘Extraordinary Threat’ to the United States?
Is Venezuela Really an Extraordinary Threat to the United States?
Greg Grandin on March 10, 2015 - 1:47 PM ET
Yesterday, Barack Obama sent a letter to Congress announcing that he was applying the International Emergency Economic Powers Act to Venezuela, declaring the situation there to be an unusual and extraordinary threat to the national security and foreign policy of the United States. Washington named seven Venezuelan politicians as targeted by the act, their property in the US liable to seizure.
Its a serious step taken with extraordinarily strong language (as the head of the Organization of American States pointed out; very harsh, he said). Reuters writes: Declaring any country a threat to national security is the first step in starting a U.S. sanctions program. The same process has been followed with countries such as Iran and Syria, U.S. officials said.
Set aside the irony (within hours of an administration spokesperson accusing Venezuela of criticizing other nations in order to distract from its problems, New Jerseys soon-to-be-indicted senator Robert Menendez applauded the sanctions), the hypocrisy (forget Saudi Arabia, think of Mexico or Colombia), or the hyperbole (an extraordinary threat?). Its hard to figure out what the White House hopes to accomplish with this move. It will achieve exactly the opposite of its stated intention to isolate Caracas.
Within Venezuela, it will confirm to many the validity of President Nicolás Maduros accusations that the US has been leading a soft coup against his government. One doesnt have to be a committed Chavista to appreciate the irony, condemn the hypocrisy, or recoil from the hyperbole. Obama just threw Maduro a lifeline.
Outside Venezuela, Latin American nations will bristle at the attempt to apply a sanctions regime associated with the mess Washington has made in the Middle East to the region. The more suspicious among them will see the opening to Cuba as bait-and-switch, an attempt to use the good will generated by that move to isolate and destabilize other adversaries, pressing its advantage as falling commodity prices put strains on Latin American economies (the Trans Pacific Partnership is part of this divisive strategy).
More:
http://www.thenation.com/blog/200889/us-preparing-start-sanctions-against-venezuela