
Venezuela: A cautionary tale. By Notes from the Cuban Exile Quarters.
Venezuela: A cautionary tale
By Notes from the Cuban Exile Quarters
January 9, 2019
"What's past is prologue" - William Shakespeare
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Venezuelan President-elect Rómulo Betancourt meets Fidel Castro in 1959 |
The Castro regime's interest in Venezuela began from the earliest days of the dictatorship. Rómulo Betancourt, was a man of the left, the first democratically elected president of Venezuela following the fall of the military dictatorship of Marcos Pérez Jiménez in 1958. He had met Castro in 1948, and at the time both agreed that Latin America had to change. One of the first things that Fidel Castro did when taking power in 1959 was to visit Betancourt in Venezuela on January 23rd, assuming that he would find an ally.
"Riots led by Communists and other pro-Castro elements in Caracas [in the autumn of 1960] took the lives of 13 persons and injured 100. Venezuela recalled its ambassador to Cuba, and Betancourt ordered out the army to end the rioting, which he termed an attempt to “install a regime similar to that in Cuba.”The Venezuelan president "believed that trade and diplomatic relations should be broken with the governments that came to power through coups, regardless of whether they were left or right. Thus, in 1961, Venezuela broke relations with Cuba and became one of the promoters of the exclusion of the island from the OAS, which was achieved in January 1962."
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President John Kennedy, Jackie Kennedy in Venezuela with President Betancourt in 1961 |
However, the Castro regime continued to agitate for the overthrow of democracy in Venezuela with a strategic aim.
Eric Farnsworth - Twitter
January 9, 2019
"For those opposed to foreign intervention in LatAm, for the life of me I cannot understand why they are not actively and loudly condemning the Cuban, Chinese, Russian destruction of #Venezuela...unless it's not actually anti-intervention that drives them, but anti-Americanism…"
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Carlos Andres Perez invited Fidel Castro to his second presidential inaugural |
Diplomatic relations were restored between Venezuela and Cuba in December of 1974, oil deliveries resumed, and the democratic government of Venezuela under Carlos Andres Perez's first presidency advocated Cuba's readmission to the Organization of American States.
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Carlos Andres Perez, Fidel Castro, and Felipe Gonzalez of Spain |
In 1992 Hugo Chavez was involved in a failed coup against the Andres Perez government. Pardoned by Andres Perez's successor, Rafael Caldera, in March 1994 Hugo Chavez made his way to Cuba later that same year where he was received by Fidel Castro as a hero not a failed coup plotter.
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Fidel Castro greets Hugo Chavez in Cuba on December 13, 1994 |
Four years later, in a reaction to generalized disgust with the corruption endemic to the Venezuelan democratic order epitomized by the Carlos Andres Perez administration the former coup plotter was elected president.
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President Rafael Caldera with Dictator Fidel Castro in Colombia in 1994 |
President Caldera, who had pardoned Chavez, handed power over to him in 1999. Together with Fidel Castro, as a mentor, Chavez began the process of turning a flawed democratic order into the totalitarian regime it is today.
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Hugo Chavez and Fidel Castro in their military fatigues. |
Over the past six years Maduro has proven himself to be Havana's man, and Venezuela has been turned into a second Cuba. Complete with fake elections that only underscore that democracy has departed that South American country.
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Nicolas Maduro and Raul Castro |
On July 19, 2017 the Secretary General of the Organization of American States, Luis Almagro testified before US lawmakers that “[t]here are currently about 15,000 Cubans in Venezuela ... It’s like an occupation army from Cuba in Venezuela.”
What can we outside of Venezuela do? Let others know what is taking place, demand the freedom of over 288 Venezuelan political prisoners, and tomorrow when the Maduro regime attempts to legitimize his dictatorial rule join Venezuelans in protest.