Venezuelans voted for change and now has no choice but to resist
By Roger Noriega
Is the election in
Venezuela over? Apparently not. The self-declared winner, Nicolás Maduro, is
behaving very much like a man who knows he lost on April 14. In resorting to
violence and brute force to silence the opposition’s demand for an
honest recount, Maduro has signed the death warrant for chavismo’s legitimacy.
Numerous videos of soldiers
and other chavista thugs chasing, beating, and shooting
unarmed protesters have circulated around the world since last month’s
election. Last night, video from
Venezuela’s national assembly showed opposition members being beaten as they
protested a gag rule imposed by assembly president Diosdado Cabello.
Post-election
analyses have shown that even many of those who had supported caudillo Hugo
Chávez before his recent death were among a majority of Venezuelans who voted
for change last month. And that majority now has no choice but to resist the
Cuban-backed regime that cannot hold on to power, let alone govern, unless it
uses violence against the Venezuelan people.
Opposition leader
Henrique Capriles Radonski has called for a peaceful protest today in Caracas,
and the Maduro regime has summoned its supporters to a competing demonstration.
Chavista leaders have threatened to prosecute opposition leaders for inciting
violence and sowing the seeds of a “civil war.” But it is clear that chavista
leaders are eager for a confrontation. The competing demonstrations are on
opposite sides of metropolitan Caracas, so if the government’s backers want
trouble, they will have to go looking for it.
If there is
widespread violence, it should be remembered that it is the regime that
purchased $9 billion in Russian arms and distributed thousands of weapons to
militias. It is the chavista movement that has deployed motorcycle-borne
gunmen, modeled on the Iranian basij, to attack opposition
protesters. Maduro and his Cuban handlers are deluding themselves if they think
they can elude responsibility for escalating violence.
The Obama
administration has wisely declined to recognize
Maduro’s victory, questioning the rush to judgment by chavista electoral
authorities and their refusal to conduct a thorough recount despite the
reported close results. Among Latin American leaders, only Panama and Paraguay
withheld recognition of Maduro’s election. As political repression intensifies,
Obama and these other leaders will conclude that they made the right decision
in withholding judgment on Maduro’s legitimacy.
Other presidents
in the region who were quick to accommodate a Maduro victory must be viewing
the violent images coming from Caracas with serious concern. If Maduro is the
legitimate, elected president, why isn’t he willing to air disagreements in the
country’s congress? Other left-leaning presidents in the region — in Brazil,
Argentina, and El Salvador, for example — do not resort to beating opposition
figures seeking the right to speak in congress. If such violence continues and
spreads to the streets, one can only hope that other democratic leaders will
break their silence and repudiate Maduro’s tactics.
It is remarkable
to see assembly president Cabello leading the charge against the opposition —
in other words, doing the dirty work for Maduro and Havana. Cabello was thought
to have the confidence of many in the military who chafed at the heavy hand of
Cubans who are desperate to micromanage the post-Chávez succession to ensure
the flow of aid and oil to the bankrupt Castro regime. By following Havana’s
instructions, Cabello is leading Venezuela’s military into a moral ambush —
putting soldiers in a position of having to murder peaceful protestors in the
service of a foreign regime and a corrupt, illegitimate despot.
Every Venezuelan
patriot can recall the admonition of the country’s liberator, Simón Bolívar: “Maldito
sea el soldado que vuelva las armas de la república contra su pueblo,"
or “Cursed is the soldier who turns the nation’s arms against its people.”
No Cuban dictator
or brutal mercenary can be expected to comprehend the precepts of a man known
throughout Latin America simply as, “El Libertador” — “The Liberator.”
But no Venezuelan can forget that solemn admonition or forgive those who
dishonor his legacy.
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