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Update Venezuela: Will Maduro Prevent Food From Getting to his People?

<p>All’s quiet on the Venezuelan&comma; Colombian and Brazilian fronts &lpar;sort of&rpar;&comma; as the United States and others heed recognized Interim Venezuela President Juan Guaidó’s call for humanitarian assistance of foodstuffs and medicines&period; The supplies are being flown in and stockpiled in warehouses in Colombia&comma; Brazil&comma; and other undisclosed points outside of Venezuela&comma; and have yet to reach those inside Venezuela who need it&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Past President Nicolas Maduro has refused entry of the aid&comma; seeing it as a pretext to his ouster because of his illegitimacy to serve a second term&period; Guaidó has set February 23rd as <em>the<&sol;em> day that distribution begins&comma; and he dares Maduro’s military to stop it&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>There are currently thousands of Venezuelans recruited as volunteers to form a human distribution network on that day&comma; from the borders to throughout the country&comma; in conjunction with more mass protests&period; The logistics of the distribution are still unknown&comma; but the political logistics are strong and well thought out&colon;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>U&period;S&period; Senator Marco Rubio has identified six top Venezuelan military officers as key to turning the country’s armed forces away from Maduro all by themselves&period; As these six go&comma; it’s argued&comma; so goes most everyone else in uniform&period; He has announced in public&comma; and God knows what he and U&period;S&period; officials have said to them in private&comma; that the clock is ticking for them to make the right decision&comma; a decision that will give them amnesty&comma; possible visas to the destinations of their choice&comma; and let them take their ill-gotten gains &lpar;money&rpar; with them&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Rubio rightfully argues that the needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few&comma; and letting a few men escape justice in order to bring social justice to 30&comma;000&comma;000 Venezuelans is a deal worth making&period; However&comma; he told them that this is a coupon with an expiration date&comma; not redeemable one day past that date&comma; and with February 23rd on the table&comma; this makes for one interesting&comma; upcoming scenario&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>If the military doesn’t turn in Guaidó’s favor&comma; violence at the borders seems inevitable&comma; both at the two major Colombian crossings in the west &lpar;the Simon Bolivar International Bridge and the Tienditas Bridge&rpar;&comma; and the southern border crossing into Roraima&comma; Brazil&period; Incidentally&comma; the indigenous native peoples in southern Venezuela have vowed to fight the military if they try to stop the aid&comma; and they have a track record of causing the military a lot of headaches&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>If the aid is stopped and violence occurs&comma; the U&period;S&period; is going in&comma; one way or another&period; My prediction&period; First step might &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;just” be a U&period;S&period; naval blockade&comma; though&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Remember that February 23rd date&quest; Well&comma; Guaidó is in close communication with the White House&comma; and February 23rd took Venezuela off of Trump’s very full plate for now&comma; allowing him to deal with the budget and avoid another shutdown&comma; plus start his national emergency mechanism to get proper funding for the wall&period; In other words&comma; Guaidó&comma; in coordination with the White House&comma; slowed down the timetable and immediate expectations&comma; so as not to prematurely cause Trump any headaches before their time&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Granted&comma; the logistics of setting up distribution for the aid takes time anyway&comma; but I think it’s more than just a coincidence that we’re looking at this convenient timing between events taking place up here and the activity going on down there&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>If the military <em>does<&sol;em> turn on Maduro and carries Guaidó on their shoulders to the presidential palace&comma; all I can say is there are going to be a lot of Venezuelan soldiers getting real lucky with the ladies that night&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>As for the Venezuelans themselves&comma; I feel comfortable saying that it’s a 50&sol;50 mix of sentiments amongst those who want Maduro gone&comma; which I feel totally confident saying is the vast majority of the people&period; Half are trying to keep up hope that come February 23rd&comma; events will force outside military intervention to come in and begin fixing this mess once and for all&period; The other half are downhearted and disgusted that this intervention hasn’t taken place yet&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>So where&comma; in my equation&comma; does that leave those who want Maduro out&comma; but don’t want to see outside military intervention&quest;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>As the past few years have unfolded&comma; there are less and less of them&period; When your house is on fire&comma; you don’t care who breaks down your door to bring in the garden house&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;

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