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by Jiri Valenta • February 25, 2019
at 5:00 pm
- If Nicolás Maduro is
removed from office in Venezuela, Putin might act as he did when
a popular revolution overthrew Yanukovych in Ukraine, in 2014:
with a surprise invasion of the Crimea. This time, Putin may
launch a surprise naval and land attack on Mariupol, set up a
land bridge from Crimea to Russia and continue intensifying his
attempt to strangle Ukraine's economy in order to subjugate
Ukraine to Russia. Trump needs to take immediate preemptive
measures to prevent Putin from doing that by increasing naval
aid to Kiev.
- So far, Putin seems to
have been counting on a lack of American resolve regarding
Venezuela, and has just succeeded in getting China to support
him.
- If America abdicates
its role in Venezuela, you can bet Russia will eventually build
intelligence facilities there. Russia has also been providing
Nicaragua with "sophisticated weaponry," including
"T-72 tanks, war boats, warplanes, and powerful
bombs."
- Above all, President
Trump must continue as he is doing now, to work towards
liberating the Venezuelan people. Any hesitation will be
counterproductive.

Pictured: A
United States Air Force Reserve cargo plane delivers humanitarian
aid, intended for the people of Venezuela, in Cucuta, Colombia, a
mile and a half from the Venezuelan border, on February 22, 2019. The
USAF reservists were greeted by Colombian President Ivan Duquemarquez
and Vice President Marta Lucia-Ramirez. (U.S. Air Force Photo by Maj.
Wayne Capps)
America is facing two dangerous crises. In Venezuela,
Nicolás Maduro, the illegitimate winner of a reportedly sham
election, has, with his socialist policies, created a catastrophic
situation. The struggle in Venezuela between his challenger, Juan
Guaidó, and him is reaching a crescendo. Millions of Venezuelans,
suffering under his radical regime, have been flooding neighboring
Brazil and Colombia. Yet, with the help of Russian President Vladimir
Putin, Maduro is clinging to power, as Fidel Castro did in the early
1960s with the aid of Nikita Khrushchev.
Putin, seeking to rescue his beleaguered client,
Maduro, as well as his considerable investments in Venezuelan oil and
gold, recently deployed two nuclear-capable bombers to Venezuela. In
addition, hundreds of "private military contractors who do
secret missions for Russia" are reportedly deployed in
Venezuela.
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