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‘Rio Pact’ means war danger between Venezuela and Colombia

The resurrection of the Inter American Treaty of Reciprocal Assistance against Venezuela could lead to an armed invasion of the oil-rich country, writes EMILE SCHEPERS

SOME people had the wistful thought that the departure of John Bolton as Donald Trump’s national security adviser would cause an easing of the wacky aggressiveness of current US foreign policy.

Alas, no.

Trump quickly clarified that whatever his disagreements with Bolton actually had been, he has no intention of letting up the pressure on Venezuela, or on Cuba either. And the news this past week bears this out in frightening ways.

On Thursday, the United States got the Organisation of American States (OAS) to invoke the Inter American Treaty of Reciprocal Assistance against Venezuela, a move that could actually lead to an armed invasion of the oil-rich country.

This treaty, also called the Rio Pact because it was signed in that Brazilian city in 1947, is a cold war relic that the United States had used to co-ordinate its anti-Cuba policies since the Cuban Revolution of January 1 1959. 

Its membership includes the United States, Haiti and all the Spanish- and Portuguese-speaking Latin American countries in the Americas except Bolivia, Cuba, Ecuador, Nicaragua and Mexico. 

Venezuela had withdrawn from it in 2013, but in July of 2019, the Venezuelan National Assembly, in opposition to the elected President Nicolas Maduro, had rejoined. 

The Venezuelan right wanted the Rio Pact invoked under the pretext that the Russian Federation has been giving some support to Maduro’s government.

Of the member countries of the OAS who are signed up to the Rio Pact, 11 plus the Juan Guaido group in the National Assembly, claiming to be the real Venezuelan government, supported its invocation. 

All of these are right-centre, right-wing, or ultra-right governments, in several cases anti-democratic and hugely corrupt. 

They are Chile, Colombia, Argentina, Brazil, El Salvador, Guatemala, Haiti, Honduras, Paraguay, the Dominican Republic, and the United States.

The wording of the invocation of the treaty was bizarre; it was, the United States said, intended to “defend” Venezuela. 

What the US meant by this was that supposedly the Maduro government is illegitimate and the US pet, National Assembly head Juan Guaido, is the legitimate president. 

But all the efforts to remove Maduro, who was legally elected president in 2013 and re-elected since, have so far failed, largely because the forces behind Guaido simply don’t have the support of the majority of the Venezuelan people.

Besides the United States, the main moving force behind the new push to overthrow the Venezuelan government and the invocation of the Rio Pact is the government of neighbouring Colombia, headed by right-wing extremist President Ivan Duque Marquez, and Duque’s close ally, former president Alvaro Uribe. 

Duque, Uribe and the right-wing and criminal groups with which they are closely allied are trying to undo the peace treaty between the Colombian government and the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia-People’s Army, or Farc-EP.

This treaty, signed in 2017, gave promise of ending five decades of bloody war in this very violent country. 

Its approval was achieved through the mediation of socialist Cuba, Bolivarian Venezuela, and the government of Norway. 

The Farc-EP agreed to lay down its arms while the government of then president Juan Manuel Santos agreed to disarm right-wing paramilitary terrorist groups and adhere to a programme of social and economic reforms designed to help poor rural people. 

Among other things, the rural poor were to be weaned off growing coca leaf by a programme of crop substitution.

With many glitches, the peace process seemed to be going pretty well at the time that Duque inaugurated in August 2018. 

Since then, a hellish situation has developed, with at least 500 peasant, labour and leftist leaders and activists murdered for their political work.

In that context, Ivan Marquez, leader of an important section of the Farc-EP, announced at the end of August that because of Duque’s failure to live up to the terms of the 2016 peace agreement, he and his comrades will once again take up arms. 

Although this announcement came after horrific provocations from the right, and although it does not represent the views of the whole of the Farc-EP, it is being used by the United States and allies to go after Venezuela with the accusation that Maduro’s government is supporting the Marquez group.

The invocation of the Rio Pact represents a real danger of a shooting war between Colombia and Venezuela, whose relations have been extremely tense since the Duque government supported the attempted Guaido coup in February of this year. 

Guaido was under a court order not to leave Venezuela, but it appears he was smuggled across the border by a criminal gang, “los Rastrojos,” on February 23.

The origins of los Rastrojos lie in the ultra-violent far-right “Colombian Self Defence Forces” who were responsible for the murder of thousands of people before the peace pact was signed. 

The gang is also reputed to be involved in the drug trade, smuggling, extortion and assassinations.

Although Guaido denied claims that he had co-ordinated with los Rastreros, his claims were undercut when a Colombian human rights activist, Wilfredo Canizares, of the Progresar Foundation, published photographs in which Guaido is shown in chummy togetherness with two top leaders of the gang. 

According to Canizares, los Rastrojos delivered Guaido from the border to a football field where he was greeted by Colombian government officials.

What could happen now? Under the terms of the Rio Pact, there is a possibility that Colombia sends troops into Venezuela, with the backing of the United States. Or the United States could decide to intercept tankers carrying Venezuelan oil on the high seas, under the pretext that they are violating trade sanctions which the United States has unilaterally imposed on the oil-rich country.

For this reason, a number of Latin American countries and organisations issued sharply worded condemnations of the invocation of the Rio Pact. 

Mexican Foreign Minister Marcelo Ebrard pointed out that the invocation of the pact would open up the possibility of an armed intervention in Venezuela, “but later it could be any country besides Venezuela.” 

Mexico left the Rio Pact in 2002 and has not joined the anti-Venezuela movement.

Cuba, which left the pact soon after its 1959 revolution, also denounced the decision. A statement from the Cuban Foreign Ministry called the action “shameful,” and added: “To invoke the [Rio Pact] which the United States has used to justify military interventions and aggressions in the region, which have caused so much pain and death to the Latin Americans and Caribbean people, is a deliberate attempt to provoke a situation which could lead to the use of force to overthrow the legitimate government of President Maduro, in open opposition to the principles of international law and the proclamation of Latin America and the Caribbean as a zone of peace.”

Uruguay and Nicaragua also condemned the invocation of the Rio Pact, as did a number of non-government organisations and even some opposition figures in Venezuela.

Negotiations between the Venezuelan government and some opposition leaders are continuing, but Guaido has declared them dead and appears to be relying entirely on the Trump administration and right-wing Latin American governments to advance his plans.

This article appeared at Peoplesworld.org.

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