Biden Vacillates, Venezuela’s Maduro Gains Ground
Posted by
Consortium News
President
Nicolas Maduro's repeated calls for dialogue with the U.S. in order to
normalize relations seem to be paying off. His openness to rapprochement
contrasts with the Biden administration's nebulousness regarding the degree to
which Washington is willing to recognize Maduro as president (full diplomatic
recognition is out of the question). Biden’s use of sanctions as a bargaining
chip to wrest concessions from Caracas is a harder sell than Trump’s regime-
change narrative on the basis of the preposterous Responsibility to Protect
(R2P) principle, sometimes referred to as “humanitarian intervention.”
Over the last
two months, the flip flops and timidity of the Biden administration have been
put on full display. In early March, Biden sent a high-level delegation to
Caracas to talk to Maduro, but then just days later backed off in response to the
backlash led by Florida’s congressional bloc headed by Senators Marco Rubio
and Rick Scott and
seconded by Senator Bob Menendez. Biden spokeswoman Jen Psaki told
journalists not to waste their time speculating “about
the future of the United States importing oil at this point in
time…from Venezuela."
More recently, the Economist reported that the Biden
administration is planning to reengage Maduro’s representatives in a meeting in
Trinidad. Shortly thereafter, however, U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Brian Nichols denied the report
and claimed that the only issue under discussion in the March meeting in
Caracas was related to Venezuelan democracy. The remark contradicts a previous
White House statement that the March meeting discussed “global energy
security.”
For many centrists, the Biden administration’s ruling out of
the military threats and actions employed by Trump appears to be benign and a
step in the right direction. That appearance is enhanced by the belligerent
attacks on Biden by the Florida congressional bloc for his use of “sanctions
placed on the Maduro regime as a bargaining chip with an illegitimate
dictatorship to produce more oil.” Their statement decries Washington’s
engagement with Maduro for representing a tacit recognition of his government
and undermining the legitimacy of Venezuela’s bogus president Juan Guaidó. As
part of the Florida-based campaign, Governor Ron DeSantis spoke at a rally
against buying Venezuelan oil – the
supposed purpose of the talks with Maduro.
Biden’s unwillingness (or inability) to boldly explain and defend
his change of policy to U.S. voters also contrasts with Obama, who put his
cards on the table when he reestablished diplomatic relations with Cuba.
Indeed, it’s hard
to know exactly
what Biden has in mind as to how to proceed, assuming he himself knows. Brian Winter, vice president of the Council
of the Americas was right in saying at the time of the first delegation to
Venezuela that “until we know precisely what the Biden administration is trying to
achieve, it’ll be difficult to evaluate how far this détente can go.”
The Ripple
Effect
Biden’s overtures
have worked to Maduro’s advantage, even with, of all places, Brazil. In late
April, Brazil’s Foreign Minister Carlos França stated “At
a moment in which the United States considers making an exception to the
embargo on Venezuelan oil exports, it seems to me that we can think in terms of
reevaluating the issue of diplomatic relations.” Exactly two years before, Bolsonaro had closed
Brazil’s embassy in Venezuela.
Following suit on April 29, Mexico’s Andrés Manuel López
Obrador called Biden to discuss the Ninth Summit of the Americas to be held in
Los Angeles in early June. He urged Biden for "all
the countries of the Americas [to] receive an invitation, without excluding
anyone." Shortly before López Obrador made the call, the State
Department’s Brian Nichols had addressed
reporters on the upcoming Summit stating, in reference to Venezuela, Cuba and
Nicaragua, “they are unlikely to be there.”
The ripple effect of Washington’s diplomatic mission to
Venezuela also reached Ecuador’s conservative president Guillermo Lasso. In a
joint press conference with Argentina’s Alberto Fernández, Lasso stated that
his government welcomed the rapprochement between the U.S. and Venezuela and
would consider reestablishing diplomatic relations with the latter. Fernández,
for his part, defended his government’s decision to reestablish full relations
with Venezuela and called on other countries in the region to do the same,
noting “Venezuela
has had a difficult time.”
This groundswell in opposition to Venezuela’s ostracization
is going to be hard for Washington to contain, especially in light of left and
center-left electoral victories since 2018 in Mexico, Argentina, Bolivia, and
more recently Chile and Honduras. Progressive candidates are slated to win in upcoming
presidential elections in Colombia and Brazil.
It’s Not Just the Oil
The mainstream media attributed the Biden administration’s
abrupt abandonment of its Venezuelan initiative to the backlash from Rubio and
company. And they were right. Actually, half right. After all, the State
Department had to have anticipated the political consequences when they sent the
delegation to Venezuela apparently to negotiate the resumption of oil flows to
compensate for shortages resulting from the sanctions against Russia.
The Biden administration may have balked, not because of the
predictable outcry from Rubio and company, but because Washington didn’t get
what it wanted. After all the delegation’s objective was not just about oil. That’s
what the BBC concluded: “So, could
the US visit be more than just oil? An attempt to change Venezuela's political
allegiances, perhaps?” In the words of the Financial Times (March 9, 2022, p. 4) it was to “coax
Maduro away from Moscow’s embrace”, and assume a more neutral stand on the Ukraine invasion. Congressman
Gregory Meeks, Chair of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, said the same when
he stated “re-engagement with Venezuela… serves to shift Venezuela away from
the malign influence of Vladimir Putin.”
The problem is
that Maduro, who has leaned over backwards to assure Washington that he has
become investment friendly toward big oil, refused to turn his back on Putin. Thus
Venezuela recognized the independence of eastern Ukraine’s two separatist
republics just hours after Putin did. Immediately after the U.S. mission left
Caracas in March, Maduro gave Washington a glimmer of hope when he called for
dialogue between Moscow and Ukraine, but then reiterated his unconditional
support for Moscow.
There is an
ideological component to Maduro’s position on Ukraine. The U.S., according to
him, wants to “destroy it [Russia] in pieces and end the hope of a multi-polar world
where we can all live.”
Now that Cold War
II has set in, geopolitical considerations become a greater priority for U.S.
foreign policy. As John Mearsheimer, a leading strategist belonging to the
school of realism of international relations, has pointed out, maintaining a
secure hemisphere is of greater concern than conflicts elsewhere in the world
since it provides the U.S. with an advantage over adversaries located in
regions characterized by strife. The same thesis predicts that other great
powers (read China and Russia) will attempt to challenge “regional hegemony,” in the U.S.’s “neighborhood.” Caracas’ strategic alliance
with Moscow, which includes Russia’s deployment of warships in Venezuelan
ports, takes on a special significance within the framework of Mearsheimer’s
line of thinking.
Biden’s
bargaining-chip strategy toward Venezuela of lifting some of Washington’s estimated
502 coercive measures in return for concessions is designed to
achieve two sets of objectives: providing the United States with much-needed oil
and influencing Maduro’s foreign policy. Juan Gonzalez, the hard-liner who
headed the delegation to Venezuela in March, clearly indicated that the use of
sanctions goes far beyond their stated purpose: “The sanctions on Russia are so robust
that they will have an impact on those governments that have economic
affiliations with Russia, that is by design,”
Bloomberg News
spelled out the “soft-power” strategy employed by the Biden administration in
an editorial titled “Approaching Venezuela is Worth the Risk.” The horse-trading proposal would consist of the
following: ‘In exchange for Venezuela suspending its military
cooperation with Russia, the Biden Administration should lift some sanctions against
Caracas to allow the country to import equipment to upgrade production
facilities and resume oil sales to the United States.” Bloomberg went on to
call for tough bargaining: “Any further steps toward normalization should be
conditioned on Venezuela’s willingness to accelerate market-oriented economic
reforms” at the same time that Washington would continue to recognize Guaidó.
Bloomberg then summarized its approach: “Unpalatable as it may be, engaging
with the Venezuelan regime is critical to protecting core U.S. interests and
containing Russian influence in the Western Hemisphere.”
Biden’s horse-trading strategy has much in common with Trump’s threats and
actions in favor of regime change through military force. In both cases, the
will of Venezuelans is ignored as is their suffering. What makes the current
situation even more despicable is that the bargaining chips were formerly designed
to get Venezuela to revise economic policy and now there is an added objective,
namely a change in foreign policy. Those pro-Biden centrists who see his
approach to Venezuela as more “humanitarian,” fail to consider how far removed
the Venezuelan people are from Washington’s calculations and political
maneuvers.
Steve Ellner is a
retire professor from the Universidad de Oriente in Venezuela and is currently
an associate managing editor of Latin American Perspectives. His latest
books are his edited Latin American Extractivism: Dependency, Resource
Nationalism and Resistance in Comparative Perspective (Rowman &
Littlefield, 2021) and his co–edited Latin American Social Movements
and Progressive Governments: Creative
Tensions between Resistance and Convergence (Rowman & Littlefield, 2023).
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