Could Venezuela become Latin America’s Afghanistan?

Could Venezuela become Latin America’s Afghanistan?

 

The Biden administration, along with U.S. intelligence and military agencies, was stunned by the gains made by the Taliban which saw them seize the Afghan capital Kabul and take power earlier this month. The rapid collapse of the U.S.-backed government and its security forces was a complete surprise for Washington. The early July 2021 assassination of Haiti’s president, allegedly by Colombian mercenaries, along with six week-long violent anti-government demonstrations in long-time U.S. ally Colombia also caught the Biden administration off guard. Those events highlight that Biden, despite campaigning as a seasoned international relations expert, lacks a genuine understanding of many pressing geopolitical crises that are threatening regional stability and urgently need Washington’s attention. One such dilemma is the plight of Venezuela, once Latin America’s richest and most stable democracy.

By Oil PriceMatthew Smith

Aug 25, 2021

The OPEC member, which was once among the world’s largest oil exporters, is on the verge of collapse after decades of corruption and malfeasance by the ruling United Socialist Party of Venezuela. The state’s potential to implode is accelerating because of strict U.S. sanctions, weaker oil prices, and the near failure of its economic backbone the petroleum industry. This confluence of events has triggered a deep seemingly irreversible economic crisis for Venezuela which has been described as the worst economic collapse outside of war. It is causing immense suffering for the Venezuelan people with it estimated that more than 90% are living in poverty and that over five million have fled their country, mostly settling in nearby nations notably Colombia, creating what is the world’s second worst humanitarian disaster. That massive influx of economic and political refugees into neighboring countries, notably Colombia, is exacerbating existing social turmoil in the region. In Colombia alone, those refugees are competing for work in a country with a double-digit unemployment rate, where more than 50% of the population works informally and over 42% (Spanish) live in poverty.

Venezuela’s economic implosion means that Caracas is nearly bankrupt and incapable of funding basic public goods, including security forces capable of maintaining a monopoly of violence in the petrostate’s territory. As the state progressively unravels, withdrawing from many remote regions, various towns and smaller cities have fallen into isolation. It is non-state armed groups that are stepping in to fill the void. Colombia’s Marxist National Liberation Army (ELN – Spanish initials), with an estimated strength of 1,500 fighters, has established a significant presence in Venezuela. The guerilla group, long tolerated by Chavez and Maduro, is operating in the states of Amazonas, Apure, Bolívar, Táchira and Zulia controlling lucrative smuggling routes, illegal gold mining and extortion. In many communities which lack a government presence where the ELN operates, the guerillas have become a de-facto state of sorts, meeting out justice and providing basic public goods. The ELN’s flourishing presence in Venezuela can be blamed on Caracas’ inability to control its territory and rein in the group’s activities. As the ELN’s power expands they can profit further from lucrative illicit activities, notably cocaine as well as arms trafficking and illegal mining.

FARC dissidents, which are involved in similar illicit activities to the ELN, are also expanding their presence in Venezuela as the state further weakens and continues to unravel. This has seen the 10th and 28th FARC Fronts, who refused to recognize the 2016 peace accord with Colombia’s national government, expand their presence on the Colombian Venezuelan frontier. Clashes, earlier this year, between the dissident FARC 10th Front and Venezuelan security forces, in the state of Apure near the border with Colombia, highlighted the growing strength of the FARC dissidents. Using classic guerilla tactics, honed during years of battle with the Colombian Army, dissident FARC combatants defeated the Venezuelan military.

Those events further emphasize just how weak Caracas has become and the government’s inability to effectively maintain sovereignty over Venezuela’s national territory. This is not only confined to remote regions; Maduro’s autocratic regime is also steadily losing control of Caracas with suburbs in the city’s west becoming virtual war zones as various armed gangs battle security forces for control. In the latest reported incident, which occurred in July 2021 roughly 300-armed gang members fought pitched battles with police. There is a growing consensus, among analysts and academics, that Maduro’s regime is steadily losing its grip on power in Venezuela. Reuters quoted Alexander Campos a researcher at the Central University of Venezuela who said, “It is becoming more evident that Maduro is losing control in and out of Caracas,”.

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