In order to achieve the destruction of socialism in Yugoslavia, Western powers pursued a "divide and conquer" strategy,
encouraging the piecemeal breakup of the country. Could the same plan be in the works for Venezuela?
Could be:
President Hugo Chavez accused the United States of attempting to foment the secession of an oil-rich region in western Venezuela on Sunday and demanded independence for the Caribbean island of Puerto Rico.
Chavez said U.S. officials were working behind the scenes with the governor of Zulia state, which is home to much of Venezuela's all-important oil industry, to create a secession movement loyal to U.S. interests.
Of course the U.S. denies involvement.
Sort of:
The head of the ruling MVR party, William Lara, has accused the U.S. Ambassador to Venezuela, William Brownfield, of meeting with the group. But the U.S. embassy in Caracas told the Daily Journal newspaper there is no record of such a meeting.
That's because they don't keep records of meetings like that.
The Venezuelan people are not standing still, as you might expect:
Broad sectors of Venezuelan society began mobilizing today to express their disapproval of secession plans by the wealthy state of Zulia, believed to be part of U.S. interventionist designs.
Apparently, a group called Rumbo Propio is planning to organize a referendum that would propose the establishment of the Republic of Zulia, with its own president and constitution, and a system of "liberal capitalism."
I'm sure you're shocked by the last bit of news, right? Yeah, "liberal capitalism," that's the ticket. The Venezuelan people, and the rest of Latin America, have done
so well under that system.
By the way, aside from Yugoslavia, which is probably more recent and relevant, is this whole concept of the U.S. and other imperialist powers encouraging secession for their own ends unprecedented? Hardly; the same thing happened when they got Panama to secede from Colombia in 1903 in order to build the Panama Canal.
Reprinted from Left I on the News