Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Russia Plants Its Flag In America's Backyard As Venezuela Doubles Down


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Venezuela just made official what has been brewing for years: a full strategic partnership with Russia that transforms the Caribbean into another front in the global power struggle between Moscow and Washington.

This week, Venezuela's parliament approved a comprehensive treaty signed by Presidents Maduro and Putin in Moscow last May.

The 10-year agreement, renewable every five years, makes Venezuela Russia's primary Latin American ally-joining an exclusive club that includes only China, North Korea, and Iran.
The Immediate Drama
The timing is explosive. Eight U.S. warships, including destroyers and a nuclear submarine, are patrolling Caribbean waters under the pretext of fighting drug trafficking.

Venezuela's response? A massive military show featuring Russian-built Sukhoi fighters armed with anti-ship missiles, 2,500 elite troops, and a blunt message: any aggression will trigger "prolonged resistance."



The choreography is deliberate. Maduro 's government released dramatic Instagram videos of the warplanes taking off, while officials warned that "enemies within"-opposition leaders-would be treated as foreign agents during any conflict.
The Bigger Picture
Behind the military theater lies a deeper story. Russia has methodically built influence in Latin America over two decades, investing billions in Venezuelan oil, establishing weapons factories, and creating financial systems that bypass Western sanctions.

Today, Venezuela operates the only Kalashnikov rifle factory in the Americas and uses Russian payment cards to avoid U.S. banking restrictions.

For Putin, Venezuela offers a strategic foothold just 1,600 miles from Florida-a perfect pressure point against Washington.

For Maduro, facing international isolation after allegedly stealing last year's election, Russia provides economic lifelines and military protection that no Western nation will offer. The partnership spans 350 bilateral agreements covering everything from oil sales to space technology.

Venezuela has become Russia 's sixth-largest weapons customer globally, while Moscow helps sell Venezuelan crude through shadowy networks that circumvent international sanctions.
What This Means
This isn't just another diplomatic agreement. It represents Russia's most ambitious challenge to U.S. influence in the Western Hemisphere since the Cuban Missile Crisis.

Unlike Cold War proxies, today's Venezuela offers Russia direct access to oil resources, strategic Caribbean geography, and a testing ground for sanction-evasion tactics that other authoritarian allies can replicate.

For Latin America, it signals a new era where countries can leverage great-power competition to escape traditional spheres of influence.

For global energy markets, it means another major oil producer firmly in Russia's orbit, potentially affecting OPEC+ decisions for years to come.

The stakes extend beyond Venezuela's borders: this treaty establishes a template for how authoritarian regimes can survive international pressure by pooling resources and coordinating resistance to Western sanctions.

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