Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Venezuela At An Inflection Point: Can Diplomacy Outrun The Drumbeat Of Force?


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) In late September, the United States acknowledged destroying several suspected drug-smuggling boats in the southern Caribbean, with 17 people reported dead. Caracas condemned the strikes as external aggression.

Almost simultaneously, intermediaries explored a direct channel between Washington and Nicolás Maduro's government-an odd mix of gunboats and quiet outreach that captures the moment's volatility.

Latin America's response has been split. Colombia and Cuba criticized the killings; Brazil and Chile urged non-intervention; others stayed cautious or supported Washington's anti-narcotics rationale. The lack of a common line gives the U.S. more room to act while weakening the region's ability to steer outcomes.

Behind the clash sits an unresolved election. Venezuela 's July 2024 vote remains disputed: authorities declared Maduro the winner; the opposition says its tallies show Edmundo González Urrutia prevailed.

Several governments questioned the result; some recognized González. With institutions polarized, legitimacy is contested-and external pressure matters more.



Why the boats matter is simple: money. Trafficking routes, illegal gold, and sanctions-evading oil shipments fund armed networks and corrupt patrons. Strikes can destroy a vessel; they don't fix the cash flows.
Targeted Pressure Offers Path to Venezuela Transition
A smarter mix exists: tighten port and insurance rules against the“shadow fleet,” expand coast-guard interdictions, and coordinate Brazil-Colombia crackdowns on illegal gold. These steps raise costs on criminal revenue without widening the conflict.

A narrow diplomatic lane still exists. Pair non-kinetic pressure with a concrete package: publish and audit precinct-level vote data; sequence minimum guarantees (prisoner releases, electoral safeguards, judicial steps); match each milestone with calibrated incentives and penalties.

Neighbors should be in the room to connect the political track with borders, migration, and smuggling. Why readers outside Venezuela should care: shocks in the southern Caribbean can ripple into fuel prices, shipping insurance, and new migration flows.

For Brazil and the region, avoiding escalation while forcing verifiable steps toward a transition is the least-cost path.

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