Sunday, September 16, 2018

OAS Chief: Military Iintervention Tto Overthrow" Venezuelan Presdient Maduro's Government Cannot Be Ruled Out



DW: OAS chief: 'military intervention' in Venezuela cannot be ruled out

The international community should consider "all options," OAS head Luis Almagro said, to help suffering Venezuelans. Almagro reminded Latin American states that the crisis threatens to destabilize the entire region.

The Secretary General of the Organization of American States (OAS), Luis Almagro, said on Friday that a "military intervention" to "overthrow" Nicolas Maduro's government cannot be ruled out.

Almagro made the remark while visiting the Colombian city of Cucuta, a border city that has born the brunt of the Venezuelan refugee crisis.

"With regards to a military intervention aimed at overthrowing the regime of Nicolas Maduro, I think we should not exclude any option," the chief of the Washington-based OAS said, adding that Caracas was committing "crimes against humanity" on its people.

Read more ....

Update #1: OAS chief threatens military force against Venezuela (USA Today)
Update #2: Military intervention in Venezuela ‘on the table,’ says OAS secretary general (RT)

WNU Editor: If the crisis in Venezuela gets as bad as I think it will this winter, the OAS chief will not be the only one calling for a military intervention against Venezuela.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Maracaibo Pop. (1,495,200) is the 2nd largest city in Venezuela. It is dark for a week at a time every time a substation blows out and that happens several times a year.

How can business run, when you do not have electricity for 2 months out of the year on a regular basis?

Venezuelan power station explosion illuminates night sky (VIDEOS ...) - RT

Power distribution is not rocket science. Making advances in it is rocket science, but replacing what you have is not. It is still technical, but Venezuela should be able to do it unless the power company employees said "The Hell with this" and moved out of country. Basic electrical grid maintenance is something that the Maduro Regime should be able to do.

Venezuela is going downhill and Iran their buddies are not helping. I wonder if the Iranians pay rent for their facilities at Isla Margarita?

Or does the rent go straight to Maduro's pockets?

Venezuela is GTH in a handbasket.

http://warnewsupdates.blogspot.com/2017/12/venezuelas-health-care-system-is.html

http://warnewsupdates.blogspot.com/2018/03/are-us-energy-sanctions-bringing-it.html?m=1

Mike Feldhake said...

A soft invasion is necessary. A coup would be good but think it's not possible, but who knows.