Note: the mainstream media refuses to report the violence that the Capriles 
opposition has unleashed - he openly called for his supporters to "show their 
rage" ( in colloquial Spanish: "demuestren su arrechera!") and that ended in 10 
deaths, 178 injured, dozens of health clinics run by Cuban doctos sacked and 
burned. 
Published on Thursday, May 2, 2013 by Foreign Policy in Focus
US Efforts to Block Democracy in Venezuela Harm Hemispheric Relationsby Laura 
CarlsenThe U.S. government stands alone among major world governments in 
refusing to recognize the results of the recent Venezuelan presidential 
election. The petulant position of the Obama administration harms U.S. 
relations across the entire hemisphere and feeds a scenario of violence in that 
Caribbean country.Nation after nation--including the last hold-out Spain and 
the Organization of American States—has recognized Nicolas Maduro, who took 
office following his narrow win in the April 14 elections. The results ratified 
by the National Electoral Council show Maduro with 50.78 percent to 48.95 
percent for defeated conservative candidate Henrique Capriles—a difference of 
1.8 percent, or some 260,000 votes. There were no major anomalies on Election 
Day, which by all reports went remarkably smoothly.Following the elections, 
Capriles contested the results in fiery speeches
 and called on supporters to demonstrate, but curiously did not file a legal 
challenge.[The refusal to recognize Maduro's victory] is an example of U.S. 
external pressure that encourages a break with the rule of law and violates the 
principle of self-determination that President Barack Obama claims to 
uphold.The Venezuelan electoral system is highly tamper-proof, as recognized by 
monitoring organizations like the Carter Center, which before the vote assessed 
the system as “the best in the world.”  Delegations from the Carter Center, the 
Union of South American Countries, and other experts observed the elections and 
proclaimed them clean and fair. Venezuelans vote electronically, then print out 
and double-check a paper ballot before depositing it as well. The Electoral 
Council carries out an audit at polls of 54.3 percent of the votes. These 
reviews are signed by members of the political parties, including Capriles’ 
Democratic Unity Party.The
 Electoral Council has agreed to audit the remaining 46 percent of ballots, 
although the electronic vote is the legal vote and the process for reviewing 
the paper backup after the on-site audit is unprecedented and logistically 
challenging, with almost no possibility of changing the result. Representatives 
of the conservative coalition announced instead that they plan to gather 
alleged evidence of fraud to present to the Supreme Court. Capriles said from 
there he will attempt to take the case to international courts, promising a 
drawn-out process that will feed sharp divisions with the country. The 
opposition still has not presented the suit or the proofs for judicial 
review.Daniel Kovalik, a U.S. human rights lawyer who was among 170 
international election observers from around the world, reported in the 
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, “What we found was a transparent, reliable, well-run 
and thoroughly audited electoral system.” Voter turnout was
 reportedly 79 percent—a major achievement that would be the envy of more 
mature democracies, including the United States.And still the U.S. State 
Department spokesperson Patrick Ventrell stated on April 24, 10 days after the 
elections, “We do continue to believe that the ongoing CNE recount and a 
thorough review of alleged voting irregularities will…ensure that the 
Venezuelan people feel that their democratic aspirations are being met and that 
they have greater confidence in the election outcome.”This, coming after 
recognizing in the same press conference that the Maduro government was making 
overtures to repair relations with the United States through the appointment of 
its new charge d’affaires, dashed hopes of more cordial relations between the 
two trade partners.The frame of concern for “the Venezuelan people” rings 
hollow. In a democratic contest, especially in a society as polarized as 
Venezuela’s, the losing side never feels like
 its “aspirations are being met” when they lose. And the insistence on a 
100-percent recount after the ignominy of the Bush-Gore election of 2000 and 
the immediate U.S. recognition of the conservative Mexican president Felipe 
Calderon, despite evidence of voter fraud and a much narrower margin in 2006, 
is hypocritical at best.At worst, it is an example of U.S. external pressure 
that encourages a break with the rule of law and violates the principle of 
self-determination that President Barack Obama claims to uphold.This is the 
first time the U.S. government has refused to recognize a Venezuelan election 
result, as Mark Weisbrot of the Center for Economic and Political Research 
points out. Weisbrot notes, “Washington's efforts to de-legitimise the election 
mark a significant escalation of US efforts at regime change in Venezuela. Not 
since its involvement in the 2002 military coup has the US government done this 
much to promote open conflict in
 Venezuela.”The Obama administration is bending over backwards to spur on an 
opposition movement that has no virtually legal leg to stand on in its desire 
for new presidential elections. There are some indications that the strategy to 
refuse to accept defeat at the polls was considered even before the close vote. 
Although Capriles conceded rapidly and gracefully to former President Hugo 
Chavez in the presidential elections last fall, it was a bad omen when he 
refused to sign a pre-electoral pact to respect the results prior to this 
election.Now violent opposition protests in the streets have led to the deaths 
of nine people. Maduro has attended the funerals of his supporters killed in 
the disturbances with vows to defend his victory and prosecute those inciting 
and participating in violent acts.  Health clinics established by Chavez have 
been frequent targets.It is highly unlikely that Capriles would stake his 
future on rejecting legal electoral
 institutions if he did not have the support of the U.S. government. It is even 
more unlikely that he could sustain a movement for non-recognition. Even many 
members of his own coalition will not go so far as to say they honestly believe 
he won the April 14th elections. The other countries of the region recognized 
Maduro as the new president within hours of the results. Not only did the 
left-leaning governments provide their diplomatic welcome, but also Colombia, 
Mexico, and other nations closely allied with the United States.Capriles’ 
actions and de facto U.S. support for prolonging post-electoral unrest not only 
endanger peace and stability in Venezuela, but also potentially the entire 
region. Venezuela is a geopolitical hub—for its oil, for its role in building 
south-south integration projects like ALBA and Unasur, for its solidarity trade 
pacts, and for its defiance of U.S. hegemony.To illegally disrupt the 
constitutional order there will not be
 as easy as it was in Honduras, where even a broad opposition movement couldn’t 
restore the constitutionally elected president after a right-wing coup in 2009. 
Inevitably, nations across the hemisphere and the world will react with anger 
if the Obama administration decides to maintain this course, both in defense of 
their neighbor Venezuela and also in what they see as a threat to their own 
sovereignty. Already former Brazilian president Lula da Silva has warned that 
"Americans should take care of their own business a little and let us decide 
our own destiny."The longer the United States remains globally isolated in its 
refusal to accept Venezuela’s election results, the longer the instability, 
uncertainty, and violence will continue. Extending the conflict could very well 
end up unnecessarily costing more lives.The Obama administration should 
consider that its stubbornness about what it considers an adverse election 
result in a foreign country is
 a direct cause of bloodshed. It harms relations with our hemispheric neighbors 
and partners and sows the seeds of distrust and enmity in a region where we 
have a good chance at building cooperation on issues of vital importance to all 
of our countries. Venezuela’s elections must be accepted at once to show that 
the United States will uphold democratic processes and the rule of law, even 
when its government is not particularly pleased with the results.© 2013 Foreign 
Policy in FocusLaura Carlsen (lcarlsen(at)ciponline.org) is director of the 
Americas Policy Program (www.americaspolicy.org) in Mexico City, where she has 
been an analyst and writer for two decades. She is also a Foreign Policy In 
Focus columnist.

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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