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I don't know what the group "Anti-War Committees" is, but the following 
statement 
denounces in detail US imperialism, Maduro, and Guaidó, and has a bit of 
information about the stand of the workers' movement in Venezuela. It also says 
the American anti-war movement is in crisis, as seen in the leaderships of 
coalitions and groups like ANSWER, UNAC, and Code Pink having "reduced 
opposition to imperialist interventions to a mechanical isolationism that 
abandons 
popular struggles to the repression of dictatorships."

------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Anti-War Committees in Solidarity with The Struggles for Self-Determination, 
Statement on Venezuela, February 12, 2019
No to the US Intervention in Venezuela!
Oppose Trump´s Threats to Send Troops!
No Confidence in Maduro or Guaidó!
Corrupt Venezuelan Generals and Foreign Creditors Profit While the People Face 
Hunger!

A severe economic crisis coupled with a deepening crisis of leadership has left 
Venezuela vulnerable to a US orchestrated attempt to secure a political 
transition 
that protects the military high command and restores a regime directly 
subordinate to Washington. Maduro offers no alternative to the economic crisis 
and the United Socialist Party of Venezuela (PSUV by its acronym in Spanish), 
created by Chavez, is an obstacle to the popular mobilizations and struggles 
required to overcome the crisis.

Although the US has recently taken economic measures to cut the Maduro 
government´s access to vital oil revenues, throughout the Chavista "revolution" 
of 
"21st Century Socialism", the US has been the biggest buyer of Venezuelan oil. 
Trump´s sanctions preventing Maduro and members of his inner circle from 
receiving oil revenues is effectively a blockade on oil sales to the US, but 
this 
recent development does not explain the hyperinflation and scarcity of food and 
medicines driving popular protests against the government.

The root cause of the hyperinflation immiserating the people is the Chavez 
regime´s attempt to purchase the loyalty of the military high command, maintain 
service on the foreign debt and avoid directly challenging the economic power 
of 
Venezuela´s criollo elite through serious land reform and nationalizations 
aimed at 
breaking the power of landlords and monopolists, and securing food sovereignty 
and the ability to overcome Venezuela´s dependency on imports.

Chavez balanced atop the popular struggle that challenged IMF-imposed 
austerity in the Caracazo of 1989, swept aside the power pact between corrupt 
political parties in 1998, and defeated a coup attempt in 2002. Initially 
enjoying 
deep popular support, Chavez replaced the old political regime and carried out 
a 
redistribution of oil revenues in popular social programs to alleviate poverty 
and 
increase access to housing and healthcare, but these policies could only be 
maintained as long as oil prices remained high. Chavez did not break the 
country´s exclusive reliance on oil revenues to purchase imports of consumers 
goods. With the collapse of oil prices, the needs of the people competed with 
the 
colossal waste of resources spent purchasing the loyalty of the military high 
command, and worst of all, the uninterrupted service on the foreign debt.

Historically the resistance against austerity in Latin America has been 
associated 
with struggles against measures imposed upon governments in or at risk of 
default to international banks. The populist redistribution of oil revenues by 
Chavez was praiseworthy. Today, however, the government´s policies following 
the collapse of oil prices have tightened the belt on Venezuela´s people in 
order 
to purchase the loyalty of the army; the result is a massive transfer of wealth 
to 
the generals. Workers´ wages are eaten up by hyperinflation. Venezuela imports 
everything except oil, and an artificially low exchange rate is reserved for 
the 
regime´s allies-in particular, the high command of the military. The result is 
a 
black market that fuels inflation. The military is in complete control of food 
imports 
and distribution, and it has become an enormous parasite sucking the lifeblood 
from the Venezuelan people. Under Maduro, the Chavista regime has gone from 
populist programs to aid the poor to effectively forcing Venezuela´s poorest to 
bear the burden of the crisis, while enriching the generals who maintain 
control 
over the military and guaranteeing debt service to foreign creditors.

The question of control over the military is key to understanding the political 
crisis 
in Venezuela. Up until recently, Guaidó was largely unknown to Venezuelans. He 
has seized upon popular discontent to present his leadership over the simmering 
revolt, but his planned transition is based upon amnesty for the same corrupt, 
criminal generals whose loyalty Maduro buys. The Trump administration, 
European governments, together with reactionary governments like Brazil´s and 
Colombia´s, have backed Guido´s claims that Maduro´s election in 2018 was 
illegitimate, but although much noise was made about corruption, none of the 
opposition candidates in that election opposed the foreign debt service nor 
seriously challenged the military´s control over food imports. In any case, no 
election result or constitutional crisis can bind millions of Venezuelans to 
endure 
years of misery. Political struggles aside, Guiado and the National Assembly 
are 
in fact in agreement with Maduro on protecting the generals and continuing the 
debt payments.

The desperation of Venezuelans disillusioned with Maduro will probably soon 
give 
Guaidó the upper hand, especially now that the US has announced the inner 
circle of the regime will no longer be able to access oil revenues. Resolving 
the 
constitutional crisis, however, leaves open the question of who is to suffer 
the 
pain of overcoming the economic crisis. Guaidó can rely on US aid while he 
allows the exchange rate to float, but freed prices will not break Venezuela´s 
dependency on imports and stabilizing the country´s currency will require a 
tight 
control on wages and social programs for the poor. Guaidó, and US imperialism 
know that the military as an institution may soon be required to confront new 
popular rebellions for basic necessities. The generals´ continued control over 
the 
Venezuelan military is a serious threat to the people, illusions about a 
democratic 
transition that leaves the generals in command are dangerous. US imperialism 
wishes to preserve the military as the institution to restore order in the 
likely event 
Maduro falls and impoverished Venezuelans refuse to accept a transition 
government that imposes austerity-without the populist demagoguery--to 
continue paying the debt.

At present there is no identifiable alternative to Guaidó and Maduro, but the 
leadership that must arise will come from the popular struggles for basic 
necessities. Guaidó claims Venezuela´s constitution gives him the right to 
declare 
himself president, but that same constitution also extends important legal 
guarantees to Venezuela´s working and poor millions. In response to the 
constitutional crisis, the Venezuelan Workers Confederation (Intersectoral de 
Trabajadores de Venezuela), which recently led a strike by health care workers 
to 
demand Maduro´s government index wages to inflation, recently stated: "The lack 
of democratic principles and the intensification of repression against the 
population, go hand in hand today with the violation of constitutional rights 
to 
work, to food, to health, quality education, decent wages, and intangibility 
and 
escalation of labor rights. The Constitution is being violated in its entirety 
and 
must be defended in full." Their demands included freedom for imprisoned trade 
unionists. 
(http://comunicacioncontinua.com/la-intersectorial-de-trabajadores-de-venezuela-i
tv-anuncia-nuevas-acciones-del-conflicto-laboral-a-nivel-nacional/)

US imperialism has a long sordid history of intervention and support for 
military 
dictatorships in Venezuela and throughout Latin America, and clearly the Trump 
administration seeks to take advantage of the political crisis that has 
resulted 
from the popular repudiation of Maduro. Guaidó is surely counting on the 
promise 
of humanitarian aid to facilitate his transition, but Maduro´s rejection of 
offered aid 
is a sick joke. There is nothing "revolutionary" about rejecting desperately 
needed 
aid. Politically condemning the Trump administration´s cynical intentions is 
appropriate, but the people do not eat revolutionary propaganda. Maduro´s tough 
talk is at the service of the parasitic generals he relies upon to stay in 
power.

On principle, Trump´s threats to use US troops in Venezuela must be opposed, 
but this opposition should not translate into support for Maduro. More than one 
imperialist power is working against the Venezuelan peoples´ struggle for 
self-determination. Under Chavez and Maduro, firms and banks linked to the 
Chinese and Russian governments have acquired significant economic power in 
Venezuela. No confidence should be given to the government that surrendered 
as debt collateral 50% control over CITGO (a subsidiary of Venezuela´s state 
firm 
PDVSA) to the Russian state oil company Rosneft. Chinese state banks hold at 
least US$60 billion of Venezuela´s foreign debt. There is nothing 
"anti-imperialist" 
about selling off the country´s assets to Russian and Chinese imperialism.

Solidarity with the Venezuelan people cannot be built around loyalty to 
leaderships that leave unchallenged the forces that impose hunger. Opposition 
to 
US imperialist intervention in Venezuela is a matter of principle, but the 
alternative 
to wars and interventions can only be found in solidarity with the mass 
movements, and to the extent that leaderships consistently fight for the 
interests 
of these movements, support is warranted.

The US anti-war opposition forces are today in a deep crisis because coalitions 
such as ANSWER and UNAC have openly supported the Assad regime and its 
genocidal repression of the democratic struggle in Syria, while other 
leaderships, 
such as Code Pink, have maintained a shameful silence in the face of the 
repression. These leaderships have reduced opposition to imperialist 
interventions to a mechanical isolationism that abandons popular struggles to 
the 
repression of dictatorships. A new principled anti-war leadership is required, 
one 
that builds solidarity with the people, not dictatorships!

Trump and reactionary leaders in Latin America conspire against the Venezuelan 
people!
-- Demand debt forgiveness for Latin America and an end to US intervention!

No Confidence in Guaidó or Maduro!

Solidarity with the Popular Struggles for Basic Necessities!

Neither Maduro nor Guaidó challenge the debt and dependency at the root of 
poverty in Venezuela!

Maduro and Guaidó protect the generals whose control of the army is a real 
danger to the people!

Venezuela´s self-determination requires an end to the foreign debt that 
strangles 
her people!

-- Condemn Maduro´s repression of popular protests!
-- Reject Guaidó´s undemocratic amnesty for criminal generals! The generals do 
not serve the people!

No Confidence in Assad´s Apologists!
Build Solidarity with the People in Struggle, Not Dictatorships!

The US leaderships that have apologized for Assad´s atrocities and war crimes 
in 
Syria have no moral authority to lead an anti-war opposition!

Maduro´s support for the murderous Assad regime betrays the Syrian people!

-- From Venezuela to Syria, solidarity with the democratic struggles for 
self-determination, not dictatorships, is the only alternative to wars and 
imperialist 
interventions!

Anti-War Committees in Solidarity with the Struggles for Self-Determination



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