Venezuelan sanctions: a response to Assistant Secretary of State Roberta Jacobson

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By Luis Fleischman and Nancy Menges

On May 8th, while Assistant Secretary of State for the Western Hemisphere Roberta Jacobson was testifying before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Nicolas Maduro, the president of Venezuela was arresting 240 student protestors.

In fact, since the beginning of the dialogue, the government has arrested more than 500 protestors. Protests in Venezuela have been going on for the last four months due to shortage of basic goods, a spectacularly high crime rate, a 57% inflation rate and an increasing oppressive government.  Since the protests began in February, both houses of Congress have sponsored bi-partisan legislation to promote human rights in Venezuela and to sanction specific individuals in the Venezuelan government responsible for repression and violation of human rights in Venezuela as well as the torture and murder of at least forty one protestors. The irony here is that while members of the Foreign Affairs Committees in both houses of the United States Congress see a need for sanctions Ms. Jacobson continues to advocate for a dialogue between the two sides (the government and the opposition). This puts the Obama Administration at odds with Democrats in both the House and the Senate who believe the time has come to pressure the Venezuelan government. Ms. Jacobson’s main argument is that imposition of sanctions would undermine the current dialogue “while it still offers a chance of progress”.


Does Ms. Jacobson presume that the Venezuelan government will engage in dialogue with the opposition when so many of them are now incarcerated?

In addition to supporting dialogue over sanctions, Ms. Jacobson stated that members of the opposition who are part of this dialogue share her thinking. So, she concluded that this is not the right time to apply sanctions. She did acknowledge that not every member of the opposition shares her views.

Jacobson seemed confused and defensive when Senator Marco Rubio asked for specific names of those in the opposition who asked her to refrain from sanctions on perpetrators of human rights violations. The answer to why the chief U.S diplomat on Latin American Affairs experienced such feelings of embarrassment came just hours after the hearings.

Indeed, the executive secretary of the opposition party called Mesa de Unidad Democratica (MUD), Ramon Guillermo Aveledo issued a statement claiming that while MUD opposes general embargos against the people of Venezuela, it does not rule out that sanctions be applied against individuals responsible for human rights violations.

This shows that the opposition to sanctions comes from the Obama Administration and the State Department not from the Venezuelan opposition.

Is the position of the Administration logical? Does Ms. Jacobson really believe that there is any incentive the Venezuelan government has to conduct an honest dialogue that would ultimately restore democracy to Venezuela? Are Ms Jacobson and the State Department bureaucracy aware of what kind of regime the Bolivarian regime is? How exactly can they justify their current position against sanctions?

Most recently, Cesar Vidal, a Spanish historian who resides in Miami spoke about the conditions of possibility of dialogue in a symposium organized by the Miami-based Foro de Promocion Democratica Continental (FPDC). Dr. Vidal pointed out that dialogue couldn’t take place when it is dealing with 1) a totalitarian regime 2) An entity or group that has systematically violated the constitution and legality of the state 3) A terrorist group.

Although, some may argue whether the Venezuelan regime is totalitarian or not, its aspirations are definitely totalitarian. From the outset the regime declared itself revolutionary and did everything possible to perpetuate itself in power via repression and other means of intimidation, while denying the legitimacy of any other truth except its own ideology. True dialogue, a key element in democratic societies, has not existed in Venezuela. Elections were used as an excuse to legitimize a ruthless majority rule over a minority with limited rights.   The majority of course is not really a majority but it is embedded in the power of the government that keeps growing At the expense of civil and political liberties. . Indeed, the government has displayed totalitarian behavior and this is the general direction in which it is currently going

In addition, Cesar Vidal pointed out that it is impossible to ask a totalitarian regime (or in this case a regime that tends towards totalitarianism) to change its ways. Furthermore, an agreement with totalitarian regimes that do not include its ultimate capitulation (or does not guarantee its eventual transformation) only strengthens totalitarian power.

The Chavez-Maduro regime, precisely because of its totalitarian aspiration has also broken the rule of law and systematically violated the country’s constitution to institutionalize an oppressive regime. The regime is the aggressor that denies the opposition and civil society a voice that it deserves. The opposition and civil society are the victims, not moral equals. As negotiations unfold the Maduro regime continues to arrest people by the hundreds, torture, and shooting protestors and dissidents. Likewise, it has stubbornly refused to release any of the prisoners it has unjustly jailed in a clear sign that it intends to keep the upper hand.

. Simply supporting a plain dialogue assumes, as Vidal also pointed out, that the non-totalitarian side also shares some responsibility and provides legitimacy to the aggressive side by providing a false perception that two moral equals are negotiating and somehow both are equally responsible for the deterioration of the situation.

Thus, there will not be any compromise offered by the Venezuelan government if the opposition does not have some leverage. Iran is a case in point. Dialogue with Iran would not have been conceivable without the sanctions that preceded it

Sanctions as they are proposed in this bill should be a first step, a sort of a warning but the U.S government and, if possible, other countries should create a situation where the threat of more punitive action deters the Venezuelan regime. The final purpose should be to transform the nature of the regime. The goal should be at least to create a situation where the government allows more space and power to the opposition without interference and also restores the legality and constitutionality that existed previous to the rise of Hugo Chavez to power. This means to cease having totalitarian aspirations and to open the system to a true democracy without repression; without Para-military, without political prisoners; without political exiles, without subjugation of the judiciary; without arbitrary expropriation of private property; without restricting the freedom of the press and other individual liberties and with full respect for and inclusion of the opposition. In other words, the regime cannot do less than giving up its own tyrannical essence.

If these goals are not achieved, the dialogue failed. Any deal that compromises these parameters of democratic restoration will lead to the reinforcement and legitimization of the regime. If the dialogue fails to achieve this, new sanctions and total isolation of Venezuela should ensue.

Luis Fleischman is co-editor of The Americas Report and the author of the book, Latin America in the Post-Chavez Era: The Security Threat to the United States.  Nancy Menges is the chief editor of The Americas Report.

Acerca de Luis Fleischman

Luis Fleischman is also an adjunct professor of Sociology and Political Science at the Florida Atlantic University Honors College and FAU Life Long Learning Society since 2005 where he has taught courses on history and sociology of Democracy, the Middle East, Political Sociology, American Conservative Thought, the Politics and Sociology of Rogue States, and Latin America.He has also served as Executive Director of the Jewish Community Relations Council of the Jewish Federation of Palm Beach County. (JCRC) since 2000 and prior to that as director of the JCRC at the Jewish Federation of Central New Jersey.In that capacity, he has worked intensively on issues related to the Middle East and national security serving as a liaison between these organizations and members of Congress, the state legislature, foreign consuls, the media, and the local community at large. Within that role, he has dealt with issues related to the threat of a nuclear Iran, advocated for the security of the State of Israel, sanctions against Iran, and issues related to domestic terrorism.He is also in charge of developing relations and programs with the community at large including interfaith relations, African-American/Jewish relations, activities, Hispanic/Jewish relations and Muslim/Jewish relations.Fleischman has also served as an academic advisor on Latin American affairs and hemispheric security to the Menges Hemispheric Security Project at the Washington DC-based Center for Security Policy. Luis also serves in the Security Task Force of the Center for Hemispheric Policy at the University of Miami.Fleischman holds a Ph.D. and a M.A degree in Sociology from the New School for Social Research in New York, and has a B.A. degree in Political Science and Labor Studies from Tel Aviv University. He has published journalistic and academic articles and written policy papers on a variety of topics, including the theoretical aspects of civil society and state, Latin American affairs, the Middle East and terrorism. He is currently writing a book on Contemporary Latin America and regional security and he is the co-chair of the Spain and Latin America task force of the group Scholars for Peace in the Middle East. He is currently owrking on a book that deals with national and regional secuirty challenges in Latin America.

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