Donald Trump
has found the 'bad hombres' he mentioned while debating Hillary Clinton last
year. They just weren't in Mexico.
They're in
Venezuela.
The US
Treasury has placed sanctions on Venezuela's new Vice President, Tareck El
Aissami.
And on
Wednesday, Trump tweeted "Venezuela should allow Leopoldo Lopez, a
political prisoner & husband of @liliantintori (just met w/ @marcorubio)
out of prison immediately."
That was
accompanied by a picture of himself meeting with Tintori, who has been carrying
on her husband's work, and Senator Rubio.
Lopez, a
Harvard-educated former mayor, has been in prison since February of 2014. He
was jailed for leading massive protests against President Nicolas Maduro's
brutal socialist regime.
Maduro's
reign has been a complete and utter humanitarian disaster. Venezuela is broken,
suffering from food shortages and rolling blackouts. Stories of the nightmarish
situation in hospitals across the country and desperate citizens resorting to
vigilante justice to maintain order have been shocking the world for almost two
years now.
The fact
that Maduro — late-President Hugo Chavez's chosen successor — chose El Aissami
as his VP shows that he's doubling down on his failed policies. El Aissami has
been on the US's radar for years. He is
allegedly a part of Venezuela's state drug-trafficking network and has ties to
Iran, Syria, and Lebanese terrorist group Hezbollah.
A former
governor of Venezuela's Aragua state, the Wall Street Journal once said of El Aissami: " One part master of
Middle-Eastern networking, one part honorary Cuban revolutionary, and one part
highly ambitious chavista , Mr. El Aissami is a dream come true for Tehran and
Havana. That makes him a powerful man in Venezuela."
According to
Brazilian newspaper Veja, Venezuelan defectors say El Aissami participated in a
clandestine program to provide Venezuelan passports to terrorists in Damascus
when he served as Interior Minister. They also accuse him of accepting payment
from Venezuelan drug kingpins trying to smuggle cocaine through country,
according to the WSJ.
The head of
Venezuela's National Assembly, Diosdado Caballero, has also been accused of
aiding and abetting drug traffickers.
Now, the
Obama Administration was always careful about what it called Venezuela's
leaders. That's because Maduro and his ilk would use negative statements as
proof that the US is Venezuela's enemy — an enemy of Chavez's so-called
"revolution."
And so it
was when the Trump administration put sanctions on El Aissami (from Reuters):
"We
shall not be distracted by these miserable provocations," said Tareck El
Aissami, the most senior Venezuelan official yet sanctioned by the United
States.
"We
will see this vile aggression dispelled," he added in a series of defiant
tweets before appearing on state television looking unruffled as he presided
over a government meeting...
"Comrade
Tareck has my full support," said Maduro, flanked by El Aissami in a live
television address in which he attacked the United States.
It remains
to be seen what, if anything, this new pressure on Maduro's regime will do for
Venezuela and its desperate people.
Or for
Lopez.
(Business
Insider)
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