
Guyanese President Irfaan Ali and Trinidadian Prime Minister Keith Rowley engaged each other at the Diplomatic Centre in Port of Spain on Thursday, August 18, 2022. Photo: Office of the President (Trinidad and Tobago).
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Guyanese President Irfaan Ali and Trinidadian Prime Minister Keith Rowley engaged each other at the Diplomatic Centre in Port of Spain on Thursday, August 18, 2022. Photo: Office of the President (Trinidad and Tobago).
By Wayne Kublalsingh – Nov 25, 2023
At a news conference on November 21, Dr Keith Rowley was asked by a journalist why Venezuela was at this time ramping up its claim to Essequibo. He replied that this journalist should know the answer to the question. And he looked forward to reading the journalistâs answer to his own question. Yet, the answer is complex and far from obvious. Any presumption of obviousness is not good. Unwise.
On October 25, Caricom issued a statement on the âborder disputeâ. It was âdeeply disappointed and concerned at the decree and subsequent statements by Venezuela with respect to that countryâs border controversy with Guyanaâ. It expressed âfull support of the judicial process under way at the International Court of Justice (ICJ)â. It ended, âCaricom firmly repudiates any acts of aggression by Venezuela against Guyana.â This is a flat, unilateral statement, evincing no regard for the deeply complex realpolitik of the issue. It is either dumb, pretends to be dumb, or dumbly following learnt or Âaccepted dicta.
Venezuela has clearly pronounced on the matter; and where there are instances too delicate to describe, it has thrown hints. Much of this position was articulated in its defence before the ICJ on November 15. First, it alleged that Guyana had used its seat at the OAS to join in actions âorchestrated against the sovereignty and the institutions of Venezuela, including the calls made by its Secretary General Luis Almagro for the use of military force and the calls aimed at denying the legitimacy of the president of the Republicâ.
Second, âGuyana then participated in a group of states that was created exclusively to intervene and attack Venezuela within this infamous Lima Group. Guyana approved sixteen interventionist declarations against Venezuela.â
Third, âGuyana has put its institutions and its territory in the Âservice of the major powers that have always aspired to destroy Venezuela in order to grab some of the largest world reserves of oil, gold and gas. The growing presence of the United States Southern Command and the frequent joint military exercises with the government of Guyana along with hostile declarations aimed at threatening Venezuela are public knowledge.â
Fourth, it claimed that it is only when the former CEO of Exxon Mobil Rex Tillerson, a key oil contractor in the Essequibo, was appointed by Donald Trump to the position of secretary of state âthat United States supported for the first time Guyanaâs position in the territorial disputeâ. And that Trumpâs next secretary of state, Mike Pompeo (former CIA director), had signed a strategic geopolitical and military pact with Guyana threatening Venezuela.
President of Guyana Tries to Provoke Venezuela, Raises Guyanese Flag in Disputed Essequibo Territory
In a speech, Maduro addressed Ali directly: âIn your eagerness to please powerful transnational interests, you are turning Guyana into a branch of Exxon Mobil.â
Fifth, Guyana has prematurely granted concessions for oil mining in âdelimitedâ maritime areas which were still in dispute, that had yet to be negotiated between Guyana and Venezuela.
Since the Bolivarian Republic was created by Hugo Chavez in 1999, Venezuela has been added to the US pantheon of Axis of Evil. Since 2021, 30 Venezuelan officials have been added to the US sanctions list, which includes travel bans and frozen assets. In 2002, the US backed the coup to temporarily overthrow Chavez. In 2019, it fomented rebellion in Venezuela, backing the non-elected Juan Guido to be its man in Caracas. Venezuela now accuses Guyana of abetting US efforts (including âlapdogâ OAS and Lima groups) to destabilise it.
Venezuelaâs two other points are deep-rooted and complex. In its ICJ defence, Venezuela stated that Nicolas Maduro âhas never become an ally to powers that today are massacring the Palestinian people that have bombed Libya, Syria, Iraq and Afghanistanâ.
A point which begs to be added is that Guyanese President Dr Irfaan Ali is Muslim. He has hedged this credential in Middle East visits and negotiations with Saudi Arabia, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates, even before the present conflagration. He has since been lobbying these new allies for support. Revealingly, Ali solicited the US allies in the Middle East: the blue-eyed wealthy elite amongst Arabs.
Finally, the ICJ defence castigated âthe legacy left by the British Empire that exploited the territory from its legitimate owners and gave it to those who never had any right over said territoryâ. This statement is laden with innuendo and Âgrievance. The Bolivarian Revolution is criollo, native, mestizo. Not white, Western, European. Newbie immigrants arrived in the New World to filch the assets bequeathed to them by British and European plunder. Their self-serving mercantile classes sell out the assets of the indigens, sideline them in the Essequibo.
Has Guyana forgotten how VeneÂzuela accepted rice for its oil, or the contribution of Venezuelaâs Petrocaribe to Guyanaâs GDP? In contrast, what impact has Exxon Mobil had on Guyanaâs human Âdevelopment indices?
Maduro wants assurances. He wants to talk directly to Ali. He wants to settle these matters bilaterally, neighbour to neighbour. The Bolivarian Republic is regarded as an outlier oil kingdom. He knows he will not get a fair shake with Western-backed tribunals and courts.
But Ali, tellingly, does not want to meet. Not good. Guyanaâs justifiable dismay and indignation are as acute as Venezuelaâs. If Caricom is to become a credible arbiter in this matter, it must acknowledge its complex ethnic and economic realpolitik; not succumb to the Zelenskyy effect, like NATO and the West did, in generalising and downplaying Russiaâs security Âanxieties.