
Close-up of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro with a âstrong man look,â next to Defense Minister Vladimir Padrino. Photo: Juan Barreto/AFP via The New York Times.
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From Venezuela and made by Venezuelan Chavistas
Close-up of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro with a âstrong man look,â next to Defense Minister Vladimir Padrino. Photo: Juan Barreto/AFP via The New York Times.
By Lucas Koerner and Ricardo Vaz  –  Feb 12, 2025
Donald Trump is back in the White House, and faux opposition is once again the order of the day for the Western media and the Democratic Party. Whether it comes to criminalizing migrants (FAIR.org, 1/25/25), maintaining US âsoft powerâ via USAID, downplaying anti-democratic power grabs (FAIR.org, 2/4/25) or whitewashing Nazi salutes (FAIR.org, 1/23/25), the centrist establishment seems quite content to normalize Trump or even outflank him from the right.
There is, of course, no area of greater consensus than US imperial grand strategy, from waging genocidal war in Palestine (FAIR.org, 1/30/25) to recolonizing Washingtonâs âbackyardâ south of the Rio Grande. Accumulation by laying waste to the societies of the global South via carpet bombing and/or economic siege warfare is, according to anti-imperialist political economist Ali Kadri, the name of the game.
Venezuela is no exception to this multi-pronged onslaught. And the US empireâs âpaper of record,â the New York Times, proudly leads the charge, most recently advocating the overthrow of Venezuelan President NicolĂĄs Maduro âthrough coercive diplomacy if possible or force if necessary.â
High on his own (imperial) supply
Bret Stephens (New York Times, 1/14/25): âEnding Maduroâs long reign of terror is a good way to start [the Trump] administrationâand send a signal to tyrants elsewhere that American patience with disorder and danger eventually runs out.â
In a column belligerently titled âDepose Maduro,â New York Times columnist Bret Stephens (1/14/25) made an overt case for US military intervention to topple Venezuelaâs government. He hailed this textbook crime of aggression as âoverdue, morally right and in our national security interest.â
For the Timesâ self-described âwarmongering neocon,â that last point is characteristically paramount. Specifically, he asserted that US ânational securityâ requires âputting an end to a criminal regime that is a source of drugs, mass migration and Iranian influence in the Americas.â
The irony that during the 1980s, the Central Intelligence Agency actually facilitated the trafficking of cocaine to working-class Black communities in the context of the Iran/Contra scandal (FAIR.org, 12/29/24) was evidently lost on the Times columnist.
Then as today, the principal drug routes to the United States cut across the Pacific rather than the Gulf of Mexico (FAIR.org, 9/24/19). A 2017 DEA report found that less than 10% of US-bound cocaine flowed through Venezuelaâs eastern Caribbean corridor, with WOLA reaching a similar conclusion in a 2020 study.
Not only does the bulk of drug trafficking flow through US-allied countries, but the US government itself is broadly complicit in the perpetuation of the multi-billion dollar contraband, as evidenced in its support for narco puppet regimes in Afghanistan (New York Times, 7/27/08) and Honduras (FAIR.org, 3/20/24; Covert Action, 3/14/24).
In marked contrast, the US has levied ânarco-terrorismâ charges against top Caracas officials, going as far as to place a bounty on Maduroâs head, without providing a shred of evidence, since Western outlets are happy to take US officialsâ word, no questions asked (BBC, 1/10/25; New York Times, 1/10/25; Washington Post, 1/10/25; AP, 1/10/25).
Stephens lamented that Washingtonâs murderous economic sanctions âdidnât workâ and that its bounty âalso wonât work.â The columnist conveniently ignored that the unilateral coercive measures, described aptly by US officials as âmaximum pressure,â were quite effective in deliberately gutting Venezuelaâs economy, in the process killing at least tens of thousands, and spurring the migrant exodus he pointed to as justification for his proposed military adventure.
Such omission regarding US responsibility for Venezuelan migration is by now a staple of corporate media coverage (New York Times, 1/31/25; PBS, 1/31/25; CBS, 2/2/25). Indeed, support for Washingtonâs economic terrorism against Venezuela has been fairly uniform across the US political spectrum for years (FAIR.org, 6/4/20, 6/4/21, 5/2/22, 6/13/22).
Common tactics include describing sanctions as merely affecting Maduro and allies (New York Times, 1/6/25; NPR, 1/10/25; Al Jazeera, 1/6/25; Financial Times, 1/31/25) or portraying their consequences as merely the demonized leaderâs opinion (New York Times, 1/31/25; BBC, 1/10/25; Reuters, 1/27/25).
The Iranian bogeyman
Stephens cites a story (Infobae, 1/10/25) about an Iranian âdrone development baseâ in Venezuela that offers as its only source for the claim that âthere is informationâ about such a base.
It is no surprise, either, that in Stephensâ casus belli, Iran appears alongside the familiar conservative tropes of Latin American migrant hordes and narcotics threatening the US (white settler) body politic.
Stephensâ Orientalist fixation with the Iranian bogeyman is notable, if hardly novel. Western media have in recent years circulated baseless rumors of Iran covertly shipping military equipment to Venezuela (FAIR.org, 6/10/20), and the Times in particular has promoted equally evidence-free claims of drug trafficking by Iranian ally Hezbollah (FAIR.org, 5/24/19, 2/4/21).
In the latest whopper, Stephens cited Iran having âreportedly established a âdrone development baseââ at a Venezuelan air base. However, this story comes from rabidly anti-Venezuelan government outlet Infobae (1/10/25), which did not even bother describing its anonymous source. The report only vaguely stated that âthere is informationâ about this purported base.
Regardless of whether there is any truth to the alleged defense cooperation between the two sovereign nations, the perceived threat is, following the late Edward Said, symptomatic of Western imperialismâs enduring obsession with the âloss of Iranâ in the wake of the 1979 overthrow of the Shah. Like the Chinese Revolution before it, Iranâs Islamic Revolution is still decades later portrayed as a global civilizational menace.
But the effort to update the âaxis of evilâ with a revised cast of rogue states from Venezuela to Iran also crucially serves to manufacture consent for military aggression against Tehran, which has long been the ultimate dream of significant segments of the US political class and intelligentsia, including Stephens (FAIR.org, 10/25/24).
On elections and âtropical despotismsâ
In Stephensâ tropical gunboat diplomacy redux, there was something for everyone, even bleeding-heart âliberalsâ horrified that Venezuelan President Maduro supposedly âstole the election, terrorizes his opponents and brutalizes his people.â
As always, US imperialist intervention ideologically hinges on denying the Bolivarian governmentâs democratic credentials, most recently regarding the outcome of the July 28, 2024, presidential vote (Venezuelanalysis, 8/22/24, 7/29/24). However, Washingtonâs blockade ensured that the elections would never be free and fair. As the main factor driving economic hardship and migration, US sanctions meant Venezuelans headed to the polls with a gun to their heads, not unlike Nicaraguans in 1990.
It is the height of hypocrisy for US officials and their corporate media stenographers to claim the right to arbitrate other sovereign nationsâ democratic legitimacy, even as they advance fascism at home and genocidal war across the globe. That sectors of the Western âcompatible leftâ echo Stephens and his ilk, caricaturing the Maduro government as a âcorruptâ and ârepressiveâ regime, is unfortunate but not surprising (Ebb, 10/3/24).
The core racial assumption, going back to the 19th century, is that Global South states that refuse to bow to Western imperialist diktat constitute âtropical despotismsâ to be toppled in a never-ending âcivilizing mission,â with its anti-Communist, âwar on terrorâ and neo-Orientalist mutations.
Demolishing the Death Star
Extra! (1â2/90): âIn covering the invasion of Panama, many TV journalists abandoned even the pretense of operating in a neutral, independent mode.â
It is noteworthy that the script for Stephensâ Rambo sequel is over 35 years old: Stephens argued for âUS military intervention of the sort that in 1990 swiftly ended the regime of the Panamanian strongman Manuel Noriega.â Formerly US-backed narco dictator Noriega was, not incidentally, an ex-CIA agent involved in Iran/Contra (Extra!, 1â2/90; FAIR.org, 12/29/24).
The New York Times warmonger-in-chiefâs rendering of the intervention is fantastically selective, forgetting that the Central American nation was already âpre-invadedâ by US military bases, and that the savage bombing of the Afro-Panamanian neighborhood of El Chorrillo transformed it into âLittle Hiroshima.â
But the sober reality is that Venezuela is not Panama. Venezuelaâs Bolivarian Armed Forces, alongside other corps, like the Bolivarian Militia, have spent a quarter of a century preparing for a âprolonged peopleâs war of resistanceâ against the US empire at the level of doctrine, organization, equipment and training.
If the US and its Zionist colonial outpost failed to defeat the heroic Palestinian resistance in Gaza after nearly 500 days of genocidal war, an asymmetric conflict with a significantly larger and stronger force, across a territory more than 2,000 times as large, is not likely a serious proposition.
Nonetheless, it is the duty of all those residing in the imperialist core to grind Washingtonâs industrial-scale death machine to a definitive halt. This paramount strategic objective demands systematically deposing the New York Timesâ Goebbelsian propaganda.
(FAIR)
Lucas Koerner is a journalist and political analyst based in Caracas, Venezuela. He currently serves on the editorial board of Venezuelanalysis.
Ricardo Vaz is a political analyst and editor at Venezuelanalysis.com