Operation Condor 2.0: After Bolivia Coup, Trump Dubs Nicaragua “National Security Threatâ and Targets Mexico


Orinoco Tribune – News and opinion pieces about Venezuela and beyond
From Venezuela and made by Venezuelan Chavistas

After presiding over a far-right coup in Bolivia, the US dubbed Nicaragua a ânational security threatâ and announced new sanctions, while Trump designated drug cartels in Mexico as âterroristsâ and refused to rule out military intervention.
By Ben Norton
One successful coup against a democratically elected socialist president is not enough, it seems.
Immediately after overseeing a far-right military coup in Bolivia on November 10, the Trump administration set its sights once again Nicaragua, whose democratically elected Sandinista government defeated a violent right-wing coup attempt in 2018.
Washington dubbed Nicaragua a threat to US national security, and announced that it will be expanding its suffocating sanctions on the tiny Central American nation.
Trump is also turning up the heat on Mexico, baselessly linking the country to terrorism and even hinting at potential military intervention. The moves come as the countryâs left-leaning President AndrĂ©s Manuel LĂłpez Obrador warns of right-wing attempts at a coup.
As Washingtonâs rightist allies in Colombia, Brazil, Chile, and Ecuador are desperately beating back massive grassroots uprisings against neoliberal austerity policies and yawning inequality gaps, the United States is ramping up its aggression against the regionâs few remaining progressive governments.
These moves have led left-wing forces in Latin America to warn of a 21st-century revival of Operation Condor, the Cold War era campaign of violent subterfuge and US support for right-wing dictatorships across the region.
Trump admin declares Nicaragua a ânational security threatâ
A day after the US-backed far-right coup in Bolivia, the White House released a statement applauding the military putsch and making it clear that two countries were next on Washingtonâs target list: âThese events send a strong signal to the illegitimate regimes in Venezuela and Nicaragua,â Trump declared.
On November 25, the Trump White House then quietly issued a statement characterizing Nicaragua as an âunusual and extraordinary threat to the national security and foreign policy of the United States.â
This prolonged for an additional year an executive order Trump had signed in 2018 declaring a state of ânational emergencyâ on the Central American country.
Trumpâs 2018 declaration came after a failed violent right-wing coup attempt in Nicaragua. The US government has funded and supported many of the opposition groups that sought to topple elected Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega, and cheered them on as they sought to overthrow him.
The 2018 national security threat designation was quickly followed by economic warfare. In December the US Congress approved the NICA Act without any opposition. This legislation gave Trump the authority to impose sanctions on Nicaragua, and prevents international financial institutions from doing business with Managua.
Trumpâs new 2019 statement spewed outlandish propaganda against Nicaragua, referring to its democratically elected government â which for decades has been targeted for overthrow by Washington â as a supposedly violent and corrupt âregime.â

This executive order is similar to one made by President Barack Obama in 2015, which designated Venezuela as a threat to US national security.
Both orders were used to justify the unilateral imposition of suffocating economic sanctions. And Trumpâs renewal of the order paves the way for an escalated economic attack on Nicaragua.
RELATED CONTENT: Welcome to the Global Rebellion Against Neoliberalism
The extension received negligible coverage in mainstream English-language corporate media, but right-wing Spanish-language outlets in Latin America heavily amplified it.
And opposition activists are gleefully cheering on the intensification of Washingtonâs hybrid warfare against Managua.
More aggressive US sanctions against Nicaragua
Voice of America (VOA), the US governmentâs main foreign broadcasting service, noted that the extension of the executive order will be followed with more economic attacks.
Washingtonâs ambassador to the Organization of American States (OAS), Carlos Trujillo, told VOA, âThe pressure against Nicaragua is going to continue.â
The OAS representative added that Trump will be announcing new sanctions against the Nicaraguan government in the coming weeks.
VOA stated clearly that âNicaragua, along with Cuba and Venezuela, is one of the Latin American countries whose government Trump has made a priority to put diplomatic and economic pressure on to bring about regime change.â
VOAâs report quoted several right-wing Nicaraguans who called for even more US pressure against their country.
Bianca Jagger, a celebrity opposition activist formerly married to Rolling Stones frontman Mick Jagger, called on the US to impose sanctions on Nicaraguaâs military in particular.
âThe Nicaraguan military has not been touched because they [US officials] are hoping that the military will like act the military in Bolivia,â Jagger said, referring to the military officials who violently overthrew Boliviaâs democratically elected president.
Many of these military leaders had been trained at the US governmentâs School of the Americas, a notorious base of subversion dating back to Operation Condor. Latin American media has been filled in recent days with reports that Bolivian soldiers were paid $50,000 and generals were paid up to $1 million to carry out the putsch.
đłđźNo se ha sancionado el ejĂ©rcito de #Nicaragua “porque tal vez tienen esperanza de que el ejĂ©rcito se va a conducir como el de Bolivia”, @BiancaJagger. https://t.co/43BPEjmEEp pic.twitter.com/6KaT7NVjko
â Voz de AmĂ©rica (@VOANoticias) November 26, 2019
VOA added that âin the case of the Central American government [of Nicaragua], the effect that sanctions can have can be greater because it is a more economically vulnerable country.â
VOA quoted Roberto Courtney, a prominent exiled right-wing activist and executive director of the opposition group Ethics and Transparency, which monitors elections in Nicaragua and is supported by the US governmentâs regime-change arm, the National Endowment for Democracy (NED).
Courtney, who claims to be a human rights activist, salivated over the prospects of US economic war on his country, telling VOA, âThere is a bit of a difference [between Nicaragua and Bolivia] ⊠the economic vulnerability makes it more likely that the sanctions will have an effect.â
Courtney, who was described by VOA as an âexpert on the electoral process,â added, âIf there is a stick, there must also be a carrot.â He said the OAS could help apply diplomatic and political pressure against Nicaraguaâs government.
These unilateral American sanctions are illegal under international law, and considered an act of war. Iranâs foreign minister, Javad Zarif, has characterized US economic warfare âfinancial terrorism,â explaining that it disproportionately targets civilians in order to turn them against their government.
Top right-wing Nicaraguan opposition groups applauded Trump for extending the executive order and for pledging new sanctions against their country.
Estados Unidos amplió por un año mås la vigencia de la Declaración de Emergencia Nacional con respecto a la Situación en Nicaragua. https://t.co/Xq8m8UWVfr
â Alianza CĂvica Nicaragua (@AlianzaCivicaNi) November 25, 2019
The Nicaraguan Civic Alliance for Justice and Democracy, an opposition front group that brings together numerous opposition groups, several of which are also funded by the US governmentâs NED, welcomed the order.
Trump dubs drug cartels in Mexico âterrorists,â refuses to rule out drone strikes
While the US targeting of Nicaragua and Venezuelaâs governments is nothing new, Donald Trump is setting his sights on a longtime US ally in Mexico.
In 2018, Mexican voters made history when they elected AndrĂ©s Manuel LĂłpez Obrador as president in a landslide. LĂłpez Obrador, who is often referred to by his initials AMLO, is Mexicoâs first left-wing president in more than five decades. He ran on a progressive campaign pledging to boost social spending, cut poverty, combat corruption, and even decriminalize drugs.
AMLO is wildly popular in Mexico. In February, he had a record-breaking 86 percent approval rating. And he has earned this widespread support by pledging to combat neoliberal capitalist orthodoxy.
âThe neoliberal economic model has been a disaster, a calamity for the public life of the country,â AMLO has declared. âThe child of neoliberalism is corruption.â
When he unveiled his multibillion-dollar National Development Plan, LĂłpez Obrador announced the end to âthe long night of neoliberalism.â
RELATED CONTENT: Evo the âTerrorist & the Weaponization of Fear-Mongering Labels
AMLOâs left-wing policies have caused shockwaves in Washington, which has long relied on neoliberal Mexican leaders ensuring a steady cheap exploitable labor base and maintaining a reliable market for US goods and open borders for US capital and corporations.
On November 27 â a day after declaring Nicaragua a ânational security threatâ â Trump announced that the US government will be designating Mexican drug cartels as âterrorist organizations.â
Such a designation could pave the way for direct US military intervention in Mexico.
Trump revealed this new policy in an interview with right-wing Fox News host Bill OâReilly. âAre you going to designate those cartels in Mexico as terror groups and start hitting them with drones and things like that?â OâReilly asked.
The US president refused to rule out drone strikes or other military action against drug cartels in Mexico.
President @realDonaldTrump tells me he is 90 days into the process of designating Mexican drug cartels as Foreign Terrorist Organizations – which would give US forces more leverage in taking them out. pic.twitter.com/ewSJMkt6rr
â Bill O’Reilly (@BillOReilly) November 27, 2019
Trumpâs announcement seemed to surprise the Mexican government, which immediately called for a meeting with the US State Department.
The designation was particularly ironic considering some top drug cartel leaders in Mexico have long-standing ties to the US government. The leaders of the notoriously brutal cartel the Zetas, for instance, were originally trained in counter-insurgency tactics by the US military.
Throughout the Cold War, the US government armed, trained, and funded right-wing death squads throughout Latin America, many of which were involved in drug trafficking. The CIA also used drug money to fund far-right counter-insurgency paramilitary groups in Central America.
These tactics were also employed in the Middle East and South Asia. The United States armed, trained, and funded far-right Islamist extremists in Afghanistan in the 1980s in order to fight the Soviet Union. These same US-backed Salafi-jihadists then founded al-Qaeda and the Taliban.
This strategy was later repeated in the US wars on Libya and Syria. ISIS commander Omar al-Shishani, to take one example, had been trained by the US military and enjoyed direct support from Washington when he was fighting against Russia.
The Barack Obama administration also oversaw a campaign called Project Gunrunner and Operation Fast and Furious, in which the US government helped send thousands of guns to cartels in Mexico.
Mexican journalist Alina Duarte explained that, with the Trump administrationâs designation of cartels as terrorists, âThey are creating the idea that Mexico represents a threat to their national security.â
âShould we start talking about the possibility of a coup against Lopez Obrador in Mexico?â Duarte asked.
She noted that the US corporate media has embarked on an increasingly ferocious campaign to demonize AMLO, portraying the democratically elected president as a power-hungry aspiring dictator who is supposedly wrecking Mexicoâs economy.
Duarte discussed the issue of US interference in Mexican politics in an interview with The Grayzoneâs Max Blumenthal and Ben Norton, on their podcast Moderate Rebels:
Now, a whisper campaign over fears that the right-wing opposition may try to overthrow President Andrés Manuel López Obrador is spreading across Mexico.
AMLO himself has publicly addressed the rumors, making it clear that he will not tolerate any discussion of coups.
âHow wrong the conservatives and their hawks are,â LĂłpez Obrador tweeted on November 2. Referencing the 1913 assassination of progressive President Francisco Madero, who had been a leader of the Mexican Revolution, AMLO wrote, âNow is different.â
âAnother coup dâĂ©tat will now be allowed,â he declared.
Ahora es distinto. Aunque son otras realidades y no debe caerse en la simplicidad de las comparaciones, la transformaciĂłn que encabezo cuenta con el respaldo de una mayorĂa libre y consciente, justa y amante de la legalidad y de la paz, que no permitirĂa otro golpe de Estado.
â AndrĂ©s Manuel (@lopezobrador_) November 2, 2019
In recent months, as fears of a coup intensify, LĂłpez Obrador has swung even further to the left, directly challenging the US government and asserting an independent foreign policy that contrasts starkly to the subservience of his predecessors.
AMLOâs government has rejected US efforts to delegitimize Venezuelaâs leftist government, throwing a wrench in Washingtonâs efforts to impose right-wing activist Juan GuaidĂł as coup leader.
AMLO has welcomed Ecuadorâs ousted socialist leader Rafael Correa and hosted Argentinaâs left-leaning Alberto FernĂĄndez for his first foreign trip after winning the presidency.
In October, LĂłpez Obrador even welcomed Cuban President DĂaz-Canel to Mexico for a historic visit.
Trumpâs Operation Condor 2.0
For Washington, an independent and left-wing Mexico is intolerable.
In a speech for right-wing, MAGA hat-wearing Venezuelans in Miami, Florida in February, Trump ranted against socialism for nearly an hour, threatened the remaining leftist countries in Latin America with regime change.
âThe days of socialism and communism are numbered not only in Venezuela, but in Nicaragua and in Cuba as well,â he declared, adding that socialism would never be allowed to take root in heart of capitalism in the United States.
While Trump has claimed he seeks to withdraw from wars in the Middle East (when he is not occupying its oil fields), he has ramped up aggressive US intervention in Latin America.
Though the neoconservative war hawk John Bolton is no longer overseeing US foreign policy, Elliott Abrams remains firmly embedded in the State Department, dusting off his Iran-Contra playbook to decimate socialism in Latin America all over again.
During the height of the Cold War, Operation Condor thousands of dissidents were murdered, and hundreds of thousands more were disappeared, tortured, or imprisoned with the assistance of the US intelligence apparatus.
Today, as Latin America is increasingly viewed through the lens of a new Cold War, Operation Condor is being reignited with new mechanisms of sabotage and subversion in play. The mayhem has only begun.

Benjamin Norton is the founder and editor of the independent news website Multipolarista, where he does original reporting in both English and Spanish. Benjamin has reported from numerous countries, including Venezuela, Nicaragua, Bolivia, Ecuador, Honduras, Colombia, and more. His journalistic work has been published in dozens of media outlets, and he has done interviews on Sky News, Al Jazeera, Democracy Now, El Financiero Bloomberg, Al Mayadeen teleSUR, RT, TRT World, CGTN, Press TV, HispanTV, Sin Censura, and various TV channels in Mexico, Nicaragua, Venezuela, Ecuador, and Bolivia. Benjamin writes a regular column for Al Mayadeen (in English and Spanish). He was formerly a reporter with the investigative journalism website The Grayzone, and previously produced the political podcast and video show Moderate Rebels. His personal website is BenNorton.com, and he tweets at @BenjaminNorton.