sexta-feira, 25 de janeiro de 2019

Russia declares support for Maduro. What now?

(Putin receiving Maduro in his official residente near Moscow, on December 5th, 2018. Promise of political support.)

          Amid Venezuela's severe social, political and economic crisis, Vladimir Putin has called for President Nicolas Maduro to express support to his authority as country's president. Several countries around the world, such as US, Canada, France and Brazil, declared they don't recognize Maduro's new term and has considered Juan Guaidó, National Assembly's president, as the legitimate President in charge.

          In the message, Putin stated that "the worsening of the internal political crisis" is "provoked from outside the country", in allusion, although not exclusive, to the US, and that this interference is a "gross violation" of international law. 

          Noting the votes at the UN, international alliances and statements of Moscow and Washington, mainly after Russia annexed the Crimea and started to sponsor a war in eastern Ukraine, its clear that Venezuela is an ally of the Russians and serves as a Kremlin's space of presence in a region traditionally influenced by the US.

          Last December, Russia sent two Tupolev Tu-160 Blackjacks bombers to Venezuela to carry out military exercises with the local armed forces, where they stayed from day 10 to 14. On day 12, they performed aerial maneuvers lasting 10 hours over the Caribbean Sea. The Tu-160s were introduced in November 2017 and were designed to realize more than 10 thousands kilometers flights being capable to carry nuclear warheads.

          The bomber's presence in Venezuela was a double message to the US, which recently abandoned a treaty over nuclear warheads singed with the Soviets in 1987 (Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Traty, INF, which Trump claimed of being violated several times by the Russians) and has being raising the tone of criticism against Maduro's dictatorial government. It may also be a response to the support given to Ukraine by the Americans in the Kerch Strait crisis in November 2018. Secondarily, its also a message to Jair Bonsonaro's Brazil, the largest country in Latin America, which has been a harsh critic of Caracas and seeks an alignment with Washington.

(Tupolev Tu-160)

          There's also the possibility of Russia establishing a military base in the Venezuelan island of La Orchila, in the Caribbean Sea, what would ensure permanent presence of troops in the region and would supplant logistic difficulties, such as displacement and supply of aircrafts such as Tu-160. Although Russian interest in the place is more than then years old and this possibility is unclear, a base in La Orchila would imply in a change in US-led military security in the Americas.  

          The Russian presence is also a way of reaffirming its aliance with Caracas. Between 2016 and 2017, Moscow lent at least U$ 17 billion to Venezuela, and in December 2018 (when Maduro met Putin) promised U$ 6 billion more in investment in oil industry and gold exploration. Such debts are in part paid with oil and the participation of Russian state-owned Rosneft in Venezuelan PDVSA's businesses. In the political field, Maduro has been a staunch Moscow's supporter is its geopolitical actions, such as in Ukraine and neighbouring countries.

          The question that remains in these tension days for the Venezuelans is: will Russia act before the treat of a possible Maduro's downfall? In a tense moment, the possibility of Caracas asking Moscow for a last-minute help stays open since, such as Putin's phone call showed, if the current political crisis is caused by a foreign intrvention would be legitimate for other foreigners (the Russians) to come in denfense of Maduro. In addition, the Russians have much to lose with a possible government's downfall, not only money and contracts, but also a possible mid-term military presence in the Caribbean Sea, region traditionally influenced by Washington. The picture that hasn't been seen in the Americas since the 1962 Missile Crisis could repeat, albeit to a lesser extent than the tension which almost led the world to a nuclear war.

* Published in Portuguese on January 24, 2019.

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