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Maduro's soldiers have begun disobeying orders, Rubio says

Ivan Valencia/Bloomberg

A volunteer sorts U.S. aid packages at a warehouse near the Tienditas International Bridge in Cucuta, Colombia

Play video: Venezuela Military Might Not Follow Illegal Orders, Former Ambassador Reich Says

- Thousands of volunteers plan to escort aid over the border
- Food and medical supplies have been piling up for days

By Patricia Laya/ Bloomberg

CUCUTA,Colombia
Petroleumworld 02 21 2019

Venezuelan troops have begun disobeying orders from Nicolas Maduro's top officers and are unlikely to heed calls to crack down on a humanitarian-aid caravan scheduled to enter the country this weekend, U.S. Senator Marco Rubio said.

“Saturday's a day when we're going to find a lot about the Maduro regime,” Rubio, who's been helping set U.S. policy toward Venezuela, said in a telephone interview on Wednesday. “I have reason to believe that rank-and-file military are not going to violently suppress aid workers.”

Juan Guaido, the National Assembly leader battling Maduro as legitimate head of the country, has been pushing aggressively for soldiers and generals alike to recognize him as president, something the U.S. and more than 30 other countries have done. While only one general and two colonels -- among thousands of top officers -- have broken ranks in the past weeks, Rubio says Maduro's grip is loosening.

“There's already significant resistance” among the troops, he said, adding that high-ranking personnel have doubts about “whether the people under their command are going to do what they're asking them to do.”

Read more: Here's how 20 years of Chavismo dragged Venezuela into a crisis

Following Guaido's lead, thousands of volunteers have organized to escort relief caravans expected to enter Venezuela from Colombia on Feb. 23, carrying food and medicine that's been piling up on the border for days. Maduro has ordered his security forces to barricade the entry points, contending the shipments are meant to humiliate and undermine him and serve as a pretext by President Donald Trump to invade his country.

A volunteer sorts U.S. aid packages at a warehouse near the Tienditas International Bridge in Cucuta, Colombia.

Rayner Pena/Bloomberg

Marco Rubio at humanitarian aid facilities in Cucuta, Colombia, on Feb. 17.

In a speech in Miami earlier this week, Trump called on Venezuela's troops to stop blocking the supplies. His administration has moved swiftly to try to shore up Guaido's government-in-waiting but is struggling to move promised aid into the country while Maduro controls the military. “We seek a peaceful transition of power, but all options are open,” Trump warned .

Rubio traveled to the Colombia-Venezuela border on Feb. 17 after a second U.S. supply shipment arrived to help alleviate the growing crisis. Traditional aid groups have shunned the effort as a political ploy, but Guaido is counting on the U.S.-backed initiative to persuade his country's military to recognize him and create an opening for desperately needed relief.

Florida, which Rubio has served as a U.S. senator since 2011, is a swing state where the Latino vote includes Venezuelan expats and is a key bloc.

Read more: Vital food and fuel exit Venezuela as smuggling worsens crisis

Virgin Atlantic founder Sir Richard Branson is planning a star-studded Live Aid-style concert Friday in the border town of Cucuta, Colombia, to raise $100 million and add pressure on Venezuela's authoritarian regime. To offset Branson, Maduro's administration said it also is planning an “immense” concert the same day on the Simon Bolivar bridge connecting the two countries.

In the meantime, there were few signs on Wednesday of the government's planned counter concert or opposition protests along Venezuela's western border. Venezuelans traveled over pedestrian crossings in Tachira state to buy basics or emigrate, while dozens of guardsmen patrolled the Tienditas International Bridge, where the Aid Live event will be held. Other guardsmen and national police were deployed across border cities manning checkpoints and reinforcing crossings.

— With assistance by Andrew Rosati

 

Original article

 

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Story by Patricia Laya from Bloomberg.


bloomberg.com 02 20 2019

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