The new representative of Venezuela's opposition in the US is urging the Biden administration to relax crippling oil sanctions on Nicolas Maduro's government or risk seeing the socialist-run country turn into another Cuba with Washington scapegoated for increasing authoritarianism and economic hardships.
Fernando Blasi's comments to The Associated Press represent a sharp break from the opposition's maximum pressure campaign of the past four years when it was relying on the U.S. to muscle Maduro out of power.
The failure of that hardline approach led the opposition in January to oust the beleaguered former lawmaker Juan Guaid from his role as interim president, a title he claimed as head of the National Assembly elected in 2015 widely considered Venezuela's last democratic vote. The opposition has replaced that arrangement with a more horizontal style of leadership of mostly exiled politicians.
If we continue down this path, Venezuela is destined to be another Cuba, Blasi said in the interview Friday in Miami. It will become an issue for politicians in Florida to win elections. ... That would be an extremely sad destiny for a country.
Blasi, 51, discussed the future of U.S. sanctions in recent meetings with mainly Democratic members of Congress, including Rep. Gregory Meeks, the ranking member on the House Foreign Affairs Committee.
While designated in January as the National Assembly's envoy in the U.S., he cautioned that he doesn't speak for the opposition Unity Platform as a whole. He acknowledged that many of his allies in the opposition coalition bristle at the idea of rewarding Maduro without upfront commitments to level the playing field ahead of next year's presidential election.
The Biden administration has signaled it's prepared to provide sanctions relief in exchange for concrete steps by Maduro such as promising not to ban whatever candidate emerges from opposition primaries later this year. But other than issuing a license to Chevron so it could resume limited oil production in Venezuela on a six-month trial basis, it has largely left in place a punishing array of sanctions inherited from the Trump administration, which made forcing regime change in the OPEC nation one of its top foreign policy priorities.
Blasi said the pace of sanctions relief is moving too slowly. Negotiations in Mexico, where the government and opposition were supposed to hammer out conditions for next year's election, haven't taken place for months although informal talks have continued in Caracas. He said any easing of sanctions would provide much-needed relief to regular Venezuelans battered by high inflation and shortages. If Maduro fails to honor his commitments, concessions can be quickly reversed, he said.
Time is running out, Blasi said. We have to begin now with a coherent plan whereby we give something and the government reciprocates ... to try and generate the best possible scenario for 2024.
The Biden administration said that, with the license to Chevron, it had shown itself willing to provide targeted, time-limited sanctions relief.
Responding to an inquiry from AP, the State Department said in an email that the policy of the United States is to calibrate sanctions on the basis of humanitarian need and positive democratic outcomes and always in close coordination with the Unity Platform."
Dinorah Figuera, who replaced Guaid as the face of the 2015 National Assembly, took distance from her envoy's comments, saying they don't represent the opposition as a whole.
Pluralism is a value and consensus a necessity to move forward, she said on Twitter.
Unlike many exiled activists in the opposition, who fled possible arrest in Venezuela following anti-government protests, Blasi left his homeland before Maduro took power in 2013, escaping what he said was an attempt by security forces to extort his medical services company. He settled in Miami, where he built a real estate financing company.
(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
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