header

header

Sunday, August 5, 2018

Venezuela: Always a bad sign when your military scatters and runs Read more: https://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2018/08/venezuela_always_a_bad_sign_when_your_military_scatters_and_runs.html#ixzz5NLnfE9NX Follow us: @AmericanThinker on Twitter | AmericanThinker on Facebook

As with everything else in socialist Venezuela, truth is experiencing some shortages.
So it's not all that clear whether the 'incident' that went down in Venezuela on Saturday afternoon, seen in this video here, was really an 'assassination attempt' on President Nicolas Maduro, from two drones carrying the moldable explosive known as C-4,  as the Venezuelan government claimed, or else the noise from a gas canister explosion from a nearby apartment building, as local firemen have alleged. (CBS had a pretty good report on that, along with a Getty photo, here.)
What's also not known is who did it. Was it an internal coup, or something Colombia did, as Maduro has just a little too quickly claimed, or was it the sheer shambles of socialism as the country falls apart across the board that led to the unscripted (or who knows, maybe scripted) explosion? Was it a combination of the two? Or, as Venezuelan Twitter dissidents have alleged, was it something the embattled Maduro set off himself, in a bid to win sympathy for himself along with an excuse to arrest dissidents?
With icy cold detachment, Pedro Burelli tweets the extent of the confusion:

But based on the pictures seen, here's one thing that isn't in confusion:
The military ran. It broke up like a mob of scared rabbits. They were the picture of chaos and disorder and it was all caught on camera. The whole grand parade Maduro was making a speech at the head of absolutely fell apart as the soldiers broke and fled in panic. It kind of looked like the Winter Palace scenes from the 1917 Russian revolution, except in tropical Technicolor. Here is a CNN screengrab from a VTV report (VTV is a coopted private Venezuelan network that has long been tamed by the regime), which can be viewed in full on Youtube.
There didn't seem to be anyone injured or down in their area as a reason to force them to cut and run, either, although one man with three stars on his shoulders, probably a general near the stands, was later seen with a bloody face. That could support the gas explosion theory as setting off a panic. The one bloody face could also support the self-attack theory. However, the troops in formation, based on the film, did break apart in chaos two very distant sections of the parade, which might support the two drones claim. So it's hard to say what happened, particularly with as dishonest a government as Maduro's making the claims.



The sorry specter of Venezuela's army falling into rapid disorder is the one takeaway that we know the Maduroites didn't want to get out. The other thing that doesn't do Maduro any good is the expressions of panic on his own and the first lady's faces from the pictures. Never helpful for a strongman to look so very weak. Here is a screengrab from CNN and you can see the whole report on Youtube here.
Another problem for Maduro is that his security men looked like buffoons. Look at the chaos and the odd visages of his supposed security detail - look at that protective ... umbrella. The full RT video can be viewed here.
The fact that the state cameras cut off the footage and ran some sequence of a white horse running (this was a Hugo Chavez favorite trope) was classic state censorship, but they didn't censor all of it, and the sorry spectacle of a weak Venezuelan military of very little discipline pretty well now gets word out that Maduro isn't all that well-protected.
Maduro's detested regime, which is in there by full-blown electoral fraud, (not a single nation of consequence supports the result of last May's vote) has already been subject to assorted quasi coup attempts. There was one last year when a disgruntled military man attacked the supreme court. Now there is this. And with valuable intelligence out there for all to see about the shambling state of Venezuela's military, you can bet there will be new efforts coming up to leverage that.
With word now out that a panicky military makes success more likely than supposed, and risk less and less obvious, the one thing that can be concluded is that such acts will get increasingly bolder, more frequent, and more violent.


 
https://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2018/08/venezuela_always_a_bad_sign_when_your_military_scatters_and_runs.html

No comments:

Post a Comment