“A crime against Venezuela is a crime against Latin America,” said René González, speaking for the Cuban Five, who were present at a March 15 “We’re all Venezuela” concert at the University of Havana that attracted thousands of people protesting U.S. threats and sanctions against Venezuela. Alí Rodríguez, inset, Venezuelan Ambassador to Cuba, also spoke, thanking the Cuban people and their revolutionary leadership for “extraordinary solidarity” with the Venezuelan people.
On March 9 President Barack Obama declared Venezuela a “national security threat,” deepening sanctions against the country, and ordered additional restrictions against seven officials, blocking or freezing their property and interests in the United States and denying them entry. The two countries have not had full diplomatic representation since 2008, though the U.S. remains Venezuela’s largest trading partner, and Venezuela is the fourth-largest supplier of crude petroleum to the U.S. There are tens of thousands of Cuban medical personnel throughout Venezuela, and Caracas supplies Cuba with the majority of its crude oil at heavily discounted prices. Cuban Foreign Minister Bruno Rodríguez visited Caracas March 14 to show the Cuban Revolution’s solidarity with Venezuela. The time for the U.S. “to treat Latin America like its backyard has ended,” he said. “The U.S. government needs to understand that it can’t handle Cuba with a carrot nor Venezuela with a stick.” — MAGGIE TROWE THE MILITANT Vol. 79/No. 11, March 30, 2015
0 Comments
Your comment will be posted after it is approved.
Leave a Reply. |
Voices for the FiveArchives
May 2016
|