🧵The Juan Guaidó experience has been full of what we could (generously) call "unconventional" antics. Pointless infomercials, a banana-fueled coup attempt, a pathetic mercenary invasion, etc. Now w/ the focus on Vzlan foreign assets, the self-proclaimed one continues to surprise
Vzla is facing a bunch of legal cases thanks to pro-corporate int'l arbitration tribunals. The "interim govt", the one "recognized" in US courts, has decided that its strategy is going to be "when the creditors arrive let's just turn off the lights and pretend we're not home"
Yes, you read it right. The US-backed Venezuelan opposition (or its representation) is simply not showing up in court. This allows judges to greenlight corporations' efforts to collect the arbitration awards by moving to seize Venezuelan assets (more on this below)
The latest case involved three Cayman Islands-based subsidiaries of the Pharo group, a hedge fund. The corporations want to collect on defaulted Venezuelan bonds (sanctions meant the govt was no longer able to service debt), with amounts+interest totaling a whopping $1.2 billion
Though the Pharo case is not covered, we recommend this piece by @frrodriguezc on the international arbitration award disputes in US courts and the opposition's actions. It's long and in Spanish, but very insightful
This small town crook behavior from Guaidó and acolytes came into the spotlight when they failed to respond in a case involving ConocoPhillips and a massive $8.5 billion award, probably more than all the other pending amounts combined. This piece has more: venezuelanalysis.com/news/15340
The US puppet and some people in made-up posts issued some less-than-convincing arguments that there was nothing to argue, they wanted to save attorney fees and there's an effort to have the award annulled at a World Bank tribunal. None of the alternatives seem very plausible
The no-show invited extra scrutiny because just days before a Delaware court document relating to yet another legal battle to collect on international arbitration awards mentioned a $1.3 billion agreement between the Guaidó make-believe administration and... ConocoPhillips
The made-up government tied itself into a knot in its denial, the court's "special master" asked to strike that part from the report without any real explanation. This led to the plausible speculation that it wasn't a formal "agreement" as much as a wink-wink understanding
This theory is not conjured from thin air. José Ignacio Hernández, former pretend "special attorney general" in Guaidó's make-believe administration, mentioned an understanding with Conoco in a leaked audio. Small detail: Hernández actually worked for corporations suing Vzla
At this point there's a temptation to shrug and tell the latest creditor to grab a ticket and wait in line. Between bondholders and arbitration awards,the amounts already exceed what Vzla's most prized foreign asset (Citgo) is valued at. It's hard to picture the company surviving
For now, paradoxically, it's the US Treasury Department keeping the corporations at bay with orders blocking the seizure of Venezuelan assets without special permission. But there are signs that these protections will be lifted in 2022, and the vultures are already lining up
This takes us to "interim president" and part-time used car salesman @jguaido. It's not unreasonable, and we bet our imaginary farm, that he'll land a sweet gig as a non-executive corporate board member. Or in a bs corporate-funded "democracy promotion" NGO. You read it here 1st!
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🧵When it comes to reporting about Venezuela, there is no corporate outlet even remotely close to the level of dishonesty of the New York Times. Seriously, it's one piece of misrepresented bullsh*t after another. Follow this thread as we break it down
This is the piece:
The article is not to be taken seriously b/c it starts from a blatant lie. US "prodding" has nothing to do with Venezuela holding elections. It is dictated by the Constitution that they be held this year and they were never in doubt shorturl.at/LFusR
Anyone not high on Western exceptionalism would actually be ashamed of their government meddling in other countries' affairs. But alas, this is the NYT.
In corporate media spiel, "restoring democracy" just means a US puppet being back in the presidential palace
🧵🧵The border dispute between Venezuela and Guyana has flared up recently, leading to a war of words, increased military deployment and increasing signs of US intervention. We have prepared an infographic to explain the history and context of the controversy (thread)
The Essequibo Strip is a sparsely populated, 160,000 square km region spanning to the west of the Essequibo River. It has been the subject of centuries of dispute which, sadly, have never taken into account the indigenous population
Instead, it has always been pretty much about resources. Gold mining is what drove British expansion westward (more on this below), and the recent discoveries of massive oil deposits led to Venezuela and Guyana raising tensions too
About time... Spain's @el_pais reports that the $3 billion in frozen Vzlan assets will soon be released. This was agreed to between the Venezuelan govt and opposition last November! But this thread is to point out the dishonest b.s. from the Spanish establishment's mouthpiece 🧵
This is the article in question:
It essentially relies on anonymous sources who say that the funds will soon be released. El País then covers this fairly straightforward report in a cloak of lies and misconceptionsenglish.elpais.com/international/…
So it begins. How dare Maduro want to access Venezuelan funds? Then it's incredibly disingenuous and racist to claim the govt wants to fix schools/hospitals to "polish its image." If a western govt builds a hospital, it's laudable. If Vzla does it it's to fool voters. GTFOH
🧵🧵Worse than a broken clock... Even when it wants to state the obvious, in this case that sanctions are a terrible and wrong policy, the @nytimes remains fully draped in US exceptionalism. The corporate media are an active front of the US empire (thread)
The article in question () is instantly off to a bad start. We are supposed to agree that Iran and NK should not have nuclear weapons, unlike the only country to ever use them. And would they also call the Iraq war an "egregious violation of intl laws"? https://t.co/ElNZjjKTlTtinyurl.com/3rmur79p
The end of the first section shows that this editorial is really not going anywhere since it's based on the outrageously false premise that the US should have some kind of god-given ability to impose murderous sanctions on other nations when it so pleases
🧵🧵🧵We just came across an incredible piece from the Financial Times (not in a good way). It has a remarkable blend of fallacious arguments, outright lies, bias, and lack of standards. This is a long thread, so bear with us!
This is the article in question from @FT (tinyurl.com/y32pmvtk). You can tell from the off that you're in for a ride because it's based on this assumption that the West "presses for free and fair elections" when this in fact has happened less frequently than Yeti sightings
FT "journalists" must get a bonus for every use of the word "authoritarian." It's not often that a piece starts w/ an outright falsehood, b/c "democracy" never left Venezuela, only the US didn't like election results. But this apocalyptic tone is worthy of a good chuckle
The US-backed Venezuelan opposition, which runs an imaginary parliament, wants a US court to declare a Venezuelan bond as invalid to try and soften the disaster brought by their complete bundling when in charge of CITGO
The strategy haw few chances of success, for several reasons, not least of them that when this National Assembly was actually running it *did not* formally declare the bond issued by the Maduro govt as illegal. A US-backed group was not about to challenge financial investors
.@Reuters will not let a short, straightforward piece get in the way of some outrageous lying. US sanctions have been classified as "collective punishment" against the Vzlan population, and these stenographer clowns write "sanctions against the Maduro govt" #SanctionsKill