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Oct 22, 2021 14 tweets 6 min read Read on X
When it comes to ConocoPhillips, the US-backed Venezuelan opposition is a gift that keeps on giving. And giving here means giving the oil giant ever better chances of seizing billions-worth of Venezuelan assets. Legendary incompetence or something more? Let's take a look 🧵🧵🧵
The latest development is that the ICSID (World Bank arbitration tribunal) has suspended proceedings to annul an $8.5B award given to ConocoPhillips for a 2007 nationalization of its assets. Why? Because the Juan Guaidó merry band of idiots did not fulfill its payment obligations
This is especially significant because the US-backed pretend administration caught a lot of heat for not showing up in a DC court where ConocoPhillips is looking to have its award enforced. We explained it at length in this piece
venezuelanalysis.com/news/15340
Facing a storm, Guaidó resorted to his most trusted weapon: mumbo-jumbo. His team put out a dense communique saying there was nothing to be done at the US court because... they were concentrating their fire on getting the ICSID award annulled, and they were optimistic!
Here there are 2 points:
1) If there's a case for the award to be annulled, why not present it before the US court as well?
2) When this statement was put out (Oct 4), the opposition had already defaulted on its obligations (see image above)
It's a clown show, or perhaps more...
Not showing up in court was not the *first* Conoco-related scandal for Guaidó's make-believe administration. Days before, a Delaware court report mentioned a $1.3 billion agreement between the US-backed opposition and ConocoPhillips (related to another arbitration award)
This agreement was unconvincingly denied and removed from the report with no explanation, which led many to plausibly speculate whether this was less of a formal agreement than a wink-wink understanding. Say, to not stand in the way in the other arbitration award?
In the thread below we recap this Guaidó legal strategy of turning off the lights and pretending no one's home. We've also gone on the Twitter record predicting that the US puppet will land a sweet gig once the curtain falls on this circus
With all these shenanigans, Conoco and other corporations are inching closer to seizing Venezuelan assets, chief among them oil subsidiary Citgo, valued at $8 billion. US protections of Vzlan assets, to save the opposition's blushes, are likely to be lifted in 2022
But this latest ConocoPhillips development has a gun of the smoking variety (see image). In this email to the CP legal team, check out the first address. Sound familiar? That's Alberto Ravell, none other than the son of Juan Guaidó's comms director (also named Alberto Ravell)
This is worth spelling out. The son of Guaidó's comms director is working as counsel for a corporation that is suing Venezuela and trying to seize assets. And because of a ridiculous decision to "recognize" a self-proclaimed idiot, this is Vzla's representative before US courts
When we say that Venezuela's elites are very tight with corporate interests, this is what we mean. Also, expect the mainstream media, always claiming that Vzla's judiciary/electoral council/etc is not "independent" to have no interest in this scandalous conflict of interest
Stay tuned and follow us as we continue to report on these legal battles, which start to look more and more like convoluted schemes for corporations to lay their hands on Venezuelan assets behind a thick cover of opposition idiocy and incompetence
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More from @venanalysis

Nov 29, 2023
🧵🧵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) Image
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 Image
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 Image
Read 11 tweets
Sep 12, 2023
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 🧵 Image
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 Image
Read 20 tweets
Jul 25, 2023
🧵🧵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) Image
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
Image
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 Image
Read 13 tweets
Jun 9, 2023
🧵🧵🧵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! Image
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 Image
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 Image
Read 17 tweets
Jun 7, 2023
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

reuters.com/markets/commod…
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 Image
Read 5 tweets
May 27, 2023
The @BBC is shocked, of course w/ its stiff-upper-lip propagandist style, to find out that... (you better sit down for this) the Venezuelan government wants to position its message on social media (gasp!). Yes, it will be hard to recover from this one (thread) Image
This is the article in question (bbc.com/news/blogs-tre…). In summary, the UK's state propaganda outlet is appalled to find out that the Venezuelan govt tries to do what it and other state/private channels do all the time. Exceptionalist delusion Image
Unless you're naive enough to believe giant tech platforms are a neutral playing field, it's quite reasonable to try and amplify the message to get over the noise and the well-funded propaganda coming from the enemy. Also, don't Western outlets just repeat the State Dept line? Image
Read 12 tweets

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