7 Comments

  1. Few people in Venezuela will [rue the fall of Nicolás Maduro](https://inews.co.uk/opinion/trump-is-echoing-putins-justification-for-invading-ukraine-4118459?ico=in-line_link), the brutal and kleptocratic dictator who drove the world’s most oil-rich nation into deep poverty and hyperinflation.

    The answer to what comes next for Venezuelans – direct American rule, a return to democracy, or more *Chavismo* – a form of left-wing populism advocated by Maduro and his predecessor Hugo Chávez – is only to be found somewhere in the thicket of mood swings, knee-jerks and grudges that populate Donald Trump’s brain.

    Across the West, there’s a search for the [meaning and implications](https://inews.co.uk/opinion/no-country-safe-trumps-anarchy-venezuela-4147280https://inews.co.uk/opinion/no-country-safe-trumps-anarchy-venezuela-4147280?ico=in-line_link) of this radical departure from what was previously Maga’s declared opposition to foreign adventurism.

    While the consequences for South America, Greenland and Denmark are uppermost, the impact on Russia has been under-discussed. Like Trump’s tactics or loathe them, one positive development is that Vladimir Putin has just lost yet another friend in his alliance of dictatorships.

    Putin and Maduro were close partners. When Maduro stole elections, Russia provided him with political cover. When Russia mounted its second invasion of Ukraine in 2022, Maduro reciprocated by publicly backing the war.

    Nor was their alliance only political. Over the last 20 years, Russia has supplied billions of dollars to the Venezuelan state, and is the leading provider of its weapons (including, amusingly, the air defences that failed to trouble US aircraft a few days ago).

    The two dictatorships also co-operate on the development of Venezuelan oil fields and sanctions-jumping – the latter evidenced by the rush to re-designate dark-fleet tankers from Venezuelan to Russian national flags in the last couple of days.

    Maduro’s ejection is just the latest sorry episode for the Putin fanclub, which is in a parlous state.

    The Wagner Group is a shattered fragment of what it once was, after its attempted rebellion against the Kremlin and its leader’s death in a plane “accident”. Bashar al-Assad’s bloodstained tyranny in Syria, propped up at vast financial and military cost by Russia, collapsed just over a year ago, with the dictator himself fleeing to Moscow.

    Hezbollah, which served as a key ally of Assad and Putin in the Syrian war, is in tatters after a battering by Israel, and under pressure from the Lebanese government to disarm.

    Iran, a key supplier of drones and a longstanding ally of the Kremlin, is riven by mass street protests, now into their ninth day. The Revolutionary Guard is reportedly using live fire to murder civilian protesters, while in some cities security apparatus has been attacked and overrun by crowds chanting for the downfall of the Ayatollah.

    There is great anxiety in Moscow at a perceived loss of control over the Caucasus, amid protests in Georgia against Russian political interference, disillusionment in Armenia after the failure of the Kremlin’s security guarantees in the war with Azerbaijan, and a deterioration of the relationship with Azeri dictator Ilham Aliyev after the Russians shot down a civilian airliner.

    After years of building up alliances, Putin is left with only Iran, Belarus and North Korea round the table. Meanwhile, failure in Ukraine has reduced his status with China from a peer power to something verging on a client state, reliant on Beijing for money and technological know-how.

  2. justbrowsinginpeace on

    Really? The US has joined the “Special Operation” school of international diplomacy. NATO member territory is being threatened by another NATO member and the alliance is looking frail. European Powers UK and France are at their lowest ebb economically for a generation and soon China will surely take Taiwan distracting the world from what they have done in the Ukraine and may attempt elsewhere.

  3. Hopefully not.

    I suspect that they are going “Potemkin village” on their economy to appear strong. Of course I cannot verify this, but if true, the West should escalate on supporting Ukraine, until Russia’s initial offer is a freeze and then start negotiating.

  4. Putin watched all these dictators being ousted since 2000:

    * Saddam Hussein (Iraq)

    * Zine El Abidine Ben Ali

    * Hosni Mubarak (Egypt)

    * Muammar Gaddafi (Libya)

    * Ali Abdullah Saleh (Yemen)

    * Viktor Yanukovych (Ukraine)

    * Blaise Compaoré (Burkina Faso)

    * Omar al-Bashir (Sudan)

    * Gotabaya Rajapaksa (Sri Lanka)

    * Bashar al-Assad (Syria)

    * Sheikh Hasina (Bangladesh)

    * Nicolas Maduro (Venezuela)

    One of them being his puppet, and 2 regimes he propped himself. Kadyrov is next, and possibly Khamenei.

  5. What do you mean maximum weakness? He has Trump in bed with him. Biden was weak, but Trump is effectively destroying post-WW2 US Foreign policy.