Petro, Maduro and Iran – regime change en route to Colombia?

Via Off-Guardian

by Gavin O’Reilly

Gustavo Petro’s victory in Sunday’s Colombian Presidential election, marking the first time Bogotá has elected a left-wing head of state, was not the only far-reaching geopolitical event to recently take place involving Latin America.

A week prior to the former guerrilla fighter’s electoral success, President Nicolás Maduro of neighbouring Venezuela paid an official two day visit to Iran where he signed an official 20-year cooperation agreement with Iranian head of state Ayatollah Khameini – a deal intended to counter the wide-ranging US sanctions targeting both Caracas and Tehran.

With one of Petro’s Presidential aims being to develop further relations with Venezuela however, his incoming Presidency has undoubtedly already been placed in the sights of the regime change lobby, wary that friendly relations between Bogota, Caracas and Tehran, will undermine US-NATO hegemony from South America all the way to the Middle East.

Indeed, CIA involvement in fomenting regime change in Latin America has a history stretching back more than half a century.

In 1970, at the height of Cold War tensions between East and West, the election of Socialist candidate Salvador Allende in Chile, and his subsequent nationalisation of Santiago’s lucrative copper mining industry and telecommunications sector, would quickly draw the ire of Washington.

With corporate interests at stake, and fearing that socialism would take root on its doorstep, a plan was hatched by the White House to remove Allende’s Left-wing government.

On September 11th 1973, a bloody CIA-backed coup was launched in Chile, which would see the death of Allende, officially by suicide but with foul play highly suspected, and the seizing of power by the US-backed General Augusto Pinochet, whose 17-year long reign would see the extrajudicial killing of more than 3,000 left-wing activists, and the further forced exiling of 200,000 more.

The installment of Pinochet’s leadership would subsequently lead to the CIA launching Operation Condor, a Cold War initiative intended to halt the spread of Communism in South America via the covert backing of right-wing political movements in the region.

Like Chile, Bolivia, Paraguay, Uruguay and Brazil had also come under the rule of military dictatorships, Argentina following in 1976, with each receiving the full support of the United States.

Despite the end of the Cold War following the Soviet Union’s collapse in 1991 however, this US interference in Latin America would continue unabated,  most recently seen in 2020 when Operation Gideon, a failed Bay of Pigs-style coup attempt involving US mercenaries and most likely sanctioned covertly by the White House, was launched in order to remove the Venezuelan leadership of Nicolás Maduro – a long-time target of the regime change lobby since he was elected as President of the oil-rich nation following the death of Hugo Chávez in 2013.

Coming just a year after another failed coup attempt in the Latin American country, involving US-backed ‘Interim President’ Juan Guaidó, the motivation for Maduro to further develop relations with Iran, following Tehran’s May 2020 export of almost two million barrels on Iranian oil to Venezuela in order to counter US sanctions, should be clear.

Like Venezuela, the Islamic Republic has also been a long-time opponent of the US-NATO hegemony, when following the 1979 Islamic Revolution, the anti-American Ayatollah Khomeini would come to power, overthrowing the Western-backed Shah Pahlavi, who had himself been installed in a 1953 CIA and MI6 orchestrated coup launched in response to then-Iranian Prime Minister Mohammad Mosaddegh’s decision to nationalise his country’s vast oil reserves.

With striking similarities between both Venezuela and Iran in terms of nationalisation of natural resources, opposition to US Imperialism, and being subject to Western sanctions, it would only seem natural that both countries would seek to develop diplomatic relations.

It would also only seem natural that with the election of Gustavo Petro in Colombia, and his campaign promise to normalise relations with Venezuela, that Bogotá may soon also experience the same regime-change attempts that have previously befell both Caracas and Tehran.

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14 Comments
TN Patriot
TN Patriot
July 7, 2022 7:31 pm

The old Sea Eye Hey just isn’t as good at regime change as it once was, so they had to turn to a closer location to effect their latest color revolution.

Anonymous
Anonymous
July 7, 2022 9:53 pm

We’ve been tromping through other people’s gardens in S. America much farther back than the 1970’s. Think United Fruit in the 1920’s.

Read USMC Major General Smedley Butler’s book War Is a Racket.

Fleabaggs
Fleabaggs
July 7, 2022 10:22 pm

Indeed, CIA involvement in fomenting regime change in Latin America has a history stretching back more than half a century.

Half century?? How old are you Gavin?
How about two centuries.

august
august
July 7, 2022 10:28 pm

Given the Russia-Ukraine situation, and associate issues, it understandable why the recent Colombian election has not received much media play. It is, nevertheless, a very big deal in Latin America, as the FUSA fritters away its scant remaining credibility in that part of the world.

They don’t have to like us (and they don’t) but they are still at least supposed to fear us.

Stucky
Stucky
July 7, 2022 11:13 pm

Hopefully Gustavo Petro won’t interrupt the flow of cocaine and other fun Columbian drugs into America.

Aunt Acid
Aunt Acid
  Stucky
July 8, 2022 12:06 am

Perhaps Hunter is up for an ambassador gig?

It could happen with the Big Guy where he is currently.

brian
brian
  Stucky
July 8, 2022 10:42 am

My daughter goes to Columbia frequently, they buy clothing from small suppliers down there for their shop in Penticton. We were talking about the Columbian cartels there and shes saying they aren’t in Columbia… they all moved to Mexico. Far more lucrative.

Whats left in Columbia are the small criminal gags like you find in any city in merika and canukistan. Not the place it once was known for…

bucknp
bucknp
July 7, 2022 11:18 pm

A couple of books by John Perkins, Confessions of an Economic Hitman and The Secret History of the American Empire.

I could care less Perkins once volunteered for the Peace Corp or that he participated in “saving the whales”. His accounts of CIA and NGO involvement in overthrowing governments in Latin America and elsewhere are quite enlightening.

Where is Marco Rubio? What happened to that lunacy of overthrowing Maduro in Venezuela?

bucknp
bucknp
July 7, 2022 11:40 pm

John Perkins is no dummy. Page 90, Confessions of an Economic Hitman:

“The Depression resulted in the New Deal and in policies that promoted economic regulation, governmental financial manipulation, and the extensive application of fiscal policy. In addition , both the Depression and World War II led to the creation of organizations like the World Bank, the IMF, and the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT). The 1960’s was a pivotal decade in this period and in the shift from neoclassic to Keynesian economics. It happened under the Kennedy and Johnson administrations, and perhaps the most important single influence was one man, Robert McNamara. ”

“McNamara became a strong advocate of a Keynesian approach to government…”

flash
flash
  bucknp
July 8, 2022 7:01 am

Muh greatest generation……reeeeeeeee

bucknp
bucknp
  flash
July 8, 2022 9:08 am
Anonymous
Anonymous
July 8, 2022 1:11 am

It’s a cocaína republic. Speaking of ‘Rhyming’..https://www.thoughtco.com/banana-republic-definition-4776041#:~:text=The%20first%20banana%20republics%20were%20created%20in%20the,in%20depressed%20Central%20American%20countries.%20Banana%20Republic%20Definition

It says ‘Americans’, but if ya dig, at All, the usual suspects. Who say they are, but are not.

flash
flash
July 8, 2022 7:00 am

Definitely not a CIA op too, because the Biden’s are that crafty…

This past April, the Biden admin sold 950,000 Strategic Petroleum Reserve barrels to a Chinese gas company that a private equity firm co-founded by HUNTER BIDEN owns a $1.7 billion stake in.
https://freebeacon.com/national-security/biden-sold-a-million-barrels-from-us-strategic-petroleum-reserve-to-china-owned-gas-giant/

bucknp
bucknp
  flash
July 8, 2022 9:16 am

Biden sucks as it goes with evil bastards. Least we not forget what Texas was doing during Rick Perry’s tenure as governor. Perhaps not Perry’s idea, none the less, there was plenty selling of mineral rights in Texas to Chinese operatives. My list of evil bastard stuff (links of old) is quite extensive. The Good Ole Boy “system”.