If Tehran plans further retaliation for Qassem Soleimani’s elimination, Venezuela could pose a threat.
Iran is second only to Cuba as Venezuela’s top ally.
“Until 2006 our relation with Iran was minimal,” says Maibort Petit, a Venezuelan journalist currently based in the United States. That year, she says, Venezuela’s then-President Hugo Chavez traveled to Tehran and all but fell in love with the country’s then-president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. Pretty soon, “Iran became very important for the Bolivarian revolution,” Petit says.
Mosques in Venezuela started popping up. Daily flights between Caracas and Tehran carried suspicious cargo, including arms. Ahmadinejad was a frequent visitor, at one point spewing Holocaust-denying theories as Chavez nodded in enthusiastic agreement. Ties established, Hezbollah, Iran’s top terror proxy, started using the country as a South American base.
Today, led by Cuban-backed strongman Nicolas Maduro, the once-thriving oil-rich democracy of Venezuela is no longer a real country. It’s ruled by a corrupt crime syndicate that thrives on proceeds from illicit trading in drugs, arms and oil smuggling. Its citizens, meanwhile, are reduced to dumpster diving, petty crime and other desperate means of obtaining life’s most basic necessities.
A toxic mixture of anarchy, repression and a new generation fed on anti-US propaganda makes the country vulnerable as a hot spot for hostile activities against America.
A top aide to Maduro, Tareck el Aissami, is widely considered a Hezbollah bagman. In April, Maduro’s foreign minister, Jorge Arreaza, visited Lebanon and Syria, meeting with top Hezbollah officials and Syrian strongman Bashar al-Assad. According to some reports, he also conferred with Gen. Soleimani, who was killed in a US drone strike earlier this month.
Ominously, Venezuela is the fifth largest producer of thorium, considered an heir to uranium as top nuclear-bomb fuel — and the country offers a friendly base within a little more than spitting distance from Miami.
All of this makes Venezuela one of America’s top worries. Helping the country end its odious alliances and emerge out of its current sorry state should be a top goal. Washington desperately needs to find a credible, incorruptible ally, capable of leading a viable movement to topple the Maduro regime, which is hated by long-oppressed Venezuelans.