General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsNow I guess Trump has to appoint a Viceroy for the colony.
A Viceroy is a high-ranking official who rules a country or province as the representative of a monarch, acting with the sovereign's power in distant lands, derived from Latin meaning "in place of a king". Think the Shah of Iran with hazard pay.
However, he has to decide who. Who is intensely loyal to him and yet totally expendable? It has to be someone from his inner circle, someone who will live in a strife torn country while dodging constant assassination and coup attempts. Who is willing to pay the ultimate price to manage the king's empirical interests abroad, potentially for years?
Little Marco knows the language. ...Just sayin'
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Tetrachloride
(9,384 posts)The return of the Conquistadores.
Permanut
(7,996 posts)Remember the Shah?
markodochartaigh
(5,036 posts)would be Don Jr. or Eric. But should we use the Russian term, наме́стник, namestnik? As in, "Putin chose Trump as his namestnik because he was deeply corrupt."
JohnnyRingo
(20,511 posts)...and that's altogether possible when someone comes from another country and starts barking orders.
They will want to govern themselves and will oust the Paper Tiger foreigner. One way or another.
markodochartaigh
(5,036 posts)I doubt this. Venezuela has a long history of domination by authoritarian US puppets. Certainly the Trump regime exceeds the incompetence, stupidity, arrogance, and corruption of Bush II's "nation building" in Iraq. And I think that these qualities will only help when reich-wing Venezuelan expats begin to return to take over the government. I think Haiti or El Salvador style society is what awaits Venezuela, with an opposition to weak for meaningful opposition. If I were a businessman looking for a get rich quick scheme I would buy an evangelical church in Venezuela.
sop
(17,445 posts)"Maduro was an illegitimate president that the United States has not recognized since January 2019. But at Saturdays press conference, U.S. officials expressed support for Delcy Rodríguez, the executive vice president of Venezuela, to be the countrys interim president."
"There is a logic problem: If Maduro was an 'illegitimate dictator,' then wouldnt his executive vice president similarly be illegitimate?"
"Here are some basic facts that existed before U.S. actions Saturday: Delcy Rodríguez has been sanctioned by the U.S. Treasury Department since 2018 for antidemocratic actions and violating human rights. She has also been sanctioned since 2018 by the European Union, a rarer designation reserved for particularly bad actors. She has been a part of Maduros various governments since 2013, when he took over for the deceased Hugo Chavez. She is a staunch Maduro loyalist."
"At his press conference, Trump indicated that Secretary of State Marco Rubio had engaged with Rodríguez by phone and that she had been 'quite gracious' and was willing to do whatever is necessary to facilitate a transition of power. Notably, Rubio appeared visibly uncomfortable with Trumps characterization of the nascent relationship."
"But a more forceful contrast came from Rodríguez, who gave her own press conference on Saturday and railed against the Trump administration. Rodríguez denounced the U.S. action as an 'illegal and illegitimate kidnapping,' rejected the idea of U.S. authority to oversee Venezuela and insisted that Maduro remains the countrys only president.
https://www.ms.now/opinion/trump-maduro-regime-change-venezuela-opposition-leaders
Kennah
(14,554 posts)sarisataka
(22,237 posts)Ars Longa
(433 posts)JohnnyRingo
(20,511 posts)He should be sent out of his comfy DC apartment and into a war zone where he'll need a food taster.
Johonny
(25,475 posts)And US oil companies aren't exactly dying to manage those fields.