We know from political crises in Africa that foreign intervention is a bad idea

Image credit David Hern��ndez via Flickr (CC).
The��political, economic, and humanitarian��crisis in oil-rich��Venezuela��has caught the world���s attention.��As foreign powers position themselves for intervention, lessons from Africa��offer��insights into��what will��not��work��and��the dangers that lie ahead.
This is what we know.��When��Juan Hugo��Ch��vez��won��Venezuela���s��presidential election��in 1998, he was swept into office��on��a��platform calling for social revolution.��Although its huge��oil reserves made��Venezuela��one of��Latin America���s��richest��counties, it was��profoundly��unequal, with the��descendants of European settlers��dominating��the��state and economy.��Venezuela���s poor,��indigenous,��and African-Venezuelan��populations��rallied to Ch��vez��and his��call to��redistribute��wealth and power.��Following��Ch��vez���s��death��in 2013,��Nicol��s Maduro��was elected to office, claiming��his predecessor���s��socialist mantle. However,��the Maduro��government was��marred by authoritarian practices, human rights abuses,��and��economic mismanagement.��The vast majority of Venezuelans continued to live in extreme poverty,��and��millions��left the country��to survive.��Returned to office in��2018��in elections widely viewed as fraudulent, Maduro was confronted by massive popular protests��from across��the political and economic spectrum.
The crisis intensified in��January 2019,��when��Juan��Guaid��,��president of the��Venezuelan��National Assembly,��declared himself��president.��Deemed��a savior by some and a��usurper��by others,��Guaid����based��his��legitimacy��on��a constitutional clause that, in the absence of an elected head of state, vests power in the National Assembly president until free and��fair��elections��occur. Maduro, predictably,��refused to step aside;��his military and police remained loyal,��and��protests continued.��The��international community lined up to take sides��that aligned��with��their��political and��economic interests.��Some, including the United States,��hinted that military intervention may be in the offing.
Guaid�����s��international backers claim to be responding��to��a��power grab��by an illegitimate authoritarian regime.��They point to widespread opposition to Maduro��within��Venezuela��and��present��themselves as enforcers of the people���s will.��What is really��at stake��is��Venezuela���s enormous wealth���who��will��control it and whom��will��it��benefit.��Rather than resolve a humanitarian crisis, foreign intervention is certain��to intensify it.��The legacy of US intervention in Latin America, which��the United States has treated as its ���backyard��� since the nineteenth century, has left a bitterness that is far more powerful than��local��hostility toward��a brutal��president.��Foreign��meddling, with the aim of returning to power��the old oligarchy that enriched��foreign��businesses, is��likely��to��sharpen divisions, increase violence,��and��create a dangerous power vacuum.
Lessons from recent interventions in Africa��should be heeded.��Cases��from across the continent��underscore the fact that, regardless of the official rationale, external powers tend to intervene only where their own political, economic, and strategic interests are at stake.��Rather than promoting peace and stability,��foreign��military intervention��has��more��often��increased��outside support for repressive regimes,��exacerbated��local conflicts,��and undermined��prospects for regional peace.
Take the cases��of Libya��and Somalia���two of many that illustrate these points.��During the Arab Spring uprisings of 2011, foreign governments and��organizations��intervened in Libya, ostensibly��to protect civilian lives, but with��regime change��as��an��unofficial��objective.��The��NATO-backed��overthrow of��Muammar��Qaddafi��resulted��in��a power vacuum that opened the door to��civil war��and terrorist infiltration��in Libya, with widespread regional ramifications���including a military coup and jihadist insurgency in Mali��with��ripple effects throughout the Sahel.
Foreign intervention in Somalia, which��provoked��decades of instability and��a terrorist insurgency, is especially instructive.��After the Cold War, Western powers abandoned��the��Somali strongman, Siad Barre, whom they��no longer needed as a��regional policeman.��Warlords and militias vied for power, state institutions and basic services��crumbled, the formal economy ceased to function, and southern Somalia disintegrated into fiefdoms ruled by rival warlords and their militias. War-induced famine, compounded by drought, threatened the lives of much of the population.
In 1992, the UN Security Council authorized the establishment of a U.S.-led multinational military task force to��ensure the delivery of humanitarian relief.��In 1993, another UN mission, also led by the United States, permitted military personnel to forcibly disarm��and arrest��Somali warlords and militia��members.��As the��United States embroiled��itself��in Somalia���s civil war,��it��generated��enormous hostility��within the civilian population.��As a result, when US Special Operations Forces��attempted to capture key militia leaders in October 1993,��and��Somali��militias shot down two Black Hawk helicopters, angry crowds attacked the surviving soldiers and their rescuers.�� Eighteen American��troops��and some one thousand Somali men, women, and children were killed in the��violence that ensued.
The United States and��UN hastily withdrew��from Somalia, and the turmoil��intensified.��Islamist groups gained widespread popular support by providing essential social services and��courts to enforce��law and order. However, the United States, which viewed��all��Islamists as a threat,��worked with Somali warlords and neighboring Ethiopia to oust them.��The result was an anti-foreign��backlash��and the��transformation��of al-Shabaab,��originally��a��youth militia that defended the Islamic courts, into��a violent jihadist organization that quickly gained the support of al-Qaeda.��As��al-Shabaab took control of large swaths of��central and southern Somali��in 2007, the UN��and��African��Union��intervened,��neighboring countries��interceded to��push their own agendas, and al-Shabaab extended its targets to include them.��Today,��the Somali government,��weak��and��beholden to��outsiders, has little internal support, and al-Shabaab continues��to wreak havoc��in Somalia and��the region.
What lesson should be learned?��In Africa, foreign support for governments that��benefit��privileged elites and their external backers has��perpetuated violence and instability. It is��bound to do the same in Latin America.��Latin American��pro-democracy movements, like their��African��counterparts,��demand��access to education, employment, health care, clean water, sanitation,��electricity, and��infrastructure. They��call for��responsive democratic governments that respect the rule of law, eliminate corruption, and��distribute��resources��more equitably.��If��underlying political, economic, and social grievances are��ignored, intervention by outsiders��will��only��intensify violence and instability and��undermine��prospects for��an enduring peace.
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