Venezuelan Security Agent Fingers Head of National Assembly as Leader of Drug Cartel
Diosdado Cabello alleged to be leader of a cartel based in the Venezuelan military.


Leamsy Salazar, the former security chief for the head of the Venezuelan National Assembly Diosdado Cabello and a former bodyguard for the late Hugo Chavez, has defected to the United States. According to reports in the Spanish language press, the long-time military officer told U.S. investigators Cabello acted as the head of the Soles cartel, a drug cartel whose existence has been a matter of debate but which is alleged to be embedded in the Venezuelan armed forces.
The Venezuelan government, naturally, denies the claims. For his part, Cabello dismissed Salazar's allegations against him as a matter of "disloyalty," lamenting that Hugo Chavez's strength, loyalty, and love should have "rubbed off" on Salazar.
The story, via Foreign Policy:
Emili Blasco, the ABC reporter who broke the story, says that his report on Cabello's criminal enterprise draws upon information from anonymous "sources within the U.S. investigation" as well as an interview with the defector himself. The Soles are said to hold a veritable monopoly over the Venezuelan drug trade, which specializes in transferring cocaine produced in rebel-controlled territory in Colombia (near the Venezuelan border) to Mexican cartels. (The detour through Venezuela enables the Colombian traffickers to dodge their own security forces, who are ostensibly less corrupt than Venezuela's.) According to the ABC report, an astounding 90 percent of Colombian drugs pass through Venezuela.
Blasco's report weaves together several major themes from the annals of rumored corruption in Venezuela: the ephemeral arrest and failed extradition of Gen. Hugo "El Pollo" Carvajal on a U.S. warrant for drug charges; a truck found with $10 million in cash abandoned on the docks of Venezuela's principle port last month; and shadowy Cuban involvement — all punctuated with descriptions of giant piles of money and speedboats stuffed with tons of cocaine. The names of high-ranking Venezuelan leaders, an unsurprising list of "usual suspects" commonly associated with corruption, also appear, and the report carefully outlines their respective roles within the organization ("the money launderer," the "numbers guy," etc.).
Decriminalizing cocaine would rob narco-states and developing narco-states of a large source of revenue. Keeping it criminal, on the other hand, offers the United States and other countries interested in being seen as regional or global powers an excuse to interfere in the domestic affairs of another country, for the children. Venezuela's president, Nicolas Maduro, seems to think so. "Imperialist hands are behind this," Maduro said of the claims, which have also circulated in Venezuela long before Salazar's defection. "A hell of solitude awaits whoever betrays the revolution." Whether they've "betrayed the revolution" or not, most Venezuelan residents already live in a government-planned hell.
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Is Lucy working for Foreign Policy now?
Wait, so can we talk about Lucy now?
He's like a comic villain. Why aren't Venezuelans laughing him out of office...?
Because they're too busy scavanging for toilet paper and food?
Which is a dangerous game for Maduro. Well-wiped bums are the opiate of the masses.
Is your restroom breeding Bolsheviks?
Oh no! Not, um, solitude! Anything but that!
Guns and Prisons?
There are hordes of non-Venezuelans who are more than willing to blame the empty store shelves, shortages, and everything wrong with Venezuela on the US and "western imperialism"--e.g., Sean Penn--so when guns are actually being pointed at the residents who dissent, well...
Prohibition drives me fucking insane.
Just because they got the wrong Top. Men. in charge. /derp
Nah, the current narrative is that it's the right Top Men in charge, they're just being undermined by foreign sabotage and kulak wreckers.
Since the entire government is a criminal organization, who cares if one division is peddling drugs?
TRUST DEMOCRACY
"Fingers." Really, people? Over an hour and nobody has even rubbed that a little?
It can sometimes be pretty sensitive.
Hugo Chavez's strength, loyalty, and love should have "rubbed off"
That could only happen if Hugo routinely rubbed one off in staff meetings.
So he was the Lyndon Johnson of the southern hemisphere, then.
Miguel Cabrera signed with Detroit so he could feel close to home.
The results could be salutary. This is the excuse for the USA to overthrow the regime.
Are they providing foreign heads-of-state and other notables with drugs on the same below-cost basis as oil?