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		As West turns on him, Venezuela's Maduro 
		flexes military muscle 
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		 [January 28, 2019] 
		By Vivian Sequera 
 CARACAS (Reuters) - Venezuelan President 
		Nicolas Maduro oversaw a display of the army's Russian hardware on 
		Sunday, with anti-aircraft flak and tank rounds pounding a hillside to 
		show military force and loyalty in the face of an international 
		ultimatum for new elections.
 
 Maduro, 56, is confronting an unprecedented challenge to his authority 
		after opposition leader Juan Guaido declared himself interim president, 
		citing a fraudulent election. Guaido has won wide international support 
		and offers amnesty to soldiers who join him.
 
 On Sunday, Israel and Australia joined the countries backing the 
		35-year-old leader, and President Donald Trump's administration said it 
		had accepted Venezuelan opposition figure Carlos Alfredo Vecchio as the 
		country's diplomatic representative in the United States.
 
 Early on Sunday, alongside Defense Minister Vladimir Padrino, Maduro 
		watched a platoon of soldiers release volleys of rocket-propelled 
		grenades, machine-gun anti-aircraft fire and tank rounds at hillside 
		targets, the Russian ordnance kicking up clouds of dust at the Fort of 
		Paramacay, an armored vehicle base.
 
		
		 
		
 Maduro said the display showed the world he had the backing of the 
		military and that Venezuela's armed forces were ready to defend the 
		country. Maduro says Guaido is taking part in a coup directed by Trump's 
		hardline policy advisers, who include Cold War veterans John Bolton and 
		Elliott Abrams.
 
 "Nobody respects the weak, cowards, traitors. In this world, what's 
		respected is the brave, the courageous, power," Maduro said.
 
 "Nobody should even think of stepping on this sacred soil. Venezuela 
		wants peace," he said. "To guarantee peace, we have to be prepared."
 
 From Feb. 10 to 15, the military is planning larger exercises that 
		Maduro described as the "most important in the history of Venezuela."
 
 The show of force was accompanied by a government publicity campaign 
		online based on the slogan "Always Loyal, Never a Traitor," and followed 
		a high-profile defection by the country's top military diplomat in the 
		United States on Saturday.
 
 The Fort of Paramacay, about two hours west of the capital, Caracas, was 
		itself the site of an uprising in 2017, when about 20 soldiers and armed 
		civilians attacked the base. The leader of the attack, which was quickly 
		subdued, said he was calling for a transitional government.
 
 Maduro on Sunday denounced an alleged conspiracy aimed at spreading 
		rebellion in the army, saying thousands of messages were being sent to 
		soldiers every day over WhatsApp and other social media platforms from 
		neighboring Colombia. He later jogged with soldiers and boarded an 
		amphibious vehicle at a navy base.
 
 Guaido also sent a message to the military on Sunday, asking for support 
		and ordering it not to repress civilians during an event in which 
		supporters handed out copies of a proposed amnesty for people accused of 
		crimes in the Maduro government.
 
 "I order you not to shoot," he said. "I order you not to repress the 
		people."
 
 At a U.N. Security Council debate on Saturday, Russia and China strongly 
		backed Maduro and rejected calls by the United States, Canada, Latin 
		American nations and European powers for early elections.
 
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			Venezuela's President Nicolas Maduro speaks during a news conference 
			at Miraflores Palace in Caracas, Venezuela January 25, 2019. 
			REUTERS/Manaure Quintero 
            
 
            Both Russia and China are major creditors of Venezuela. Since the 
			government of Maduro's late mentor, Hugo Chavez, the OPEC nation has 
			invested heavily in Russian weaponry, including Sukhoi fighter jets 
			and heavy armor.
 The strategic alliance was in evidence last year, when two Russian 
			nuclear-capable bombers landed in Venezuela. Reuters reported on 
			Friday that private military contractors who do secret missions for 
			Russia flew into Venezuela to beef up security for Maduro.
 
 NO ELECTIONS
 
 In an interview that aired on Sunday, Maduro rejected a European 
			ultimatum to call elections within eight days and said Guaido 
			violated the constitution by declaring himself interim leader. He 
			said European nations should leave Venezuela, if they so wanted.
 
 "Fortunately, we don’t depend on Europe. And those arrogant, 
			overbearing attitudes, looking down on us, because we are ‘sudacas,’ 
			inferior to them," he told CNN Turk.
 
 "The leaders of Europe are sycophants, kneeling behind the policies 
			of Donald Trump," he said, adding he was open to dialog and that 
			meeting Trump was improbable but not impossible.
 
 Washington urged the world on Saturday to "pick a side" on Venezuela 
			and financially disconnect from Maduro's government.
 
 Bolton, the White House national security adviser, warned on Sunday 
			against violence or the intimidation of American diplomats in 
			Venezuela or Guaido, saying such action would trigger a response 
			from the United States.
 
 Venezuela has sunk into turmoil under Maduro, with food shortages 
			and protests amid an economic and political crisis that has led 
			millions to leave the country and with inflation seen rising to 10 
			million percent this year.
 
 Britain, Germany, France and Spain all said they would recognize 
			Guaido if Maduro failed to call new elections within eight days, an 
			ultimatum Russia said was "absurd" and the Venezuelan foreign 
			minister called "childlike."
 
 The United States, Canada, most Latin American nations and many 
			European states say Maduro stole his second-term election win last 
			May. The former union leader cruised to victory after blocking the 
			main opposition candidates from running. Turnout was low.
 
 Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan voiced his support for Maduro in a 
			phone call on Thursday.
 
 (Reporting by Vivian Sequera; Additional reporting by Ali 
			Kucukgocmen in Istanbul and Patricia Zengerle in Washington; Writing 
			by Frank Jack Daniel; Editing by Lisa Shumaker and Peter Cooney)
 
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