Date: Thursday, 06 November 2025
https://ericzuesse.substack.com/p/the-us-government-has-become-and
https://theduran.com/the-u-s-government-has-become-and-is-the-great-satan-yanis
The U.S. Government HAS become, and IS, “the Great Satan.” (Yanis Varoufakis)
6 November 2025, posted by Eric Zuesse. (All of my recent articles can be seen here.)
——
https://www.youtube.com/live/kCGTNv4i98I
“Russia’s Warships Are in Venezuela... and Washington Is Panicking | Yanis Varoufakis”
5 November 2025
Nadikudi Nadine youtube channel (where Varoufakis also says the U.S. economy will soon plunge.)
TRANSCRIPT:
0:00
We are seeing something remarkable
0:01
happening in the Caribbean that would
0:03
have seemed impossible not long ago.
0:06
Russian warships have shown up in
0:08
Venezuelan waters. And this isn't just a
0:11
casual visit. It's a deliberate
0:13
geopolitical message. What's unfolding
0:17
represents a fundamental challenge to
0:19
the hemispheric power structure the
0:20
United States has assumed was secure
0:23
since the Monroe Doctrine nearly two
0:25
centuries ago. For generations,
0:28
Washington has worked on the premise
0:29
that the Western Hemisphere belongs
0:31
exclusively to American influence. That
0:33
premise is now being openly contested.
0:36
Russia's naval presence in Venezuela is
0:38
Moscow's response to years of NATO
0:40
moving eastward, missile systems being
0:43
positioned near Russian borders, and
0:45
what the Kremlin sees as constant
0:48
American expansion into their sphere.
0:50
Venezuela, which holds the world's
0:52
largest confirmed oil reserves, has
0:55
become the center of a broader struggle
0:56
over who makes the rules in
0:58
international affairs. Uh the sanctions,
1:02
diplomatic isolation, and threats of
1:04
military action haven't produced the
1:07
regime change Washington wanted.
1:10
Instead, they've driven Karakas into
1:13
deeper partnerships with Moscow,
1:15
Beijing, and Thran. Understanding what's
1:18
truly at stake matters because the
1:19
implications extend far beyond Karakas
1:22
or Moscow. This concerns whether we're
1:25
heading toward a world with multiple
1:26
centers of power or desperately holding
1:28
on to a single superpower arrangement
1:30
that no longer matches reality to grasp
1:32
how we reach this point. We need to look
1:36
back because nothing in geopolitics
1:38
exists in isolation. The story of
1:41
Russian warships in Venezuelan waters is
1:46
actually the story of American foreign
1:48
policy over the last 30 years and how it
1:50
has consistently pushed away potential
1:53
partners while forcing adversaries to
1:56
band together. When the Soviet Union
1:59
fell apart in 1991, the United States
2:02
enjoyed an unmatched moment of global
2:03
dominance. We had won the Cold War. Or
2:07
that's how the story was told. American
2:10
policy makers thought we'd reached what
2:13
Francis Fuguama called the end of
2:14
history, the ultimate victory of liberal
2:17
democracy and market capitalism. But
2:20
what did we do with that opportunity?
2:22
Rather than creating a genuine framework
2:24
for worldwide cooperation, rather than
2:27
bringing Russia into European security
2:29
arrangements, rather than building
2:31
institutions that reflected all major
2:33
powers interests, we opted for expansion
2:39
and dominance. The debates in the 1,990s
2:44
um about uh expanding NATO included
2:47
warnings from wise observers that
2:49
pushing NATO eastward would be perceived
2:51
by Russia as a fundamental threat.
2:54
George Kennan, who designed America's
2:56
cold war containment strategy, labeled
2:59
NATO expansion the most consequential
3:02
mistake of American policy in the entire
3:05
postcold war period. He grasped what
3:09
political leaders refused to recognize
3:12
that Russia, regardless of who governed
3:15
it, would see NATO forces on its borders
3:19
as an existential threat. But those
3:21
warnings went unheeded.
3:25
NATO expanded first to Poland, Hungary,
3:28
and the Czech Republic, then to the
3:30
Baltic States, Bulgaria, Romania,
3:33
Slovakia, and Slovenia. With each
3:36
expansion wave, we convinced ourselves
3:39
we were spreading democracy and
3:41
security. What we were actually doing
3:43
was constructing a military alliance
3:47
right up to Russia's border while
3:49
excluding Russia from any meaningful
3:51
participation in European security. The
3:54
critical moment arrived in 2008
3:57
uh um at the NATO summit in Bucharest
4:00
when the uh alliance declared that
4:03
Ukraine and Georgia would eventually
4:06
join. For Russia, this crossed the red
4:09
line. Ukraine isn't just another country
4:12
to Russia. It represents the birthplace
4:14
of Russian civilization where the first
4:17
Russian state emerged in Kev. The
4:20
prospect of NATO forces in Ukraine, of
4:23
American missile systems just hundreds
4:26
of miles from Moscow was something no
4:28
Russian government could tolerate,
4:30
regardless of uh its political
4:32
character. Yet, we pushed forward
4:35
believing Russia was too weak to
4:37
respond, that history favored us, that
4:40
we could remake the entire postsviet
4:42
region according to our preferences
4:45
without facing consequences. You might
4:47
wonder what uh any of this has to do
4:50
with Venezuela. Everything American
4:54
foreign policy has applied the same
4:56
approach in Latin America that it used
4:57
in Eastern Europe. We've presumed the
4:59
Western Hemisphere is ours to manage,
5:01
that governments in this region exist at
5:03
our discretion, and that any country
5:06
defying Washington must be isolated,
5:09
sanctioned, and ultimately removed from
5:13
power. Venezuela's experience is
5:15
especially uh revealing. Hugo Chavez
5:19
gained power in 1999 through democratic
5:22
elections campaigning on using
5:24
Venezuela's oil wealth to help the poor
5:26
majority instead of the traditional
5:28
elite. Whatever criticisms one might
5:31
have of Chavez's policies, and there are
5:34
many, he was democratically elected. But
5:36
because he challenged American corporate
5:39
interests, because he directed
5:41
Venezuela's oil revenues towards social
5:44
programs rather than channeling profits
5:46
to international oil companies, because
5:49
he formed alliances with Cuba and other
5:51
countries Washington disapproved of he
5:53
became a target. The United States
5:55
backed a coup against Chavez in 2002. It
5:58
failed, but um American hostility
6:02
continued. When Nicholas Maduro
6:04
succeeded Chavez after his death in
6:06
2013,
6:08
Washington increased the pressure. We've
6:10
imposed successive waves of sanctions,
6:14
not focused measures against specific
6:16
individuals, but comprehensive economic
6:19
sanctions meant to strangle Venezuela's
6:22
entire economy. These sanctions have
6:25
prevented Venezuela from accessing
6:27
international financial markets, blocked
6:29
the country from selling its oil, frozen
6:31
billions of dollars in Venezuelan
6:33
assets, and triggered a humanitarian
6:35
catastrophe. The United Nations
6:38
estimates that tens of thousands of
6:40
Venezuelans have died directly because
6:42
of these sanctions. Millions have left
6:44
the country, creating a refugee crisis
6:47
throughout Latin America. What was the
6:49
justification? Democracy and human
6:51
rights, we're told. But if democracy
6:54
mattered, we wouldn't partner with Saudi
6:57
Arabia, Egypt, or numerous other
7:00
authoritarian regimes. The actual issue
7:03
is that Venezuela refused to accept
7:05
American dominance. This brings us back
7:08
to Russia's naval presence. When you're
7:11
a country under assault, when the
7:14
world's most powerful military openly
7:16
discusses regime change, when your
7:20
economy is being deliberately destroyed
7:22
by external sanctions, uh you seek
7:26
allies wherever available. Venezuela
7:29
found them in Russia, China and Iran,
7:32
other countries that have faced American
7:35
pressure and understand the value of
7:37
solidarity. Um
7:39
uh Russia's relationship with Venezuela
7:42
isn't mainly about ideology. It's about
7:44
geopolitics
7:46
and shared interests. Russia gains a
7:49
position in the Western Hemisphere, a
7:52
way to show it can project power beyond
7:55
its uh immediate region. Venezuela gains
7:58
a powerful partner that can supply
8:00
military equipment, technical expertise,
8:03
investment, and most crucially, a
8:06
deterrent against American intervention.
8:08
Russian naval deployments to Venezuela
8:10
have occurred periodically since 2008,
8:13
but they've gained new importance in
8:14
recent years as tensions between Russia
8:17
and the West have grown. These aren't
8:19
merely symbolic visits. Russian military
8:23
advisers are in Venezuela. Russian
8:25
equipment from air defense systems to
8:29
fighter jets has been delivered. Russian
8:32
oil companies have invested in
8:34
Venezuelan energy infrastructure.
8:37
Reports indicate Russian personnel at
8:39
Venezuelan military bases. Uh Moscow is
8:44
delivering a clear message to
8:47
Washington. If you can position military
8:50
infrastructure on our borders, we can
8:52
establish a presence in your hemisphere.
8:54
If you can support governments we
8:56
consider hostile, we can protect
8:58
governments you're trying to overthrow.
9:00
What makes this situation so dangerous
9:02
is that it's completely avoidable. The
9:05
crisis in Venezuela, uh the Russian
9:08
presence there, the broader breakdown of
9:12
uh hemispheric relations, all of it
9:15
results from American policies that have
9:18
consistently chosen dominance over
9:21
diplomacy. Consider what a different
9:24
approach might have looked like. When
9:26
Chavez was elected. We could have
9:28
engaged with his government, pursued
9:31
mutually beneficial energy partnerships,
9:34
supported constructive reforms while
9:37
expressing concerns about problematic
9:39
policies. Instead, we backed uh a coup
9:43
and then spent two decades attempting to
9:46
economically strangle the country. when
9:48
the Soviet Union collapsed, we could
9:51
have genuinely integrated Russia into
9:55
European and global institutions. Uh
9:57
created a security framework that
9:59
included rather than excluded Moscow.
10:02
Instead, we expanded NATO and treated
10:05
Russia as a defeated enemy rather than a
10:09
potential partner. This pattern repeats
10:12
worldwide. In Iraq, we invaded based on
10:15
false weapons of mass destruction
10:17
claims, destroyed the country's
10:19
infrastructure, caused hundreds of
10:21
thousands of deaths, and created
10:23
conditions for ISIS to emerge. In Libya,
10:26
we supported regime change that
10:28
transformed a functioning state, however
10:31
flawed, into a failed state with open
10:34
slave markets. In Syria, we armed rebel
10:38
groups that included extremist elements,
10:41
prolonging a civil war that has killed
10:43
half a million people. In Afghanistan,
10:46
we spent 20 years and trillions of
10:49
dollars trying to impose our vision of
10:51
governance only to watch the Taliban
10:54
return to power. In each case, we told
10:57
ourselves we were promoting democracy
11:00
and human rights. In each case, we made
11:03
things worse. And in each case, we
11:06
refuse to acknowledge military powers
11:09
limitations and the importance of
11:12
respecting other nations sovereignty.
11:15
…
—————
Investigative historian Eric Zuesse’s latest book, AMERICA’S EMPIRE OF EVIL: Hitler’s Posthumous Victory, and Why the Social Sciences Need to Change, is about how America took over the world after World War II in order to enslave it to U.S.-and-allied billionaires. Their cartels extract the world’s wealth by control of not only their ‘news’ media but the social ‘sciences’ — duping the public.