‘Dangerous game’ as Venezuela expands military buildup at Guyana border, says report | CNN (2024)

‘Dangerous game’ as Venezuela expands military buildup at Guyana border, says report | CNN (1)

Aerial view of the Essequibo region taken from Guyana on December 10, 2023.

CNN

Venezuela continues to build up military infrastructure and hardware close to the border with Guyana as President Nicolas Maduro and his supporters scale up their threats to annex anoil-rich piece of Guyanese land.

In a report shared with CNN, the Washington-based think tank Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) warns that while the Venezuelan government “has little to gain and much to lose from a full-blown conflict” it continues to play “a dangerous game” over its claim over the densely forested Essequibo region.

“The constant drumbeat asserting ‘the Essequibo is ours,’ alongside the creation of new military commands and legal structures to oversee the defense of the region, is helping to institutionalize a sense of perpetual prewar footing,” it wrote.

Tension over the region, which amounts to about two-thirds of Guyanese national territory, mounted last year after a Venezuelan referendum in which voters assented to creatinga Venezuelan state within the disputed region. Guyana had called the move a step towards annexation and an “existential” threat as the specter of armed conflict loomed over the region.

CNN previously reported in February about an expansion of operations at Venezuela’s Anacoco Island military base despite both countries agreeing in December to pursue a diplomatic avenue to resolve the conflict.

Using satellite imagery and social media, CSIS found that the expansion of Anacoco Island’s military base has continued. A bridge is seen being built across the Cuyuni River to connect the Venezuelan riverbank to the island, which has been a point of contention between the countries after it was awarded to Guyana in an 1899 ruling by an international tribunal. Venezuela annexed it in the 1960s.

El Palito refinery of the Venezuelan state oil company PDVSA is seen, in Puerto Cabello, Venezuela, on February 10. Leonardo Fernandez Viloria/Reuters/File Related article US to reimpose sanctions on Venezuela’s oil and gas sector

The island’s airfield has expanded and now includes a small control tower, CSIS writes. Satellite imagery from March showed an area next to the airfield with more than 75 field tents, “enough for a battalion-sized unit of several hundred personnel.” The field tents have since been relocated to the southern side of the airfield “demonstrating the base’s continued ability to provide logistics and resupply for a sizeable military force continuously for over a month,” it wrote.

Meanwhile, by the coast, at least two Iranian-builtPeykaap III (Zolfa*ghar) fast missile boats are seen at Venezuela’s small coast guard station at Punta Barima, “placing Venezuelan missiles and naval forces within arm’s reach of the Guyana-administered Essequibo” as it just 40 miles (64 kilometers) from the Guyanese border.

Maduro could ‘fall victim to own rhetoric’

The threats to Guyana have concerned its partners. Last week, two US Navy F/A-18 fighter jets flew over the capital Georgetown, demonstrating “our routine security cooperation and expanding bilateral defense partnership with Guyana,” the US Embassy in Guyana wrote.

While smaller than Idaho, Guyana is home to vast oil reserves and is on track to become the world’s highest per capita oil producer. It, however, has an army estimated to be less than 5,000 soldiers, and lacks the hardware or manpower to face possible Venezuelan aggression.

Nigel Dharamlall From The Ministry of Local Government and Regional Development Related article Guyanese political power broker accused of sexual assault by another woman

All things considered, “if you’re if you’re Guyana, and your army is 5,000 people, it doesn’t seem like the Venezuelans are taking their foot off the gas,” Ryan Berg, director of the Americas Programat CSIS and lead author of the report, told CNN.

There has been speculation that the upcoming Venezuelan elections at the end of July have given Maduro the motivation to escalate against Guyana, using it as a way to distract from his record: Millions of people have fled the country due to poor economic conditions, food shortages and limited access to health care.

CSIS argues that instead of tamping down the aggression after the vote, “Maduro may be tempted to ramp up both rhetoric and action related to the Essequibo in a true gambit to manufacture a regional crisis in the aftermath of a stolen election.”

It may not be in Maduro’s interest to “initiate a full-blown conflict with neighbor Guyana, but his escalatory rhetoric tethers his political reputation and legitimacy to his willingness to back his words with force” especially with his key internal ally, the armed forces, CSIS writes.

“Thus, one of the most concerning possibilities is that Maduro will fall victim to his own rhetoric. He has whipped up nationalist passions without providing an escape valve.”

‘Dangerous game’ as Venezuela expands military buildup at Guyana border, says report | CNN (2024)

FAQs

What is the land dispute between Venezuela and Guyana? ›

The long-standing territorial dispute over the Essequibo region escalated into a crisis in 2023. The region is controlled by Guyana but is claimed by Venezuela. The dispute dates back many years and the current border was established by the Paris Arbitral Award in 1899.

What was the boundary dispute between British Guiana and Venezuela? ›

The British “mapped,” “settled” and “occupied” the disputed territory during the 19th century. The Venezuela/British Guiana boundary dispute went to arbitration in 1898-1899 and, fair or not, the decision in Britain´s favor was agreed by both sides, and was not seriously challenged by Venezuela until 1962.

What separates Guyana from Venezuela? ›

Guyana and Venezuela both have rivers separating and joining them; Amacuro in the North-West and Cuyuni in the absolute West.

Which country is Venezuela from? ›

Venezuela - Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela Member

Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela is a tropical country on the northern coast of South America. It borders Colombia to the west, Guyana to the east, and Brazil to the south.

What's going on with Guyana and Venezuela? ›

For a century and a half, Guyana and Venezuela have quarreled over Essequibo, a stretch of the Amazon that both countries claim. Guyana has long governed the territory, but Venezuela also claims sovereignty over it, citing maps drawn in colonial times.

Who owns the land in Guyana? ›

Land in Guyana is owned either by the State or under private freehold tenure.

How much land does Venezuela want from Guyana? ›

The Guyana–Venezuela territorial dispute is an ongoing territorial dispute between Guyana and Venezuela over the Essequibo region, also known as Esequibo or Guayana Esequiba in Spanish (Spanish pronunciation: [ɡwaˈʝana eseˈkiβa]), a 159,500 km2 (61,600 sq mi) area west of the Essequibo River.

Why does Venezuela want to invade Guyana? ›

The Essequibo River flows in Guyana. Venezuela wants to annex Guyana's oil- and mineral-rich Essequibo region.

Is Guyana poorer than Haiti? ›

Based on GDP per capita (purchasing power parity), Guyana remains one of the poorest countries in the Western Hemisphere, currently ranking fifth, above only Haiti, Honduras, Nicaragua, and Bolivia. This makes Guyana the second poorest country in both South America and the Caribbean.

What percent of US oil comes from Venezuela? ›

It was just 0.02% in 2020 — when oil was imported only in the month of June, according to Census Bureau data, and 1.08% in 2019, the year that former President Donald Trump first restricted those imports from the government of Venezuelan President Nicholas Maduro.

What is Venezuela called now? ›

The "Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela" has been the full official title since the adoption of the Constitution of 1999, when the state was renamed in honor of Simón Bolívar. The Constitution also recognizes all indigenous languages spoken in the country.

Is Venezuela rich in oil? ›

Venezuela has the world's largest proven oil reserves at an estimated 304 billion barrels (18% of global reserves) as of 2020.

Can Americans own land in Guyana? ›

Right to Private Ownership and Establishment

The right of foreigners to own property or land in Guyana is specifically protected under the Constitution.

What country has the most land disputes? ›

The term territorial dispute means there is conflict on who controls a particular territory. Answer. India and China with problematic neighbours have major sources of territorial disputes. Hence, they have the most contentious borders.

What disputed territory is Guyana Suriname? ›

Competing claims to sovereignty over an area known as the New River Triangle (Guyana) or the Tigri Area (Suriname) stem from the question over which tributary is the source of the Courantyne River. The British claimed the boundary followed the Kutari River to the east, while the Dutch claimed the New River to the west.

When did Guyana gain independence from Venezuela? ›

Thereafter the PNC and a smaller, more conservative party formed a coalition government, led by Burnham, which took the colony into independence under its new name, Guyana, on May 26, 1966.

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