Venezuela military is loyal to the dictator, Maduro.
This is the scenario that is the intent of the Second Amendment.
Washington — Representatives of National Assembly President Juan Guaidó, who has been recognized by the U.S. and more than four dozen countries as Venezuela’s legitimate leader, believe the humanitarian aid being dispatched to the crisis-stricken South American nation will test the Venezuelan military’s loyalty for President Nicolás Maduro.
As shipping containers block the main highways near the border with neighboring Colombia, two of Guaidó’s top diplomats told CBS News the nation’s armed forces will soon face a critical choice: enforce Maduro’s orders to stop international humanitarian assistance — or defect and allow the aid to reach a Venezuelan population grappling with widespread food and medicine shortages.
“This will be a key moment for the military to see which side they will be on,” Carlos Vecchio, Guaidó’s ambassador to the U.S., told CBS News. “If they will be with the Maduro regime, which is not going anywhere … or if they will stay with the Venezuelans who need that food and medicine.”
BY CHRISTINA RUFFINI, CAMILO MONTOYA-GALVEZ