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Nicolás Maduro has warned this afternoon about an
imminent attack against Venezuela
to "try to turn the vote in Florida and in the United States", to be held next Tuesday.
"We have captured communications from conspiratorial sectors outside of our country who, in the next few hours, intend to speak of November 1,
actions of attack and violence,"
predicted the revolutionary leader during the celebration of the so-called historic Congress of the Chavista bloc, aware of the importance of that state and of the Latino vote for the final result.
Florida is a key piece on the US electoral map, with the highly influential vote of Puerto Ricans, Cubans and Venezuelans.
According to the account of the "son of Chávez," it would be a question of creating "the image of chaos, of a crisis in Venezuela, and
trying to turn the vote in Florida and the US"
around the presidential elections next Tuesday.
Maduro insisted that President Donald Trump has commissioned Juan Guaidó, interim president of Venezuela and opposition leader, and the first Colombian president, Iván Duque, to create
a kind of "red October",
"something moving, shocking in Venezuela."
The latest complaint from the "president town" is preceded by two alleged unconfirmed terrorist attacks.
The first would have been carried out on Tuesday, according to revolutionary propaganda,
against the important Amuay refinery.
In the government, they said at first that it was a missile launched with the help of the Northern Empire, "a very powerful and modern weapon", for which a missile launcher or a drone would have been used.
Oil workers and experts immediately denied the Chavista announcement and explained that
it was a breakdown that caused an explosion,
from the inside out, as can be seen through some released photographs.
The
second alleged attack
was carried out in the last hours, "an attack against a major petrochemical plant in El Tablazo. Economic terrorism against the economic and industrial base," Maduro rambled.
Chavismo introduces these false attacks to
divert its responsibility for the collapse of public services
in the country, both electricity and water, gas and gasoline.
Already during the great blackout last year, Chavismo justified the electrical failures for various reasons: electromagnetic attacks from unknown vessels, computer hacks from Texas and operations perpetrated by snipers.
To illustrate the latter, he used in his informative stills from a Clint Eastwood film.
"It is serious to attack the services that are for the population," accused Maduro, who again pointed to Duque and former Colombian president
Álvaro Uribe.
The "driver of victories" decreed maximum alert during his television intervention:
"Be very careful.
The intelligence and counterintelligence organizations, the communal forces, the people have to be fly (attentive)".
"The weapon that destroyed Venezuela
was not a terrorist attack, but evil, corruption and resentment,"
Guaidó counterattacked.
According to the criteria of The Trust Project
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