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Corporate Coup

The Failed Attempt to Overthrow Venezuela Democracy

Anya Parampil author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:OR Books

Published:11th Jul '24

Should be back in stock very soon

Corporate Coup cover

  • Collaborate with author on extensive social media campaign to promote the book.
  • Pitch excerpts and reviews to wide array of publications including Al Jazeera, Jacobin, The Intercept, The Nation, The New York Review of Books, The Los Angeles Times, The Los Angeles Review of Books, The Guardian, Publishers Weekly, Kirkus Reviews, Bookforum, The Independent, Tribune, Current Affairs, The Progressive, Morning Star, Monthly Review, and more.
  • Pitch television, radio, and podcast interviews to shows including Democracy Now!, Al Jazeera’s UpFront, The Dig, Intercepted, Useful Idiots, Bad Faith, Breaking Points, Rising, Citations Needed, Pushback with Aaron Maté, Moderate Rebels, Empire Files, and more.

Corporate Coup looks at the attempted overthrow of the elected government of Venezuela, an intervention which, despite open backing by the United States, failed spectacularly.

In January of 2019, the Trump Administration recognized a little-known opposition lawmaker named Juan Guaidó as President of Venezuela. While Washington’s history of coups in Latin America is well-documented, this step was unprecedented: Never before had the United States offered legal recognition to a new government before an actual change in leadership had taken place.

Within months it became clear that the attempt at regime change had fallen flat: all Venezuelan territory, government ministries, and the country’s military remained under the control of President Nicolás Maduro. While US officials, notably Trump’s Venezuela Envoy Elliott Abrams, boasted that roughly 54 countries had followed Washington’s lead in recognizing Guaidó’s authority, the vast majority of United Nations member states rejected the attempted coup. Four years on, Venezuela’s government is firmly in place and Guaidó is nowhere to be seen.

In this fast-paced story, investigative reporter Anya Parampil provides a narrative history of the Chavista revolution and offers character sketches of the figures who took over its leadership after Hugo Chávez’s death in 2014. She shows how Guaidó’s shadow regime consisted of individuals with deep connections to transnational corporations that sought to overturn the revolution and exploit Venezuela’s resources. In particular she uncovers their plot to steal Citgo Petroleum, the country’s most valuable international asset. Corporate Coup exposes the hidden personalities and interests driving US policy on Venezuela, revealing that while the recognition of Guaidó failed at changing reality on the ground in Caracas, it succeeded in facilitating the unprecedented looting of the country’s extensive foreign reserves.

This gripping story from Venezuela shines light on the grim, shadowy character of a US foreign policy that tramples on democratic norms around the globe. And it points to a dramatic consequence of such policy: the rise of a new, multipolar world heralding the end of US empire.

Corporate Coup is eye-witness, boots on ground, credible, essential reading for anyone who actually cares about democracy and freedom.”
—Roger Waters

“Anya Parampil is one of the most insightful people I’ve ever met. I’m proud to say I’ve stolen much of my understanding of the world from her. I can’t recommend this enough.”
—Tucker Carlson

“Anya Parampil’s progressive and great journalism on ‘The Grayzone’ has been an eye opener for years. She truly understands the modern world and its stakes.”
—Oliver Stone

“A careful and meticulous work of investigative reporting that exposes the dark side of the United States’ foreign policy towards Venezuela ... Parampil’s work epitomizes the best in the American tradition of politically committed investigative reporting which hearkens back to the times of Upton Sinclair.”
—Francisco Rodríguez, Rice Family Professor of the Practice of International and Public Affairs, Josef Korbel School of International Studies, University of Denver.

“Anya has a great ability to identify and interview key actors, as well as a capacity that not all researchers and foreign policy analysts possess: pure intuition characteristic of a woman who believes in liberation and respect for all peoples.”
—Jorge Arreaza, Foreign Minister of Venezuela (2017-2021)

“Masterful … a fascinating read, not only about Venezuela, but also about the tectonic social and economic shifts reshaping the world as we know it today.”
—Black Agenda Report

"Corporate Coup convincingly documents how disastrous U.S. policy on Venezuela has been for Venezuelans, Americans, and the world at large."
—The New Republic

"Engaging and informative"
—Jacobin

ISBN: 9781682193594

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

165 pages