Venezuela opposition leader calls for military uprising against Nicolas Maduro

Venezuelan opposition leader Juan Guaido has
called for a military uprising in what he's calling the "final phase"
of his bid to oust President Nicolas Maduro. Guaido made the call in a video
shot at a Caracas air base, showing him in front of a group of soldiers and
accompanied by previously-detained activist Leopoldo Lopez. In the three-minute
video shot early Tuesday, Guaido said soldiers who took to the streets would be
acting to protect Venezuela's constitution. He made the comments a day before a
planned anti-government rally.
"The moment is now," he said, as his
political mentor Lopez and several heavily armed soldiers backed by a single
armored vehicle looked on.
Lopez has been under house arrest for leading an
anti-government push in 2014. He said Tuesday that he had been freed by members
of the military, and reiterated Guaido's call on all Venezuelans to peacefully
take to the streets.
"Today, brave soldiers, brave patriots, brave
men, supporters of the constitution, have answered our call," declared
Guaido in the video. He addressed the rest of Venezuela's security services,
which have thus far remained loyal to President Nicolas Maduro: "I invite
you to take to the streets."
There appeared to be about two dozen troops behind
Guaido in the video posted early Tuesday morning, with a couple of armored
vehicles behind them.
The Trump administration was one of the first
major world powers to recognize Guadio as the legitimate leader of Venezuela,
shunning Maduro after a 2018 election widely deemed flawed and undemocratic saw
him win another term.
In spite of steady pressure from the U.S., most
Latin American nations and Europe, Maduro has clung to power -- thanks in large
part to support from Russia.
Jorge Rodriquez, the Maduro regime's information
minister, said in a pair of tweets early Tuesday that security services were
"currently confronting and deactivating a small group of military
traitors" who it accused of attempting to "promote a coup against the
constitution and Peace of the Republic."
"We call on the people to stay on high alert,
along with the glorious Bolivarian National armed forces, to defeat the coup
attempt and preserve the peace. We will win," wrote Rodriquez.
Tear gas was fired on a highway near the air base
where Guaido's video was shot later on Tuesday.