Editorial Board

Venezuela's Future Won't Be Settled in the Streets

Protests won't work without a compelling vision for progress.

Bolivar of Broken Dreams.

Photographer: MIGUEL GUTIERREZ/AFP/Getty Images

Sometimes it's the little things that mean the most. When Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, facing swelling protests against his own rule, sent congratulations to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad on Syria's independence day, it was a gesture his fellow tyrant surely appreciated.

So far Maduro has deployed only tear gas and (mostly) rubber bullets against protesters. Yet his recent decision to arm and mobilize a half-million-strong citizen militia to prevent a "coup" points to the risks of greater violence. As Venezuela's neighbors and the world punish its government for repression, Venezuela's opposition must come up with a realistic platform for achieving political and economic change.