Venezuela, White House and Donald Trump
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Residents living in the capital Caracas and elsewhere have expressed concerns about safety and the country’s future as its leadership and the level of United States involvement remains in flux.
A lot of questions remain to be answered following the unprecedented US attack in Venezuela and everything that has happened since. For Venezuelans, both inside the country and abroad, it’s been a mix of emotions and a sense of uncertainty over what comes next.
Trump’s former national security adviser John Bolton said Trump is more focused on oil in Venezuela than toppling Maduro’s regime.
The U.S. attack on Venezuela has shifted the ground for the various guerilla groups operating across the borderlands with Colombia, raising fears of possible betrayal by Venezuelan regime officials, while opening the door to a wider conflict should U.
U.S. government issues urgent security alert for Americans in Venezuela to leave immediately due to safety concerns and inability to provide continued assistance.
President Trump has said Venezuela "unilaterally seized and sold American oil." But the history between the countries is far more complicated, experts note.
After arresting Venezuela's president, Trump and top U.S. officials warned other countries could be the targets of American intervention next.
Trump holds a meeting of oil CEOs at the White House to project support for his Venezuela plans. But the companies are skeptical.
Across thousands of miles, the Lebanese militant group forged illicit business links with a Caracas regime frozen out by the US
U.S. forces boarded another Venezuela-linked oil tanker in the Caribbean on Friday, according to U.S. Southern Command. This is the fifth oil tanker to be seized by the United States and the third in the last three days.
Delcy Rodríguez got American help with the return of an oil tanker linked to one of her political rivals that had left the country without authorization.
The United States and Venezuela said Friday they were exploring the possibility of restoring relations, as a Trump administration delegation visited the South American nation. In a brazen intervention last weekend,