Trump claims he has cancelled second wave of attacks on Venezuela
Donald Trump has claimed that he cancelled a second wave of attacks on Venezuela because it was cooperating with the US on oil infrastructure and had released political prisoners. The US president said he had cancelled planned military action in recognition that the authorities in Caracas had released “large numbers” of prisoners and were “seeking peace”. “This is a very important and smart gesture,” Trump posted on social media. “The USA and Venezuela are working well together, especially as it pertains to rebuilding, in a much bigger, better, and more modern form, their oil and gas infrastructure. Because of this cooperation, I have cancelled the previously expected second Wave of Attacks, which looks like it will not be needed.” Trump did not elaborate on the alleged plan for fresh strikes but said the US navy armada in the Caribbean would remain, leaving Washington with the ability to attack Venezuela at short notice. “All ships will stay in place for safety and security purposes.” On Friday morning, US marines and navy sailors seized a fifth oil tanker, the Olina, which was falsely flying the flag of the small south-east Asian country of Timor-Leste, in the Caribbean near Trinidad. The assault was launched from the aircraft carrier USS Gerald R Ford, which remains positioned off Venezuela’s coast. Trump said he would meet American oil industry figures later on Friday. “At least 100 Billion Dollars will be invested by BIG OIL, all of whom I will be meeting with today at the White House,” he wrote. The Venezuelan government said it had received a “delegation of diplomatic officials from the US Department of State who will carry out technical and logistical assessments inherent to the diplomatic function”, with a view to the “restoration of diplomatic missions in both countries”. The expectation is that the assessment will lead to the gradual reopening of the US embassy, which has had no diplomats since 2019, when the US and other countries declared Nicolás Maduro’s government illegitimate and recognised Juan Guaidó as interim president. “Likewise, a delegation of Venezuelan diplomats will be sent to the US to carry out the corresponding duties,” the regime added, while insisting on framing the move as part of its efforts to “address the consequences arising from the aggression and the kidnapping of the president of the republic and the first lady, as well as to pursue a working agenda of mutual interest”. On Thursday, Venezuela announced the release of an “important number” of detainees. About 24 hours later, however, human rights organisations were able to confirm only about a dozen releases and are pressing the regime to free all political prisoners, who they estimate number between 800 and 1,000. The Committee for the Freedom of Political Prisoners posted that it was stationed outside various prisons, where “institutional indifference persists”. “In many cases, officials claim to be unaware of release orders; in others, even while acknowledging the official announcements, they point to the alleged absence of release warrants,” the NGO said in a statement. The former opposition candidate Enrique Márquez was among those released from prison, according to an opposition statement. “It’s all over now,” Márquez said in a video taken by a local journalist who accompanied him and his wife, as well as another freed opposition member, Biagio Pilieri. Spain’s foreign ministry confirmed the release of five Spanish nationals, one of them a citizen with dual nationality, who it said were “preparing to travel to Spain with assistance from our embassy in Caracas”. On Thursday, Trump said he planned soon to meet the Venezuelan opposition leader María Corina Machado. Since the US operation to capture Maduro on 3 January the future governance of the South American country has remained an open question, with Trump over the weekend dismissing the idea of working with Machado, saying “she doesn’t have the support within or the respect within the country”. But in a Fox News interview on Thursday, the US president said Machado was “coming in next week sometime”, adding: “I look forward to saying hello to her.” Asked whether he would accept Machado’s Nobel peace prize if she gave it to him, Trump said: “I’ve heard that she wants to do that. That’d be a great honour.” This will be Trump’s first meeting with Machado, who said this week that she had not spoken to the US president since she won the prize in October. Trump has not publicly made the same offer to Delcy Rodríguez, Venezuela’s interim president, although in an interview with the New York Times on Thursday Trump said the US was “getting along very well” with Rodríguez’s government and that they were “giving us everything that we feel is necessary”. The White House did not respond immediately when asked for additional details on the Machado meeting. On Friday, the retired diplomat Edmundo González, who was chose by Machado to run for president in 2024 – and who, the opposition has shown by obtaining copies of the tally sheets, did in fact win the vote – said he had spoken by phone with Spain’s prime minister, Pedro Sánchez, and told him that “democratic reconstruction in Venezuela depends on the explicit recognition of the electoral result of 28 July 2024”. He has been living in exile in Spain since September. Colombia’s president, Gustavo Petro, said in an interview published on Friday by El País that during a one-hour phone call with the US president this week, “Trump told me he was thinking about doing bad things in Colombia. The message was that they were already preparing something, planning it – a military operation.” Asked whether he feared suffering the same fate as Maduro, Petro said: “Undoubtedly. Nicolás Maduro, or any president in the world, can be removed if they do not align with certain interests.” Strikes on Colombian insurgent groups in Venezuela are apparently not off the table, however. On Thursday, Colombia’s interior minister said that during a call between Trump and Petro, the Colombian leader asked for US cooperation in combating fighters of the ELN, whose troops straddle the border. Petro asked if the US could help “hit the ELN hard on the border because when we attack they always end up in Venezuela and there have been times when Venezuela helped and other times it hasn’t”, he told local radio station Blu Radio. “They agreed to conduct joint operations against the ELN.” In recent days, Colombia’s defence minister, Pedro Sánchez, has taken to calling the ELN, the Spanish acronym for the 6,000-strong National Liberation Army, a “cartel”. While the group was born as a leftist Cuba-inspired guerrilla force in the 1960s, it has since become deeply involved in Colombia’s drug trade. Trump told Fox News that it would take time for Venezuela to get to a place where it can hold elections. US strikes on alleged drug boats in the eastern Pacific Ocean and Caribbean Sea have killed more than 100 people since they began in September. They formed part of a concerted pressure campaign on Maduro that culminated in his dramatic abduction by US forces. As part of that campaign, the US was understood to have conducted a strike on a docking area inside Venezuela, but land strikes would mark a significant escalation, with suggestions they could target cartels in Mexico. “We are going to start now hitting land with regard to the cartels. The cartels are running Mexico,” Trump told the broadcaster Sean Hannity on Fox News. Sibylla Brodzinsky, Reuters and Agence France-Presse contributed to this report






