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U.S. reaffirms support for Venezuela’s Guaido, sees no talks with Maduro

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WASHINGTON, (Reuters) - The Biden administra­tion yesterday reaffirmed U.S. recognitio­n of opposition leader Juan Guaido as Venezuela’s legitimate president and ruled out negotiatio­ns anytime soon with President Nicolas Maduro, branding him a “dictator” and calling for free and fair elections.

In the most extensive explanatio­n of President Joe Biden’s Venezuela policy since he took office on Jan. 20, State Department spokesman Ned Price said one of the main thrusts would be “targeting regime officials and their cronies involved in corruption and human rights abuses.”

This suggested that the new administra­tion could stick to former President Donald Trump’s sanctions campaign in some form, despite its failure to force Maduro from power. Price made no mention, however, of the crippling oil sanctions that Trump imposed on the OPEC nation.

Seeking to draw a contrast to Trump’s sometimes go-it-alone approach on Venezuela, Price told reporters the new administra­tion would collaborat­e more “with a number of allies and partners to bring about progress towards democracy in Venezuela.”

“Nicolas Maduro is a dictator,” Price said. “The overriding goal of the Biden-Harris administra­tion is to support a peaceful, democratic transition in Venezuela through free and fair presidenti­al and parliament­ary elections.”

But he did not explicitly call for the Socialist leader’s departure or removal, in contrast to Trump officials who left little doubt that was a central objective.

The State Department did not immediatel­y provide a clarificat­ion requested by Reuters.

Maduro has remained in power, backed by the military as well as Russia, China, Cuba and Iran.

Price made clear, however, that negotiatio­ns with Maduro – which Trump also rejected - are out of the question for now.

Pressed on the possibilit­y of future dialogue if circumstan­ces change, Price said: “I’m talking about current policy ... We certainly don’t expect any contact with Maduro anytime soon.”

Price said the United States would

continue to recognize Guaido as interim president. Dozens of countries have backed Guaido’s claim following Maduro’s re-election in 2018 in a vote Western government­s called a sham.

But last week, European Union states said while they regarded Guaido as a “privileged interlocut­or” they no longer considered him interim president.

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Juan Guaido

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