The New Zealand Herald

US opts for more sanctions

Pence pushes diplomatic path to remove Maduro

- Karen DeYoung and Anne Gearan

After a weekend of high drama but few results at Venezuela’s border, the United States and other nations appear resigned to the fact that forcing President Nicolas Maduro from power will be neither quick nor easy.

US Vice-President Mike Pence, addressing a group of Latin American leaders in Bogota, Colombia, yesterday, repeated the Trump Administra­tion’s assurance that “all options” are on the table, but he offered up only minor new US sanctions.

In his address to the Lima Group, the 14-nation diplomatic consortium supporting Maduro’s replacemen­t with opposition leader Juan Guaido, Pence gave no indication that the US was ready to use force.

Despite previously indicating that he would announce “clear actions” in response to violent clashes at the border at the weekend, Pence reiterated an amnesty offer for the Venezuelan military, emphasised continued “economic and diplomatic” measures against Maduro and urged other nations to exert more pressure.

The group agreed on a declaratio­n calling for a transition to democracy “peacefully, by the Venezuelan­s themselves . . . supported by political and diplomatic means, without the use of force”. The only participan­ts at the gathering who seemed to favour a more muscular approach were Guaido and the opposition he leads. On Monday, he tweeted that he would pose a formal question to internatio­nal backers, asking that all options be “open to achieve the liberation of this country”. Senior opposition politician Julio Borges was more direct, tweeting that the opposition “will urge for an escalation of diplomatic pressure and the use of force against the dictatorsh­ip of Nicolas Maduro”.

Pence acknowledg­ed to reporters yesterday that Guaido sought assurances that the US could use force if necessary. “I reassured him” that force remains an option, Pence said, “but we hope for better, we hope for a peaceful transition”.

The military option has not disappeare­d, said one senior Latin American official who attended the meeting. “It’s the elephant in the room,” the official said. “But nobody wants to see it, and nobody wants to talk about it.” Progress has been made, the official said. “But this is just starting. The economic pressure, the diplomatic pressure is just starting,” said the official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity.

The opposition appears to have become a victim of its own hype over the weekend’s events. It claimed that a humanitari­an “D-Day” — with aidladen trucks and thousands of cheering supporters coming face to face with Venezuelan security forces across the Colombian border — would burst the dams of Venezuelan military frustratio­n and bring about a massive rupture between the armed forces and Maduro.

Instead, about 160 rank-and-file troops abandoned their posts — symbolical­ly significan­t, but nowhere near the flood of support the opposition needed. At the same time, minimal amounts of aid got through. As many as eight people were killed, according to the opposition, and hundreds were injured.

“They started talking about the inevitabil­ity of winning, that humanitari­an aid can’t be stopped,” said David Smilde, a fellow with the Washington Office on Latin America.

“Yes, those are great to mobilise people. But the problem is being caught flat-footed. They’ve got to figure out a new plan to manage expectatio­ns.”

 ?? Photo / AP ?? Leaders, including (from left) Juan Guaido, Ivan Duque and Mike Pence, met in Bogota to plan the next move in their campaign to replace Nicolas Maduro with Guaido.
Photo / AP Leaders, including (from left) Juan Guaido, Ivan Duque and Mike Pence, met in Bogota to plan the next move in their campaign to replace Nicolas Maduro with Guaido.

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