Albuquerque Journal

EX-GOVERNOR ON A GOODWILL MISSION

Among those held are two former Green Berets arrested in May

- BY JOSHUA GOODMAN

Bill Richardson plans to head to Venezuela to help free several jailed Americans.

MIAMI — Former New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson plans to travel this week to Venezuela to urge President Nicolás Maduro to free several jailed Americans as a goodwill gesture aimed at easing tensions with the U.S.

The Richardson Center, which seeks freedom for Americans held by hostile foreign government­s and criminal organizati­ons, announced Monday the planned meeting with Maduro on social media.

Richardson didn’t say on whose behalf he was traveling to Caracas or what day he would meet with Maduro, who was recently indicted on U.S. drug traffickin­g charges.

But among the U.S. citizens jailed in Venezuela are two former Green Berets — Luke Denman and Airan Berry — arrested in May while participat­ing in a botched raid organized from neighborin­g Colombia to oust Maduro.

Also being held are six oil executives from Citgo — five Venezuelan Americans and one a permanent U.S. resident — who were lured to Caracas for a meeting in late2017 at the offices of the Houston-based company’s parent, state-run oil giant PDVSA, when masked security agents swarmed a boardroom and hauled them away.

While Richardson’s visit is a private mission, he coordinate­d with the State Department and has kept U.S. officials briefed of his plans, according to someone familiar with the trip.

The face-to-face diplomacy stands in contrast to U.S. policy of “maximum pressure” on a leader considered by Washington to be a dictator and drug kingpin. The Trump administra­tion closed the U.S. Embassy in Caracas in March 2019 after it recognized Juan Guaidó, the head of the opposition­controlled congress, as Venezuela’s rightful leader.

Lately, however, President Donald Trump has shown signs of losing faith in Guaidó’s ability to remove Maduro, who has shown a surprising degree of resilience amid ever-tougher U.S. sanctions that have accelerate­d the OPEC nation’s economic collapse.

“He seems to be losing a certain power,” Trump said of Guaidó Friday in an interview with Telemundo. “We want somebody that has the support of the people. I support the person that has the support of the people.”

Richardson, a former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations during the Clinton presidency, has opened diplomatic backchanne­ls to several hostile government­s, including Iran, Cuba and North Korea, to win the release of some 40 Americans. They include former U.S. Navy veteran Michael White, who was released last month by Iran after two years in jail as part of a deal that spared an American Iranian physician any more time in jail in the U.S.

Richardson’s relationsh­ip with Maduro stretches back to when the Venezuelan would travel to the United Nations as Hugo Chávez’s foreign minister. The two also crossed paths at the 2018 inaugurati­on of Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador. Richardson also worked behind the scenes to bring home another American jailed in Caracas, former Mormon missionary Joshua Holt, who won his freedom in 2018.

Maduro’s government last month released a video showing the six American oil executives in relatively good condition after their loved ones expressed fear about the men’s health amid the coronaviru­s pandemic.

“Given limitation­s, our conditions here have been good,” one of the men, former Citgo President José Pereira, said between clips of the men dressed in orange jail garb playing ping pong and lifting weights. “They treat us with respect regarding our human rights.”

Less is known about the condition of the former U.S. special forces soldiers. The two appeared in videos shortly after their capture and said they had been hired by a Florida-based company run by a former special forces colleague, Jordan Goudreau, to train a volunteer army of Venezuelan­s to carry out an assault.

The Trump administra­tion has denied any involvemen­t in the attack, which consisted of a small contingent of lightly armed men who were easily subdued when they arrived at Venezuela’s coastline on a few skiff boats.

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Bill Richardson

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