Las Vegas Review-Journal

U.s.-russia talks yield no fruit on Venezuela Two names stricken from U.S. sanctions list

‘Meeting of the minds’ didn’t occur, envoy says

- By Karl Ritter The Associated Press

ROME — Russia and the United States remain split on how to resolve the crisis in Venezuela, officials from both powers said Tuesday after talks in Rome.

Elliott Abrams, the Trump administra­tion’s special envoy to Venezuela, met with Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov to discuss the situation in the Latin American country.

“We did not come to a meeting of the minds, but the talks were positive in the sense that I think both sides emerged with a better understand­ing of the other’s views,” Abrams told reporters after the meeting at a luxury hotel in Rome.

He said it’s “perfectly plausible” that the two sides meet again but no date was set.

Russia backs Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro and has accused Washington of meddling in the country’s affairs by pressing him to step down and hand over power to opposition leader Juan Guaido.

Speaking to Russian media, Ryabkov emphasized the need for dialogue with the U.S. but warned Washington against military interventi­on.

President Donald Trump has said “all options are on the table” regarding Venezuela, which Russia interprets as a refusal to exclude military force, Ryabkov said.

“We have warned the U.S. against that reckless approach,” Ryabkov said in remarks that were carried by the state Tass and RIA Novosti news agencies.

Abrams insisted the U.S. will continue to keep its options open but said it has chosen the path

BOGOTA, Colombia — The Treasury Department is lifting sanctions on the wives of two Venezuelan TV magnates close to President Nicolas Maduro two months after their U.S. assets were frozen as part of a crackdown on corruption.

Maria Alexandra Perdomo and her husband, Raul Gorrin, were among seven individual­s sanctioned in January for allegedly running a graft network that stole $2.4 billion from state coffers through corrupt currency deals.

The removal from the blacklist on Tuesday of her name along with that of the wife of Gorrin’s brother-in-law and business partner Raul Perdomo suggests that the two women may be cooperatin­g with U.S. authoritie­s trying to untangle the web of corruption that proliferat­ed during two decades of socialist rule in Venezuela. of putting political, financial and diplomatic pressure on Maduro’s regime.

Earlier, Abrams met with government officials from Italy, one of four European Union countries that have not backed Guaido as Venezuela’s interim president, and paid a visit to the Vatican.

He noted that the Catholic Church enjoys respect and credibilit­y in Venezuela but said it’s unclear what role, if any, the Vatican could play in its political crisis.

Pope Francis has reportedly written to Maduro indicating that conditions aren’t ripe for the Vatican to step in and help mediate.

Also on Tuesday, the U.S. added a Venezuelan state-owned mining company to a growing sanctions list as it seeks to increase pressure on Maduro.

The new sanctions bar any U.S. citizen or entity from any financial transactio­ns with the gold mining company known as Minerven and its president, Adrian Antonio Perdomo Mata.

The U.S. Treasury Department said the company is helping to prop up Maduro, who alleges that he is the target of a U.S. coup plot.

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Elliott Abrams

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