Las Vegas Review-Journal

Maduro maintains his firm grip

Venezuela president fights overthrow bid

- By Christine Armario and Scott Smith The Associated Press

CUCUTA, Colombia — Nearly three weeks after the Trump administra­tion backed an all-out effort to overthrow Nicolas Maduro, there is little sign the Venezuelan president is losing his grip on power.

Dozens of nations have recognized opposition leader Juan Guaido’s claim to the presidency and the U.S. has tightened sanctions aimed at cutting off billions of dollars in oil revenue. But anti-maduro street protests have come and gone, and large-scale military defections have failed to materializ­e.

With the U.S. virtually certain not to launch military action, Guaido is trying to regain momentum with an effort this week to move U.S. emergency food and medicine into Venezuela despite Maduro’s pledge to block it.

Such an operation could provoke a dangerous confrontat­ion at the border — or fizzle out and leave Maduro even stronger.

With so much at stake, Guaido is under increasing pressure to soon unseat Maduro, analysts say.

“He is running against the clock,” said Daniel Lansberg-rodriguez, a Venezuela expert at Northweste­rn University’s Kellogg School of Management. “Expectatio­ns are running very high — not just among Venezuelan­s but internatio­nal allies — that this is a crisis that can be resolved quickly.”

Despite having the world’s largest oil reserves, Venezuela is suffering soaring levels of malnutriti­on, disease and violence after 20 years of socialist rule launched by the late President Hugo Chavez. Critics accuse Maduro, a former bus driver and Chavez’s hand-picked successor, of unfairly winning an election last year for a second six-year term by banning his popular rivals from running and jailing others.

The 35-year-old Guaido was a virtually unknown lawmaker until last month, when he took the helm of the opposition-controlled National Assembly. He has rallied masses of Venezuelan­s into street demonstrat­ions that have left at least 40 dead since he declared himself interim president Jan. 23.

Guaido has so far avoided arrest, but the general comptrolle­r announced Monday it was opening an investigat­ion into Guaido’s assets in a new escalation of the confrontat­ion between the government and the National Assembly.

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