Miami Herald

In Doral visit, Trump vows to fight for Venezuelan­s

- BY NORA GÁMEZ TORRES ngameztorr­es@elnuevoher­ald.com

President Donald Trump met with Venezuelan activists in a Doral church and vowed to ‘keep fighting’ for Venezuelan­s, who are still suffering under the regime of Nicolás Maduro.

On a visit to South Florida on Friday, President Donald Trump portrayed himself as tough on drugs and a champion of Venezuelan­s, at a time when U.S. policy toward the troubled South American nation has not yielded the desired results and polls show him falling behind his Democratic rival in Florida.

“We are going to be fighting for Venezuelan­s,” Trump said during a roundtable discussion at the U.S. Southern Command headquarte­rs in Doral in the afternoon. “Cuba and Venezuela, we have it very much under control.”

Trump arrived at Southcom, joined by Secretary of Defense Mark Esper, Homeland Security Acting Secretary

Chad F. Wolf, National Security Advisor Robert O’Brien and Rep. Mario Díaz-Balart, R-S. Fla., to receive a briefing on the results of a counter-narcotics operation that was launched in the Caribbean in March.

“This operation has been incredibly successful,” he said during brief remarks in

which he referred to the “beautiful equipment” sent to the Caribbean region.

The increase in the U.S. military presence in ships, planes and security forces operating in the Caribbean and the Eastern Pacific has shown significan­t results, said the head of Southcom, Navy Adm. Craig Faller.

Faller said the operation has disrupted 122 metric tons of cocaine heading to the U.S. and more than 18,000 pounds of marijuana.

On display at the center of Southcom’s theater room was what a press officer said was a million dollars’ worth of cocaine.

The military operation is aimed at fighting drug cartels that want to take advantage of the coronaviru­s crisis but also to deny funds going to the Nicolás Maduro regime in Venezuela, O’Brien said.

“For years, Venezuela has flooded the U.S. with cocaine,” he said, adding that the administra­tion would continue its “maximum

pressure campaign” against Maduro.

O’Brien took also used his time at the roundtable to highlight Trump’s “commitment” to the Venezuelan people.

“He asks almost every day how things are going in Venezuela,” the senior official said. “For the people in Venezuela, the president continues to stand with you” and interim Venezuelan President Juan Guaidó.

The president arrived in Doral, the home of a large Venezuelan community, at a critical moment for his Latin American policy. Despite efforts by the Venezuelan opposition, led by Guaidó, who has the support of the United States and almost 60 countries, Maduro remains in power with the aid of Cuba, Russia, and more recently, Iran.

Neither a flurry of sanctions against both Venezuela and Cuba, nor a diplomatic proposal for a peaceful transition presented by the State Department, has persuaded Maduro and his close allies to leave power. And despite the harsh rhetoric, the administra­tion has made it clear it has no appetite for another military adventure.

But even during this impasse, many Venezuelan­s who have supported Trump voiced their discontent when he recently left open the possibilit­y of a meeting with Maduro. Trump later said he would only meet with the Venezuelan ruler to discuss his departure from power.

After visiting Southcom, Trump met with members of the Cuban and Venezuelan communitie­s at the Doral Jesus Worship Center.

Venezuela policy resonates with many CubanAmeri­can Republican voters, a bloc that mostly voted for Trump in 2016. In Florida, a swing state where electoral victories are narrow, Cuban and Venezuelan voters’ support could be crucial.

But the alleged comments of an aide to Vice President Mike Pence, questionin­g the existence of ethnic enclaves like Little Havana, created some friction a few days before the visit.

Flanked by Cuban dissident Rosa María Payá and longtime Cuban exile activist Orlando Gutierrez, Trump quickly reiterated that his administra­tion “stands with the people of Venezuela and Cuba.”

“We are standing with the righteous leader of Venezuela, Juan Guaidó,” he said. “And I ended the Obama-Biden sellout to the Castro regime,” he added. “What they did for Cubans was ridiculous.”

Several attendants thanked the president for his policies and keeping his promise to “fight socialism” in the region.

“You are what stands between capitalism and socialism,” said pastor Mario Bramnick.

“History will record you as the president who frees this hemisphere of socialism,” Díaz-Balart said. “These regimes would not survive another four years of President Trump.”

Some activists, like Ernesto Ackerman, head of the Independen­t Venezuelan American Citizens, pleaded directly to the president to “help the people of Venezuela to get rid of the narco-terrorists that have taken over our country.”

“We need your leadership,” he said.

Payá asked the president to indict Raul Castro, name the Communist Party as a terrorist organizati­on and “cut all the funds” going to the regime.

As several activists told of their experience­s fleeing from socialist countries and facing prosecutio­n or poverty, Trump said his Democratic opponent, former Vice President Joe Biden, was “a puppet of Bernie Sanders, AOC and the radical left.”

“Nobody would be safe in a Biden America,” he said.

Trump’s interest in Hispanic voters was also evident this week when he signed an executive order Thursday “to improve Hispanic-American access to educationa­l and economic opportunit­ies.”

“The Hispanic faith leadership ... not only believes in you, but will deliver for you your reelection because we understand that you are the beacon of hope for the Hispanic community,” said Lourdes Aguirre, a representa­tive of the evangelica­l community in Miami, at the signing of the executive order at the White House.

But the Venezuelan and Cuban communitie­s are not monolithic, and as November looms, the Democratic Party is paying more attention to Hispanic voters in the state.

A few hours before Trump’s visit to Doral, the Florida Democratic Party organized a panel with Venezuelan and CubanAmeri­can activists who criticized Trump’s policies.

“He’s going to sit down today with Venezuelan migrants; I saw his agenda. Is he willing to grant Temporary Protected Status for Venezuelan­s?” asked Leopoldo Martinez Nucete, a Venezuelan member of Latino Victory. “Look beyond what he says — and assess and evaluate what he has done. He has done nothing to resolve this pandemic. Pretty much like he has done nothing — just talk — about Venezuela. He doesn’t care about Venezuelan­s.”

 ?? PEDRO PORTAL pportal@miamiheral­d.com ?? From left, President Donald Trump and Congressma­n Mario Diaz-Balart, R-S. Fla., and listen to Venezuelan and Cuban exiles, including Orlando Gutierrez-Boronat, third from right, at the Jesus Worship Center in Doral on Friday.
PEDRO PORTAL pportal@miamiheral­d.com From left, President Donald Trump and Congressma­n Mario Diaz-Balart, R-S. Fla., and listen to Venezuelan and Cuban exiles, including Orlando Gutierrez-Boronat, third from right, at the Jesus Worship Center in Doral on Friday.

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