San Antonio Express-News

U.S. officials reach out to Venezuela amid war

- By Joshua Goodman

MIAMI — Senior U.S. officials secretly traveled to Venezuela over the weekend in a bid to unfreeze hostile relations with Vladimir Putin’s top ally in Latin America, a top oil exporter whose re-entry into U.S. energy markets could mitigate the fallout at the pump from a possible oil embargo on Russia.

The outcome of the talks with President Nicolás Maduro’s government wasn’t immediatel­y clear.

The surprise visit came together after months of quiet backchanne­lling by intermedia­ries — American lobbyists, Norwegian diplomats and internatio­nal oil executives — who have been pushing for Biden to revisit the failed “maximum pressure” campaign to unseat Maduro he inherited from the Trump administra­tion.

But the impetus for a risky outreach to Maduro — who has been sanctioned and is indicted in

New York on drug traffickin­g charges — took on added urgency following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and ensuing U.S. sanctions, which promises to reshuffle global alliances and add to rising gas prices driving inflation already at a four-decade high. Powerful Democrats and Republican­s alike on Capitol Hill last week began voicing support for a U.S. ban on Russian oil and natural gas imports as the next step to punish Putin over the invasion.

The U.S. delegation was led by Juan Gonzalez, the National Security Council’s senior director for the Western Hemisphere, according to two individual­s briefed on the visit on the condition of anonymity to discuss U.S. policy. He was accompanie­d by Ambassador James Story, the top U.S. diplomat in Caracas when the Trump administra­tion broke off relations with Maduro in 2019 and recognized opposition leader Juan Guaido as the country’s legitimate president.

But it was the presence of another State Department official, Roger Carstens, the special presidenti­al envoy for hostage affairs, that had stirred hopes that Maduro may be willing to release American prisoners as a show of goodwill toward the Biden administra­tion.

Carstens previously traveled to Caracas in December and met in jail with six oil executives from Houston-based Citgo, former U.S. Marine Matthew Heath and two former Green Berets arrested in connection with a failed raid aimed at toppling Maduro staged from neighborin­g Colombia.

The Biden administra­tion has been considerin­g for some time easing tough oil sanctions on Venezuela in exchange for a commitment by Maduro to return to negotiatio­ns with his opponents that he broke off last fall when a key ally was extradited to the U.S. on corruption charges, according to a U.S. official on condition of anonymity to discuss internal deliberati­ons.

One alternativ­e is to let Chevron,

the last American oil company in Venezuela, boost production and possibly resume oil exports to Gulf Coast refineries tailor made to process the country’s tar-like crude, the official said prior to the weekend’s shuttle diplomacy. Under U.S. sanctions, Chevron is banned from doing all but basic upkeep on wells it operates in connection with PDVSA, the state run oil giant.

Maduro has shown little sign he’s willing to abandon Putin in his hour of need. He spoke by phone with the Russian president last week in a show of support and attended a rally in Caracas where Putin’s ambassador received a roaring ovation from ruling socialist party stalwarts.

“It’s a crime what they’re doing to the Russian people, an economic war,” Maduro said at an event where he railed against the decision by the U.S. and its allies to kick Russia’s banks out of the SWIFT payment system and impose a flight ban on its airlines. “It’s craziness what they’re doing.”

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