The Commercial Appeal

Venezuela sought to swap Americans for Maduro ally

Citgo executives reimprison­ed as retaliatio­n

- Joshua Goodman

MIAMI – Venezuela’s government quietly offered last year to release imprisoned Americans in exchange for the U.S. letting go a key financier of President Nicolás Maduro, according to people with knowledge of the proposal and message exchanges seen by The Associated Press.

The offer was discussed at a previously reported meeting in Mexico City in September 2020 between a top Maduro aide and Richard Grenell, a close ally of former President Donald Trump, one of the people involved in organizing the meeting said.

The offer, which was rejected by the Trump administra­tion, has taken on new relevance following the extraditio­n this month to Miami of businessma­n Alex Saab, who prosecutor­s believe was the main conduit for corruption in Maduro’s inner circle. In retaliatio­n, Venezuela reimprison­ed six executives of Houston-based Citgo, a subsidiary of Venezuela’s state-owned oil giant, who had been under house arrest.

A little over a year ago, Maduro’s government was looking to release the so-called Citgo 6 along with two former Green Berets tied to a failed cross-border raid in exchange for Saab, according to former Miami Congressma­n David Rivera, who said he helped organize the meeting.

Grenell declined to say what the September 2020 meeting was about but adamantly denied it had anything to do with hostage negotiatio­ns.

“I never discussed a swap. It wasn’t something we were interested in nor was it a point of negotiatio­n – ever,” he said in a statement. “The purpose of the meeting was clear to everyone who was actually negotiatin­g.”

However, Venezuela’s interest in negotiatin­g for Saab was corroborat­ed by another individual with knowledge of the proposal on the condition of anonymity to discuss the private diplomatic effort. The AP also saw text messages from right after the meeting between some of the organizers – but not Grenell – in which follow-up steps for a deal to return the American prisoners is discussed.

Rivera’s account raises fresh questions about the nature and scope of the back-channel diplomacy. It’s also likely to add pressure on the Biden administra­tion, which is already facing criticism for not doing enough to bring home Americans wrongfully detained abroad, to pursue a prisoner deal of its own with Maduro – something it has resisted until now.

Among new details to emerge: Grenell was joined in Mexico City by Erik Prince, the founder of controvers­ial security firm Blackwater and whose sister, Betsy Devos, was Trump’s education secretary.

In Rivera’s telling, he was asked to get involved by Raul Gorrín, a Venezuelan businessma­n who had been trying to bridge differences between the U.S. and Maduro before being indicted himself on charges of bribing top Maduro officials. Rivera, a Republican who served a single term in Congress, said he was a translator in encrypted conference calls over Wickr, a messaging app, ahead of the meeting in which Gorrín explained to Prince that Maduro was willing to swap the Americans for Saab.

“Both Gorrín in Spanish and me in English made it crystal clear to Prince repeatedly that the purpose of the meeting was to discuss freeing the Americans in exchange for Saab,” Rivera said.

Saab had been arrested a few months earlier in Cape Verde en route to Iran and was fighting tooth and nail against extraditio­n to the U.S. He was joined by Maduro’s government, which considers the previously low-profile Colombian-born businessma­n a diplomatic envoy and keeper of state secrets that, if revealed, would compromise Venezuela’s national security.

Rivera said after several back-and-forth calls Prince arranged for him and Grenell to travel to Mexico City to meet with Jorge Rodríguez, a top aide to Maduro and now president of the pro-government congress. In 2019, Prince traveled to Caracas to meet with Rodríguez’s sister, Vice President Delcy Rodríguez, cementing his role as one of the few American interlocut­ors to the otherwise isolated Maduro government.

Rivera said he was supposed to be present for the meeting as well, but got delayed while making a connection in Houston. When he arrived to the Mexican capital, the meeting at The Westin hotel had already blown up over Grenell’s insistence that any prisoner swap be accompanie­d with an exit plan for Maduro, Rivera said.

In a subsequent call, Prince told Gorrín “that the Citgo 6 were simply not valuable enough to the Trump administra­tion for a straight prisoner swap for Saab,” Rivera said.

It’s not clear how seriously the Trump administra­tion considered Maduro’s offer – if at all. The trip to Mexico City surprised some senior Trump officials, who learned about it from reporters and worried it could undermine efforts to undermine Maduro through sanctions and ongoing investigat­ions into corruption.

Unlike prisoner exchanges the U.S. has recently carried out with other hostile government­s, from Cuba to Iran, Saab hasn’t yet been tried for his alleged crimes. Moreover, his arrest was the result of a yearslong effort by law enforcemen­t that had been cheered on by foreign policy hawks and influential Venezuelan exiles in Florida for whom Saab – the architect of efforts to circumvent U.S. sanctions – was a trophy too valuable to give up before he was behind bars in the U.S.

“There was no way we were going to swap for Saab. Grenell and the others had absolutely no authority to offer that,” said Elliott Abrams, who served as the U.S. special representa­tive for Venezuela under Trump. “The move to detain and try Saab was an all-of-government interagenc­y effort. These freelancer­s represente­d no one but themselves.”

Rodríguez and Prince didn’t respond to requests for comment. A U.S. government official told the AP the State Department “is not in a position to comment on reports of deliberati­ons of a prior administra­tion.”

 ?? JORGE ARREAZA/VENEZUELA’S FOREIGN MINISTRY/TWITTER VIA AP ?? From left to right, CITGO oil executives Jose Angel Pereira, Gustavo Cardenas, Jorge Toledo, Jose Luis Zambrano, Tomeu Vadell and Alirio Jose Zambrano, are shown outside the Bolivarian National Intelligen­ce Service, in Caracas, Venezuela.
JORGE ARREAZA/VENEZUELA’S FOREIGN MINISTRY/TWITTER VIA AP From left to right, CITGO oil executives Jose Angel Pereira, Gustavo Cardenas, Jorge Toledo, Jose Luis Zambrano, Tomeu Vadell and Alirio Jose Zambrano, are shown outside the Bolivarian National Intelligen­ce Service, in Caracas, Venezuela.
 ?? ARIANA CUBILLOS/AP FILE ?? Pedestrian­s walk near a poster asking for the freedom of Colombian businessma­n and Venezuelan special envoy Alex Saab, and that reads in Spanish “They haven’t been able to bend him,” in Caracas, Venezuela.
ARIANA CUBILLOS/AP FILE Pedestrian­s walk near a poster asking for the freedom of Colombian businessma­n and Venezuelan special envoy Alex Saab, and that reads in Spanish “They haven’t been able to bend him,” in Caracas, Venezuela.

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