
Self-declared 鈥淰enezuelan Interim President鈥 Juan Guaido has ordered the setting up of a meeting with the United States Armed Forces to discuss cooperation in his efforts to oust President Nicolas Maduro.
During a gathering of supporters in the upper-middle class Caracas district of Las Mercedes on May 11, Guaido announced that he instructed his representative in the US, Carlos Vecchio, to establish a 鈥渄irect relationship鈥 with the US Southern Command (SouthCom), which all US overt and covert military operations in Latin America and the Caribbean.
The initiative by Guaido stokes rising fears that he looks to oust Maduro using a foreign-led intervention. Italian newspaper published an interview with Guaido on May 10, in which the opposition leader explained that 鈥淚f the North Americans proposed a military intervention, I would probably accept it.鈥
In a letter to SouthCom chief Admiral Craig Faller on May 13, Vecchio requested a meeting to discuss 鈥渟trategic and operational鈥 cooperation, alongside concerns over what he described as 鈥渢he [existing] presence of uninvited foreign forces鈥 in Venezuela. No evidence for this claim was provided by Vecchio.
Venezuelan authorities were quick to respond to the opposition鈥檚 move, with Vice President Delcy Rodriguez qualifying it as 鈥渞epulsive鈥 and 鈥渄oomed to fail鈥. Recent suggest that more than 86% of Venezuelans oppose a foreign-led military incursion into the country.
While SouthCom is yet to confirm a meeting with Guaido鈥檚 team, Faller had earlier tweeted that he looked forward to discussing how to 鈥渞estore [the] constitutional order鈥 in Venezuela and that his forces stand 鈥渞eady.鈥
Guaido and US officials have repeatedly stated that , including a military intervention, are 鈥渙n the table.鈥 However, other countries that have voiced support for Guaido have publicly rejected the possibility of intervention, including , , , and .
The overtures to the US SouthCom come on the heels of a and numerous unheeded calls by Guaido for the Venezuelan to support him.
After , the National Assembly president received the backing of . His unsuccessful efforts to remove the Maduro government, which included a 鈥渟howdown鈥 on the Colombian-Venezuelan border, have seen his .
More US sanctions
Guaido鈥檚 call for cooperation with the US military came as Washington unveiled a new set of sanctions against Venezuela on May 10.
The latest added two private oil shipping firms, Monsoon Navigation Corporation and Serenity Maritime Limited based in the Marshall Islands and Liberia respectively, to the US Treasury Department鈥檚 Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) blacklist. Two Panamanian oil tankers associated with these firms, the Leon Dias Chemical and Ocean Elegance, were also named.
According to the Treasury Department, the firms and tankers have delivered crude oil to Cuba from Venezuela since late 2018. Venezuela delivers around barrels of crude a day to Cuba as part of wide ranging cooperation agreements that include the presence of about 20,000 Cuban medical and agricultural technicians in Venezuela.
The sanctions follow , while the Venezuelan economy has recently seen restrictions imposed on its and sectors, as well as a .
Similarly, Guaido called on those European countries that recognise him as the 鈥渓egitimate鈥 president to 鈥渁mplify鈥 economic sanctions against Caracas this weekend, as well as urging assistance in international courts to oust Maduro.
Sanctions have repeatedly been declared by independent multilateral agencies. Recent from the UN Special Rapporteur Idriss Jazairy argued that the sanctions also violate , while an April report from the Washington-based Center for Economic and Policy Research (CEPR) indicated that US economic sanctions have directly caused more than in Venezuela since 2017.
Apart from calling for more sanctions, Guaido also urged European governments to grant 鈥渕aximum legitimacy鈥 to his appointed representatives. European governments largely continue to have complete or partial diplomatic relations with the ambassadors named by the Maduro administration.
Efforts by Vecchio to also continue to be frustrated by a group of US solidarity activists who have been occupying the building, with the permission of the Venezuelan government, since April 12.
Marine incursion
Amid discussions of military cooperation, tensions remained high following the incursion of an armed US Coast Guard patrol vessel into Venezuelan waters on May 9.
Action was taken by the Venezuelan Navy and Air Force when the USCG James sailed 13 nautical miles off Venezuela鈥檚 northern coast. The vessel changed course away from the coastline following a radio request to do so.
According to SouthCom spokesperson Colonel Amanda Azubuike, the vessel was carrying out 鈥渁 mission to intercept drugs鈥.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 know if other Republics would accept actions like these in their maritime jurisdiction, but we won鈥檛,鈥 Venezuelan defence minister Vladimir Padrino Lopez said on May 11, describing the incident as a 鈥減rovocation鈥.
鈥淎ll operations of law enforcement in this place where the US vessel was correspond to Venezuela by international law. This was an armed coast guard patrolling these waters,鈥 he said.
The USCG James was detected in the contiguous zone of Venezuelan waters which covers 12鈥24 miles from the coastline. In this maritime band and according to international law, the free passage of foreign ships is allowed, but Caracas has full sovereignty in political, migratory, border, sanitary, and fiscal matters, including law enforcement and 鈥渋ntercepting drugs鈥.
According to the , the USCG James (WMSL 754) is one of the most advanced patrol vessels in its fleet, carrying modern surveillance and reconnaissance equipment, as well as being able to serve as a command post for 鈥渃omplex law enforcement and national security missions involving the Coast Guard and numerous partner agencies鈥.
The border incursion comes as Caracas reopened its borders with Brazil and the Dutch island of Aruba on Friday, in efforts to boost border trade. The borders had been closed for more than three months since Guaido鈥檚 .
[Reprinted from .]