Venezuela, US military
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Trump, Venezuela
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Several Western countries have warned their citizens not to travel to Venezuela.
Venezuela resumed accepting U.S. deportation flights at President Donald Trump's request after initially canceling them due to an airspace closure.
By Rodrigo Campos NEW YORK, Dec 5 (Reuters) - The ramp-up of U.S. pressure on Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro's government is bringing fresh attention to the nation's defaulted bonds, including those of the state oil company Petroleos de Venezuela,
Long-range radar system will track drug boats in Caribbean, Tobago officials say, but it could also be used against Venezuela
Venezuela halts deportation flights as Trump escalates military pressure on Maduro government, ending key cooperation between Washington and Caracas.
The State Department is renewing an advisory warning Americans not to travel to Venezuela due to a high risk of instability amid heightened concern that President Trump is planning to invade the country.
Groups of Russian holidaymakers are being rerouted from a Caribbean beach resort in Venezuela to Cuba after a US military build-up posed threats to Venezuelan airspace. Russians had flocked to Isla Margarita — an idyllic and largely-undeveloped island of white sand beaches and mangrove forests 40km north of Venezuela’s mainland — for vacations after losing the ability to easily travel in the West following the imposition of sanctions over Moscow’s 2022 full-scale invasion of Ukraine.
The US is already fighting a war against Venezuela — in the form of drug traffickers and narco-terrorists, whose poisons kill more Americans in a year than died in Vietnam, Sen. Dave McCormick warned on Sunday.
Fmr. U.S. Ambassador to Venezuela James Story spoke with ABC News’ Stephanie Ramos to discuss the 87 people killed by U.S. strikes on suspected Caribbean and eastern Pacific drug boats.