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Trump declares that further strikes are possible if Venezuela's Maduro appears in US court

The United States President Donald Trump has left open the possibility of a second incursion in Venezuela if it doesn't get what it wants from the interim leader. Trump told reporters that he would order another strike against Venezuela if it did not cooperate with the United States. The U.S. is working to help Venezuela open its oil industry and end drug trafficking. He also warned of military action against Colombia and Mexico, and said that Cuba's communist government "looked like it was ready to fall on its own."

The Colombian Embassy in Washington and the Mexican Embassy in Washington have not responded to requests for comments. Trump's remarks came just before Maduro was scheduled to appear in New York on Monday, before a federal court judge. Maduro was arrested during a Saturday military raid in Caracas, which sparked international concern and plunged Venezuelan into uncertainty. Trump administration officials have described the seizure of Maduro as a law enforcement action to hold him accountable for criminal charges filed in 2020 accusing him of narcoterrorism conspiracy. Trump has said that other factors are at play. He says the raid was partly prompted by the influx of Venezuelans to the United States, and Venezuela's decision decades ago to nationalize U.S. petroleum interests.

'WE ARE IN CHARGE.' He said on Air Force One, as he returned to Washington from Florida, Sunday. "We're the ones in charge." Trump stated that oil companies would return to Venezuela to rebuild the country's petrol industry. He said that oil companies would spend billions and extract the oil from the ground.

Investors weighed the consequences of U.S. military actions in Venezuela while Asian stock markets rose.

Maduro is still in charge in Caracas and his top officials remain defiant. Delcy Rodriguez has been appointed as the 'interim leader' and she has stated that Maduro is still president. She has also contradicted Trumps claim about her willingness to work with America. Rodriguez, who is also Maduro's oil minister, was long considered to be the most pragmatic of Maduro’s inner circle.

Maduro is accused of supporting major drug trafficking gangs, including the Sinaloa Cartel, and the Tren de Aragua group.

Prosecutors claim he used his presidential properties to transport drugs, directed routes for cocaine trafficking, protected shipments with the military, and sheltered violent trafficking organizations. On Saturday, the charges were updated to include Cilia Flores who is accused by prosecutors of ordering murders and kidnappings. The first charges were filed in 2020.

Maduro denies any wrongdoing and it may be months before he is brought to trial. Since Maduro declared victory in an election that was marred by accusations of massive irregularities, the United States has considered him to be an illegitimate leader. Trump, however, has rejected the idea that Nobel Peace Prize-winning opposition leader Maria Corina Machado could take over. He says she is unsupported. Machado has been banned from the election of 2024, but she has stated that her ally Edmundo Gonzales has a mandate for the presidency. Some international observers claim he has won the vote overwhelmingly.

Trump stated on Sunday that his administration would work with Venezuela's government to crack down on the drug trade and to open its oil industry rather than push for elections in order to install a new leader.

Maduro may have few allies on the international stage, but many countries question the legality in seizing a head of state from another country and call for the U.S. respect "international law". The U.N. Security Council is scheduled to meet Monday to discuss the U.S. assault, which Secretary General Antonio Guterres called a dangerous precedent.

The attack also raised questions in Washington where opposition Democrats claim they were misled about Venezuela policy by the administration. Marco Rubio, the Secretary of State, was to brief Capitol Hill's top lawmakers later Monday. Venezuela, once one of Latin America's most prosperous countries, has seen its economy collapse over the last 20 years. This has led to one-fifth of Venezuelans moving abroad, in what is one of the largest exodus in history. Maduro's removal, who was a former Venezuelan bus driver and led the country for over 12 years following the death of Hugo Chavez as strongman, could cause further destabilization of the 28-million-person nation.

(source: Reuters)