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Top US commander surprises Venezuela with surprise security talks

U.S. officials reported that General Francis Donovan and Joseph Humire, a senior Pentagon official, made a surprise visit to Venezuela for security discussions on Wednesday.

This is the first trip by a U.S. Military delegation since U.S. Forces captured Venezuelan president Nicolas Maduro last month in an audacious operation and whisked to New York for drug-trafficking accusations. First reported by.

The Venezuelan government reported that the U.S. delegation met with interim President Delcy Rodriquez, Defense Minister Vladimir Padrino and Interior Minister Diosdado Cabello. Both sides have agreed to collaborate to fight drug trafficking, terrorism, and migration.

Padrino and?Cabello both face drug trafficking charges in the United States.

The U.S. Military's visit comes after a trip to Caracas by U.S. Secretary for?Energy Chris Wright last week.

The two trips together highlight President Donald Trump’s efforts to use his military might and energy policies to force Venezuela to implement sweeping?reforms.

DIPLOMATHY IS THE PATH OF PREFERENCE

Washington has stated that it will continue to manage Venezuela's business for oil indefinitely. It also maintains a strong naval presence in the Caribbean where the U.S. military is blowing up suspected drugs boats and working alongside the Coast Guard in order to seize Venezuelan-linked oil tanks.

Venezuela's government has emphasized diplomacy in its preferred approach to Washington. Washington wants Caracas to cut off ties to U.S. enemies and to open up to U.S. business. Venezuela has the largest reserves of crude oil in the world.

In a recent post on X, Venezuela's Minister of Communications Miguel Angel Perez stated that the meeting reaffirmed the importance of diplomacy as a means to resolve differences and address issues?of regional and bilateral interests.

Laura Dogu was also present at the meeting, according to the U.S. Southern Command. She is the new U.S. ambassador in South America.

Southern Command posted on X that "Discussions focused primarily on the security climate, steps to ensure 'the implementation of President Donald Trump’s three-phase Plan - especially the stabilization in Venezuela - and importance of shared security throughout the Western Hemisphere."

In a separate posting by the U.S. Embassy, Dogu called it a "historic day" in the effort to "advance an objective of a Venezuela that is aligned with United States."

For many years, high-ranking U.S. government officials rarely visited Caracas because the bilateral relationship between former President Hugo Chavez (and then Maduro) was strained.

Donovan was on his first trip to Latin America since he became the Southern Command chief, a position he assumed in February. Prior to that, he led the U.S. Military's Special Operations around the globe as the No. Special Operations Command. Reporting by Phil Stewart, Idrees Al-Ali; editing by Edmund Klamann, Edwina Gibbs

(source: Reuters)