Trump, Maduro and Venezuela
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Republican lawmakers are divided over whether President Trump should escalate military pressure on Venezuela to oust President Nicolás Maduro, with some Republicans warning that “regime
U.S. limits on Venezuelan oil exports are cutting the revenue that once sustained Nicolás Maduro, weakening his cash flow and putting the regime’s stability at risk.
President Donald Trump announced Tuesday what he called a "blockade" of sanctioned Venezuelan oil tankers, ratcheting up American pressure on the Venezuelan regime.
For weeks, the Trump administration has been escalating pressure on Venezuela and the government of Nicolás Maduro. Wednesday night, we heard from a critic of the approach. For a different perspective,
Trump administration's new National Security Strategy elevates Western Hemisphere as security priority, targeting Venezuela crisis and instability.
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Why Maduro Probably Can’t Count on Putin
Sign up for our newsletter about national security here. Nicolás Maduro sounded remarkably chipper last week for a man about to face off with a United States armada ...
As he realizes his glory days under former President Joe Biden are over, Venezuela’s communist dictator, Nicolas Maduro, backtracked on his initial remarks and is now begging the U.S. to de-escalate the situation. “The government of the United States ...
The M/T Skipper seized by U.S. Coast Guard, was a sanctioned crude-oil tanker previously identified as part of an oil shipping network supporting Lebanese group Hezbollah and Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps' Quds Force, both U.S.-designated terrorist organizations.