kayhan.ir

News ID: 63507
Publish Date : 24 February 2019 - 21:21

ce 2011. Guaido Threatens ‘All Options’ by U.S. in Venezuela

CARACAS (Dispatches) - Venezuelan opposition leader Juan Guaido said on Sunday he planned to propose that the U.S. consider "all options” to oust President Nicolas Maduro after a bid to bring in American "aid” was blocked by Venezuela’s army.   
Trucks of U.S. "aid” returned to warehouses in Colombia on Saturday after Guaido’s supporters failed to break through lines of troops, who dispersed them with tear gas and rubber rounds.
"Today’s events force me to make a decision: to formally propose to the international community that we must have all options open to secure the freedom of our country, which fights and will keep fighting,” Guaido said on Twitter.
The United States is the top foreign backer of Guaido, who declared himself as the interim president last month and won immediate recognition by most Western nations, setting off the current crisis.
President Donald Trump has in the past said military intervention in Venezuela is "an option”. Hawkish U.S. national security adviser John Bolton has canceled his trip to South Korea in order to "focus on events in Venezuela”.
Guaido said he will meet U.S. Vice President Mike Pence and other American officials in the Colombian capital of Bogota on Monday to decide on ramping up pressure on Maduro to step down.
A senior U.S. official said Pence would be prepared to announce new sanctions at the meeting, adding to American pressure which has hit the lives of Venezuelans grappling with hyperinflation and an economy in free fall.
Bolton courted controversy earlier this month by flashing a note reading "5,000 troops to Colombia” during an announcement of fresh sanctions on Venezuela.
Russia’s Foreign Ministry said on Friday the U.S. has deployed special forces and equipment near the South American nation and is using "humanitarian aid” to arm Venezuela’s opposition in a "dangerous provocation”.   
Analysts say Washington’s "aid” showdown at the border is less about solving Venezuela’s needs and more about instigating divisions in the army ranks after efforts to stir a mutiny fell flat.  
U.S. leaders are currently believed to be counting on violent confrontations between army troops and protesters, which could persuade some officers to defect.
On Friday, fierce clashes between Venezuelan police and protesters left two people dead as Guaido’s supporters attempted to break through the barricaded Simon Bolivar bridge to bring in the U.S. package.
The Venezuelan government says the humanitarian aid is a cover to topple it, urging Washington to lift its crippling sanctions instead if it genuinely wants to help the Venezuelans.