Will Trump Consider Meeting Venezuelan Leader Maduro?

Published June 22nd, 2020 - 08:31 GMT
US President Donald Trump speaks during a campaign rally at the BOK Center on June 20, 2020 in Tulsa, Oklahoma. Hundreds of supporters lined up early for Donald Trump's first political rally in months, saying the risk of contracting COVID-19 in a big, packed arena would not keep them from hearing the president's campaign message. Nicholas Kamm / AFP
US President Donald Trump speaks during a campaign rally at the BOK Center on June 20, 2020 in Tulsa, Oklahoma. Hundreds of supporters lined up early for Donald Trump's first political rally in months, saying the risk of contracting COVID-19 in a big, packed arena would not keep them from hearing the president's campaign message. Nicholas Kamm / AFP
Highlights
'I would maybe think about that. Maduro would like to meet,' says US president

US President Donald Trump said he would consider meeting Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro amid severed ties between the two countries. 

"I would maybe think about that. Maduro would like to meet. And I'm never opposed to meetings — you know, rarely opposed to meetings," Trump said in an Oval Office interview Friday with the Axios news website.

"I always say, you lose very little with meetings. But at this moment, I've turned them down," he said in the interview published Sunday regarding a potential meeting.

Diplomatic relations between Caracas and Washington have been on a knife's edge since early 2019 amid heightened political tension due to a power struggle between Maduro and opposition leader Juan Guaido.

The US recognizes Guaido as Venezuela’s interim president and is backing his attempts to take charge in the South American nation.


In the event of a meeting with Maduro, Trump will backtrack from his administration's policies on Venezuela, as his senior aides have thrown their full support behind Guaido.

During the interview, Trump also said he does not have much confidence in Guaido.

"Guaido was elected. I think that I wasn't necessarily in favor, but I said — some people that liked it, some people didn't. I was OK with it. I don't think it was — you know, I don't think it was very meaningful one way or the other," he added.

In March, the Department of Justice indicted Maduro and several of his aides on charges of narco-terrorism, accusing them of conspiring with Colombian rebels "to flood the United States with cocaine."

Maduro denounced the decision and accused Washington of seeking to "fill Venezuela with violence."

This article has been adapted from its original source.

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