Published: 12:45, June 25, 2020 | Updated: 23:45, June 5, 2023
Venezuela slams US 'provocation' after navy operation
By Reuters

This US Navy file photo obtained on June 24, 2020 shows the Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyer USS Nitze (DDG 94) departing Safaga, Egypt after a port visit, July 20, 2019. (WILLIAM HARDY / NAVY OFFICE OF INFORMATION / AFP)

CARACAS - Venezuelan Defense Minister Vladimir Padrino on Wednesday called an incident this week in which a US Navy ship navigated near the South American country’s coast an “act of provocation.”

Padrino said Venezuela was “not offended” by the act of the country’s longtime foe

The US military’s Southern Command on Tuesday said the missile destroyer Nitze conducted a “freedom of navigation” operation off Venezuela’s coast. The Southern Command said the vessel sailed in an area outside Venezuela’s territorial waters - which extend some 12 nautical miles from its coasts - but within an area the Venezuelan government “falsely claims to have control over.”

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Padrino said Venezuela was “not offended” by the act of the country’s longtime foe. The United States has imposed sanctions on the OPEC nation’s oil sector as part of its effort to oust socialist President Nicolas Maduro, who has overseen an economic collapse and has been accused by Washington of corruption and human rights violations.

“It is an empty victory,” Padrino said in a speech broadcast on state television, adding that the ship reached 30 miles from the Venezuelan coast. “It is a childish act.”

In a statement, US Army Col and Southern Command spokesperson Amanda Azubuike said the Navy’s freedom of navigation operations were intended to preserve maritime navigation and access rights around the world.

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“This region is no different, and we will continue to exercise our right to contest excessive claims,” Azubuike said.

Washington’s campaign of sanctions and diplomatic pressure have not succeeded in forcing Maduro from power. While President Donald Trump has stated that “all options are on the table” to remove him, US officials have made clear there is little appetite for military force.

Padrino said that any US military ships that entered Venezuela’s territorial waters would be met with an “overwhelming” response from the South American country’s armed forces.

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