Published • loading... • Updated
Maduro open to talks with US on drug trafficking and oil, dodges on CIA drone strike
Maduro offers talks on drug trafficking and U.S. oil investment amid U.S. strikes killing at least 115 in 35 operations, signaling a shift toward negotiation.
- On Thursday, Nicolás Maduro said he would negotiate on drug trafficking, oil and migration but dodged confirming an alleged CIA strike on a Venezuelan dock, saying `This could be something we talk about in a few days.`
- U.S. officials and outlets reported a CIA drone strike on December 24 targeting a Venezuelan dock facility allegedly used by the Tren de Aragua gang, marking the first known U.S. land operation.
- The U.S. maritime campaign totals 35 known boat strikes and at least 115 people killed, with a Wednesday operation striking two boats and killing five people.
- Legal critics and U.S. officials clash over the strikes' legality as international law experts and rights groups say they likely amount to extrajudicial killings, a charge the Trump administration denies, calling it an `armed conflict` with drug cartels.
- Maduro accused the U.S. of seeking regime change to access Venezuela’s oil but said he has not spoken to Donald Trump since Nov. 12 and welcomed Chevron Corp. investment.
Insights by Ground AI
196 Articles
196 Articles
Venezuela's Maduro willing to hold 'serious' talks with US
Venezuela's President Nicolas Maduro said in a New Year's interview that his country is willing to receive US investment in its oil sector, coordinate in the fight against drug trafficking and hold serious talks with the United States.
·Quezon City, Philippines
Read Full ArticleIn an interview with state television, the Venezuelan president also evaded a question about an attack in his country claimed by the US.
Maduro says Venezuela open to U.S. talks on drug trafficking, avoids question on dock strike
In a pretaped interview on state TV, Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro evaded a question about a U.S. strike at a docking area that the Trump administration believed was used by drug cartels.
·United States
Read Full ArticleCoverage Details
Total News Sources196
Leaning Left22Leaning Right31Center44Last UpdatedBias Distribution45% Center
Bias Distribution
- 45% of the sources are Center
45% Center
L 23%
C 45%
R 32%
Factuality
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium































