Venezuela, CIA and Trump
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Trump, María Corina Machado and Venezuela
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Tankers leaving Venezuela since Maduro's capture US bound
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Venezuela, oil
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When Venezuela’s opposition leader María Corina Machado walked into the White House on Thursday, she came bearing the gift US President Donald Trump has long coveted: a Nobel Peace Prize.
Economic instability in Venezuela after the U.S. raid to capture its president is deepening inflation and rattling the currency, sending grocery bills soaring for millions of people.
Rodriguez consolidates power, appoints loyalists in key positions Interior Minister Cabello seen as biggest threat to Rodriguez's leadership Intelligence chief Gonzalez's control questioned due to Cabello influence Jan 17 (Reuters) - In the 12 days since the U.
U.S. President Trump on Sunday posted on his social media platform saying Cuba should make a deal with the U.S. "before it is too late."
Trump accepted the gift from María Corina Machado and thanked her for it in a social media post. It is not clear yet what he plans to do with the medal.
17hon MSN
How Venezuela went from South America's richest to poorest economy despite massive oil reserves
Decades of nationalization, socialism, crony hiring and money printing turned Venezuela’s oil sector into a hollow shell, shrinking output, crushing incomes and forcing a historic exodus.
Venezuela sprawls over terrain twice the size of California, with vast tracts of treacherous jungles, steep mountains and cities filled with guns.
Acting Venezuelan President Delcy Rodríguez has promised to keep releasing political prisoners, but so far only a fraction of those imprisoned under Maduro have been released.