US seizes oil tanker off Venezuela
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Trinidad and Tobago, Venezuela and US Military
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Machado, Venezuela and Nobel Peace Prize
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JetBlue, United States Air Force and Venezuela
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That’s right: 34 years after lawmakers said “yes” to using force to push Iraqi occupiers out of Kuwait, 23 years after they approved sending the military into Iraq to topple Saddam, and 14 years after officially declaring the war over, Congress may finally be getting around to taking those authorizations off the books.
The Venezuelan defense minister has vowed to respond to U.S. "sovereignty" threats as pressure on Caracas mounts.
Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth will hold closed, classified briefings for all U.S. senators and representatives on Tuesday about the Trump administration's strategy toward Venezuela.
President Trump is turning up the pressure against Venezuela and its strongman leader Nicolás Maduro, seizing a massive oil tanker en route to Cuba this week and slapping additional
Venezuelan opposition leader and Nobel Peace Prize winner María Corina Machado said she's "absolutely" supportive of President Trump's strategy in the country.
With the economy in ruins, and U.S. military forces off the coast, uncertainty and rumors mark life in Venezuela, dampening the yuletide mood.
Venezuela's state-run oil company PDVSA has been subject to a cyberattack, it said on Monday, adding its operations were unaffected, even though four sources said systems remained down and oil cargo deliveries were suspended.
President Trump’s approach to foreign policy in Venezuela is presenting a stark contrast with his approach to other countries as he seeks to escalate tensions with the South American country.