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Venezuela’s Juan Guaidó promises to persevere despite crackdown

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ASSOCIATED PRESS

Venezuela’s opposition leader Juan Guaidó, who declared himself the interim-president of Venezuela, squares his suit jacket before the start of an interview, at the Popular Will party’s headquarters, in Caracas, Venezuela today. Guaidó wants to jumpstart his movement to oust Nicolas Maduro following last week’s failed military uprising. In an interview with The Associated Press, he promised to persevere in the face of a deepening crackdown by Maduro’s government.

CARACAS, Venezuela >> In the wake of last week’s failed military uprising, Venezuelan opposition leader Juan Guaidó is looking to jumpstart his movement to oust Nicolas Maduro, promising to persevere in the face of a deepening crackdown and taking heart from China’s recent support for an international mediation effort.

In an interview today with The Associated Press, Guaidó also repeated his willingness to consider inviting foreign troops to force Maduro from power, echoing the line from Washington that “all options” are on the table for dealing with Venezuela’s rapidly-escalating crisis.

“The best solution is the one generating the fewest social costs,” he said, blaming the socialist leader for blocking all attempts at negotiating a solution. “The biggest obstacle to that is Maduro.”

The 35-year-old national assembly president, who the U.S. and 50 other countries recognize as Venezuela’s rightful leader, sat for the interview at his party’s headquarters hours after the No. 2 leader in congress was jailed and several other lawmakers took refuge in foreign embassies. All are facing arrest for joining Guaidó and a small cadre of security forces in a military rebellion that was the closest the opposition has come in years to overthrowing Maduro. However, it failed to win the support of the armed forces’ top command.

“What keeps Maduro in power, and we’ve witnessed more openly in recent hours, is terror,” Guaidó said.

Guaidó said he is very grateful for support from the U.S., which has slapped severe financial sanctions on Venezuela and sent planeloads of humanitarian aid to bordering countries for eventual delivery inside Venezuela.

“Without hesitation they’ve called Maduro what he is: a dictator,” he said of the Trump administration.

But as the impasse with Maduro has dragged on, some cracks have begun to appear between the U.S. and the Venezuelan opposition.

Last week, Trump said Russian President Vladimir Putin was not “involved” in Venezuela and wanted positive things for the country, directly contradicting comments by his own national security team that Russia is propping up the socialist leader with military and financial support.

Guaidó said he viewed Trump’s comments “as just a different way of reaching out to Russia.”

Meanwhile, he said he was encouraged by recent comments by China’s government that it would step up its work with the EU and the international community to support political dialogue. Coming from Venezuela’s biggest creditor and a Maduro ally, the remarks were seen as something of an endorsement for the International Contact Group, an EU-led initiative that is seeking to promote early elections — something Maduro has steadfastly refused to support.

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