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Panama Offers Exit Path For Maduro Allies To Keep Trade Route Safe
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Key Points
Panama's leaders have watched the rising tension between the United States and Nicolás Maduro's Venezuela with one practical fear: that a showdown in the Caribbean could come uncomfortably close to the Panama Canal.
Vice foreign minister Carlos Hoyos says President José Raúl Mulino is prepared to do something unusual for a small country.
Panama is ready to act as a mediator and, if needed, to receive certain members of the Venezuelan ruling circle on a temporary basis, as part of a negotiated way out of the crisis.
In simple terms: give powerful figures a safe exit so they have less reason to fight to the bitter end. That offer comes as the United States deploys a large naval presence near Venezuela and carries out more than twenty strikes on boats it links to drug cartels.
Caracas answers with military drills and angry speeches. In Washington and Miami, some voices now talk openly about forcing Maduro from power.
For expats and foreign investors, the real story is a 51-mile strip of water cut through Central America. The Panama Canal sees more than 13,000 ship crossings a year and carries a significant share of global container traffic.
Any disruption, even from higher insurance or rerouted ships, would show up in freight prices and delivery times. Mulino's government stresses the canal's permanent neutrality and presents itself as a calm, rules-based actor in a noisy neighborhood.
The debate now runs from TV studios to social media across Latin America, sharpened after Donald Trump suggested the US should“take back” the canal.
Panama's bet is that quiet diplomacy and a controlled landing for a failing regime are less risky than waiting to see what happens when gunboat politics collide with the world's trade arteries.
Panama is offering to mediate between Washington and Caracas and to host key Venezuelan insiders temporarily to ease tensions.
The country fears that a clash around Venezuela could spill over into the Caribbean and rattle the Panama Canal.
At stake is a waterway that handles about 5–6% of global trade and underpins Panama's entire economic model.
Panama's leaders have watched the rising tension between the United States and Nicolás Maduro's Venezuela with one practical fear: that a showdown in the Caribbean could come uncomfortably close to the Panama Canal.
Vice foreign minister Carlos Hoyos says President José Raúl Mulino is prepared to do something unusual for a small country.
Panama is ready to act as a mediator and, if needed, to receive certain members of the Venezuelan ruling circle on a temporary basis, as part of a negotiated way out of the crisis.
In simple terms: give powerful figures a safe exit so they have less reason to fight to the bitter end. That offer comes as the United States deploys a large naval presence near Venezuela and carries out more than twenty strikes on boats it links to drug cartels.
Caracas answers with military drills and angry speeches. In Washington and Miami, some voices now talk openly about forcing Maduro from power.
For expats and foreign investors, the real story is a 51-mile strip of water cut through Central America. The Panama Canal sees more than 13,000 ship crossings a year and carries a significant share of global container traffic.
Any disruption, even from higher insurance or rerouted ships, would show up in freight prices and delivery times. Mulino's government stresses the canal's permanent neutrality and presents itself as a calm, rules-based actor in a noisy neighborhood.
The debate now runs from TV studios to social media across Latin America, sharpened after Donald Trump suggested the US should“take back” the canal.
Panama's bet is that quiet diplomacy and a controlled landing for a failing regime are less risky than waiting to see what happens when gunboat politics collide with the world's trade arteries.
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