Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Brazil Tries To Stop A U.S.Venezuela Clash Without Picking A Side


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Key Points

  • Brazil rejects both a U.S. strike on Venezuela and forced regime change.
  • Washington brands Maduro a drug boss; Brasília fears refugees, chaos and bad precedent.
  • Regional splits and mistrust of Caracas leave Brazil largely alone trying to stop escalation.

    Brazil's foreign-policy chief Celso Amorim has drawn a clear line: Brazil will not demand that Nicolás Maduro step down, even as it works to prevent a U.S. attack.

    He says only Maduro can decide to leave power and that Brazil will never make resignation a precondition for talks. The message is simple: Brasília opposes outside-engineered overthrows but keeps distance from Venezuela's disputed 2024 election.

    The immediate worry sits offshore. U.S. warships, including a major aircraft carrier, patrol international waters near Venezuela.



    Under a campaign presented as a crackdown on cocaine routes, U.S. forces have bombed small boats in the Caribbean and Pacific, killing dozens of suspected traffickers. Washington accuses Maduro and allied officers of running a cartel that feeds the U.S. cocaine market.
    Diplomacy Faces Headwinds
    Venezuela is not a major producer, but it is a key corridor for drugs leaving Colombia, Peru and Bolivia. That lets Washington argue that airstrikes on alleged“labs” or logistics hubs are part of a wider war on narcotics.

    Lula's advisers fear a slippery slope in which bombs fall first on traffickers and later on any target stamped as a security threat. For Brazil, the stakes are concrete. The two countries share roughly 2,000 kilometers of border through fragile Amazonian terrain.

    A serious conflict could send large numbers of Venezuelans towards Brazil and Colombia, straining services in already poor frontier towns. It could also normalize the idea that the United States can strike Latin American territory without broad regional backing.

    Brasília is trying to steer a narrow path: pressing Maduro, via diplomatic channels, to keep a moderate tone, and urging Washington to limit any military action.

    Yet regional politics are fractured. Anger over Maduro's past threats against Guyana, firm anti-Maduro positions in Argentina and Paraguay, and mistrust of both the regime and a fragmented opposition all make diplomacy harder just as the risk of miscalculation grows.

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  • The Rio Times

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