Police surround
Venezuela President Nicolas Maduro’s airplane in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, on
Monday. |
|
Imagine if an American adversary
sent agents to fly away with Air Force One. That outlandish comparison was being
spoken of in Washington Monday, after the US seized Venezuela President Nicolas Maduro’s airplane on the
grounds that Caracas never should have acquired it due to US sanctions, among
other criminal issues. The US flew the aircraft from the
Dominican Republic, where it was seized, to Florida on Monday, according to
two US officials. The
stunning sweep was the latest twist in a bitter showdown between the
US and Venezuela, and the seizure of the Dassault Falcon 900EX has been
described by officials as akin to sequestering Biden's signature
blue-and-white jet. “This sends a message all the way up
to the top,” one of the US officials told CNN. “Seizing the foreign head of
state’s plane is unheard-of for criminal matters. We’re sending a clear
message here that no one is above the law, no one is above the reach of US
sanctions.” In a statement, Attorney General
Merrick Garland said that “the Justice Department seized an aircraft we
allege was illegally purchased for $13 million through a shell company and
smuggled out of the United States for use by Nicolás Maduro and his cronies.” The plane was purchased from a
company in Florida, the Justice Department said, and was illegally exported
in April 2023 from the United States to Venezuela through the Caribbean. It
was used for Maduro's international travels and flew “almost exclusively to
and from a military base in Venezuela,” the Justice Department said. Caracas
has described the seizure as “piracy," accusing the US escalating
“aggression” toward Maduro’s government following a contested presidential
election in July. “The
United States has already demonstrated that it uses its economic and military
power to intimidate and pressure states such as the Dominican Republic to
serve as accomplices in its criminal acts. This is an example of the supposed
‘rules-based order’, which, disregarding international law, seeks to
establish the law of the strongest,” it said in a statement Monday. The
US has been ramping up pressure on the Venezuelan government to “immediately”
release specific data regarding its presidential election, citing widespread
concerns about the credibility of Maduro’s claimed victory. Read more about the extraordinary
story from CNN's Priscilla Alvarez here. |
Ingen kommentarer:
Legg inn en kommentar
Merk: Bare medlemmer av denne bloggen kan legge inn en kommentar.