Foreign Affairs Minister Sean Sobers has defended the government’s cautious posture on Venezuela, insisting it is focused on stability and a democratic transition, even as questions mount over the United States’ role in the dramatic ouster of President Nicolás Maduro.
Speaking at United National Congress headquarters earlier today, Sobers emphasised that the government’s stance has not shifted, despite the dramatic turn of events in Caracas and the increasingly assertive posture of the United States.
“As it pertains to the people of Venezuela, we’ve always stood on the side of the people of Venezuela,” Sobers said. “We stand on the side of a safe, secure, transparent, democratic transition.”
He said Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar has remained deliberate in her public remarks, even as Venezuelan Vice President Delcy Rodríguez, now acting in Maduro’s absence, has been openly critical of the Trinidad and Tobago government.
“The Prime Minister has always been extremely diplomatic in terms of her use of language as it pertains to the position, the evolving position in Venezuela, and will continue to do so,” Sobers said.
Pressed repeatedly on whom Trinidad and Tobago now recognises as Venezuela’s head of state, Sobers declined to offer a definitive answer, arguing that the issue was premature.
“As it pertains to that particular question, I really don’t think it arises,” he said. “What arises is in terms of the transition.”
He added: “We have to be extremely careful in terms of what we see. We need to be very sensitive and alive to the situation as it evolves.”
Sobers also defended the government’s earlier support for US-led military operations in the southern Caribbean, which Washington repeatedly framed as drug interdiction efforts. Venezuela had long rejected them as a pretext for regime change.
“Our position still stands as it was before,” he said. “The military intervention within the Caribbean region was based upon transnational crime. That has never changed.”
When challenged about US President Donald Trump’s public comments outlining plans for Venezuela’s oil sector, Sobers said responsibility for that narrative lay with Washington, not Port of Spain.
