WORLD

Maduro open to US talks on drug trafficking, but silent on CIA strike

Jan 1, 2026, 5:48 PM

President Nicolas Maduro joins a rally marking the anniversary of the Battle of Santa Ines, which t...

President Nicolas Maduro joins a rally marking the anniversary of the Battle of Santa Ines, which took place during Venezuela's 19th-century Federal War, in Caracas, Venezuela, Wednesday, Dec. 10, 2025. (AP Photo/Cristian Hernandez)
Credit: ASSOCIATED PRESS

(AP Photo/Cristian Hernandez)

CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) — Venezuela is open to negotiating an agreement with the United States to combat drug trafficking, the South American country’s President Nicolás Maduro said in a pretaped interview aired Thursday on state television, but he declined to comment on a CIA-led strike last week at a Venezuelan docking area that the Trump administration believed was used by cartels.

Maduro, in an interview with Spanish journalist Ignacio Ramonet, reiterated that the U.S. wants to force a government change in Venezuela and gain access to its vast oil reserves through the monthslong pressure campaign that began with a massive military deployment to the Caribbean Sea in August.

“What are they seeking? It is clear that they seek to impose themselves through threats, intimidation and force,” Maduro said, later adding that it is time for both nations to “start talking seriously, with data in hand.”

“The U.S. government knows, because we’ve told many of their spokespeople, that if they want to seriously discuss an agreement to combat drug trafficking, we’re ready,” he said. “If they want oil, Venezuela is ready for U.S. investment, like with Chevron, whenever they want it, wherever they want it and however they want it.”

Chevron Corp. is the only major oil company exporting Venezuelan crude to the U.S. Venezuela has the world’s largest proven oil reserves.

The interview was taped on New Year’s Eve, the same day the U.S. military announced strikes against five alleged drug-smuggling boats. The latest attacks bring the total number of known boat strikes to 35 and the number of people killed to at least 115, according to numbers announced by the Trump administration. Venezuelans are among the victims.

President Donald Trump has justified the attacks as a necessary escalation to stem the flow of drugs into the United States and asserted that the U.S. is engaged in an “armed conflict” with drug cartels. The strikes began off Venezuela’s Caribbean coast and later expanded to the eastern Pacific Ocean.

Meanwhile, the CIA was behind a drone strike last week at a docking area believed to have been used by Venezuelan drug cartels, according to two people familiar with details of the operation who requested anonymity to discuss the classified matter. It was the first known direct operation on Venezuelan soil since the boat strikes began, a significant escalation in the administration’s pressure campaign on Maduro, who has been charged with narco-terrorism in the U.S.

Asked about the operation on Venezuelan soil, Maduro said he could “talk about it in a few days.”

___

Associated Press writer Aamer Madhani contributed to this report from Washington.

World

FILE - United States' Chloe Kim competes during the women's halfpipe finals at the 2022 Winter Olym...

Associated Press

2-time Olympic champion Chloe Kim injures shoulde, ‘trying to stay optimistic’ for Italy

LAAX, Switzerland (AP) — Two-time Olympic gold medalist Chloe Kim said Thursday that Winter Games in Italy next month. Kim posted footage of her fall from earlier this week on the halfpipe in Laax, where the world’s top snowboarders compete later this month in a key pre-Olympic tune-up. She landed a jump cleanly but lost […]

4 hours ago

Commuters ride a bus past a mural calling for the release of former Venezuelan President Nicolas Ma...

Associated Press

Venezuela to release a ‘significant number’ of prisoners in effort as gesture to ‘seek peace’

CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) — Venezuela will release a “significant number” of Venezuelan and foreigners imprisoned in the country, the head of Venezuela’s national assembly said Thursday. Jorge Rodríguez, brother of acting President Delcy Rodríguez, did not specify who they would be releasing or how many people would be released. Despite mass detentions following the tumultuous […]

8 hours ago

A boat sails past the oil tanker Nord Star, Panama, on Lake Maracaibo, Venezuela, Wednesday, Jan. 7...

Associated Press

Britain says tanker seizure is a win for trans-Atlantic security but tensions loom over Greenland

LONDON (AP) — The U.S. seizure of a Venezuela-linked oil tanker in the North Atlantic was seen by some as the unilateral action of an America-first government with scant regard for other countries’ views. Britain calls it an example of trans-Atlantic cooperation in support of international rules. The U.K. government argues that the interception of […]

10 hours ago

An interactive map of protests in Iran from December 29, 2025, to January 5, 2026. (AP Digital Embe...

Associated Press

Protests in Iran sparked by economic woes now nationwide, activists say

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — Protests in Iran sparked by economic woes have now gone nationwide in the Islamic Republic, activists said Thursday, signaling both their staying power and intensity as they challenge the country’s theocracy. Wednesday saw the most-intense day of demonstrations, reaching rural towns and major cities in every province though still […]

15 hours ago

From left to right, Dan Huaicheng, secretary-general of China Arms control and Disarmament Associat...

Associated Press

A familiar refrain as China and Japan, uneasy neighbors in East Asia, begin 2026 at odds again

BEIJING (AP) — They’re at it again. China and Japan — frenemies, trading partners and uneasy neighbors with a tortured, bloody history they still struggle to navigate — are freshly at each other’s rhetorical throats as 2026 begins. And it’s over the same sticking points that have kept them resentful and suspicious for many decades: […]

17 hours ago

A dealer watches computer monitors at a dealing room of Hana Bank in Seoul, South Korea, Thursday, ...

Associated Press

Asian shares are mixed after Wall Street’s strong start to the year cools

HONG KONG (AP) — Asian shares were mixed on Thursday after Wall Street’s strong start to the year cooled. Tokyo’s Nikkei 225 dropped 1% to 51,660.50 in early trading, with technology stocks among those leading the decline. South Korea’s Kospi added 0.6% to 4,576.95. Both reached all-time high levels earlier this week. Hong Kong’s benchmark […]

21 hours ago

Maduro open to US talks on drug trafficking, but silent on CIA strike