Venezuela at UN seeks support against US ‘threat’

Venezuela’s Foreign Minister Yvan Gil Pinto delivered a scathing critique of the United States during a speech at the United Nations General Assembly on Friday, denouncing what he described as an unjustified military threat. Pinto accused the US of fabricating baseless allegations to justify its aggressive actions in the Caribbean, including the deployment of warships and a nuclear-powered submarine under the guise of combating drug trafficking. He emphasized that Venezuela lacks weapons of mass destruction or nuclear capabilities, rendering the US claims as “vulgar and perverse lies.” Pinto also expressed gratitude to global governments and citizens, including those in the US, for opposing what he termed an attempt to provoke war. Recent US military operations in the Caribbean have resulted in the destruction of at least three suspected drug boats and the deaths of over a dozen individuals, actions condemned by UN experts as “extrajudicial executions.” The US has further rejected calls for dialogue from Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, whose legitimacy remains unrecognized by Washington due to allegations of electoral irregularities. Maduro, a prominent leftist leader, has not attended this year’s UN meetings, with US Secretary of State Marco Rubio labeling him a fugitive following a US indictment on drug-trafficking charges.