Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
This is a list of diplomatic missions of Venezuela, excluding honorary consulates. Venezuela has an extensive global diplomatic presence and is the Latin American country with the third highest number of diplomatic missions after Brazil and Cuba .
Embassy 1978 [32] Egypt: Embassy 1979 Closed after Iranian Revolution Ethiopia: Embassy 1997 [33] Gabon: Embassy 1980s [34] Gambia: Embassy Unknown [citation needed] Israel: Embassy: 1979 Closed after 1979 attack to Israeli Embassy in Tehran [35] [36] Morocco: Embassy 2018 [37] Peru: Embassy 1978 [32] Singapore: Embassy 2010 Somalia: Embassy 2016
The Embassy of Venezuela in Washington, D.C. was the diplomatic mission of Venezuela to the United States. The embassy was located at 1099 30th Street, Northwest, Washington, D.C. in the Georgetown neighborhood. The embassy operated Consulates-General in Boston, Chicago, New York City, San Francisco, Houston, Miami, and New Orleans. [1] On ...
House Speaker Mike Johnson is criticizing a major prisoner exchange between Venezuela and the United States as a moment of diplomatic weakness for the Biden administration.
Since 2006 Vietnam has had an embassy in Caracas and Venezuela has an embassy in Hanoi. Though bilateral trade was $11.7 million in 2007 [ 135 ] relations show "great potential". [ 136 ] Over the past ten years, the two countries have witnessed new developments in various fields, including politics, economics, culture and society, particularly ...
The Biden administration is prepared to provide Venezuela sanctions relief if the country moves to restore democracy, including free elections next year, the White House said on Wednesday. "Should ...
White House spokesman John Kirby told reporters on Tuesday that the US government is “deeply concerned” by the arrest of activist and security analyst Rocio San Miguel in Caracas, Venezuela.
On October 5, 2008, Venezuela's Foreign Minister Nicolas Maduro visited Ahmadinejad in Tehran. [ 17 ] During the 2009 G-20 London summit , Chavez and Ahmadinejad held their own meeting which they called the "G-2" summit, at which the formation of a joint Iranian-Venezuelan development bank was announced, initially with US$200 million capital.