
"Washington's military operation in Venezuela on January 3 has upended the international order. A U.S. invasion of Greenland, an autonomous territory of an allied country like Denmark, is no longer seen as mere bravado by President Donald Trump. The long-awaited ceasefire in Ukraine is slipping through the world's fingers while Washington and Tel Aviv threaten a new attack against Iran."
"Spain does not want to impose any solution. Solutions cannot be imposed from the outside, much less by force. What we want is for the Venezuelan people themselves to decide. The solution must be genuinely Venezuelan, and that can only come from the broadest possible dialogue between the government and the opposition. If Spain can help with this, if Venezuela so desires, we are willing."
A U.S. military operation in Venezuela on January 3 has destabilized international norms and intensified global tensions alongside threats to Iran and a faltering Ukraine ceasefire. Diplomatic activity is intense, with incidents such as the Iranian ambassador in Madrid encountering feminist foreign policy delegates outside Spain's Foreign Ministry. Spain's foreign minister states that Spain will urge the EU to reconsider sanctions if Venezuelan authorities pursue democratic transition steps. Spain rejects externally imposed solutions and emphasizes that Venezuelan citizens must decide through broad dialogue between government and opposition. Spain offers assistance and maintains contacts with interim government figures and opposition leaders residing in Spain. Natural resources remain central to national sovereignty.
Read at english.elpais.com
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