Decade-old defunct group may be the key to better US-Venezuela ties

Jun 26, 2013

BOGOTA --  The 2002 snapshot shows Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro standing on a New England tarmac with his arms draped around U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-NY. At the time they were all lawmakers. Everyone’s smiling.
Despite deep economic ties, the United States and Venezuela have been at odds for years. Maduro — like his late boss Hugo Chávez — has accused the Imperio of trying to kill him and destroy his socialist reforms. The U.S. has yet to explicitly recognize that Maduro won April’s contested election and it blasts his administration on its human rights and drug record.
But behind the scenes, relationships built a decade ago during legislative exchanges, which became known as the Boston Group, seem to be bearing fruit. And that’s sparking talk of reviving the group, which has been defunct for seven years.

You may also be interested in:

caricom-1
La CSME, la seguridad alimentaria y la financiación climática encabezan la agenda de la Cumbre de CARICOM en las Bahamas.
The CARICOM Single Market and Economy (CSME); food security; climate change and climate finance; health; and security will be among the major topics when Heads of Government of
caricom_admin
A Building Energy Efficiency Project was introduced at the CARICOM Secretariat in December 2014
La Secretaría de CARICOM y la Agencia Caribeña para Soluciones de Justicia (CAJS) forjan una alianza para acelerar la transformación digital.
La Secretaría de CARICOM (CCS) y la Agencia Caribeña para Soluciones de Justicia (CAJS) han establecido una importante alianza con el objetivo de impulsar la transformación digital y mejorar la pre
caricom_admin