US embassy in Venezuela reopens as Trump pushes for access to resources
Image: Al Jazeera

US embassy in Venezuela reopens as Trump pushes for access to resources

14 March, 2026.USA.1 sources

Key Takeaways

  • US reopens its Caracas embassy after seven-year hiatus.
  • Flag raised at embassy, signaling resumption of diplomatic activities.
  • Trump pushes for access to resources and deepens ties with Venezuela's new government.

Diplomatic reopening and symbolism

The United States says that it has reopened its embassy in the Venezuelan capital of Caracas after a seven-year hiatus, as President Donald Trump deepens ties with the South American country’s new government.

The United States says that it has reopened its embassy in the Venezuelan capital of Caracas after a seven-year hiatus, as President Donald Trump deepens ties with the South American country’s new government

Al JazeeraAl Jazeera

The US embassy said in a social media post on Saturday that the flag over the embassy has been raised once again, in a ceremonial step that signals the resumption of diplomatic activities in Venezuela.

Image from Al Jazeera
Al JazeeraAl Jazeera

“The morning of March 14, 2019, the American flag was lowered for the final time at US Embassy Caracas. This morning, on March 14, 2026, at the same time, my team and I raised the American flag—exactly seven years after it was lowered,” Charge d’Affaires Laura Dogu wrote in the post.

“A new era for US-Venezuela relations has begun. Onward with Venezuela.”

The US restored diplomatic ties earlier this month, and Dogu, the embassy’s most senior diplomat, added that the US was committed to “staying with Venezuela.”

Regime change context

The Trump administration has held up Venezuela as a model for regime change in other countries, including Iran, that have been in conflict with the US.

The renewed diplomatic ties come after the US launched a deadly military operation on January 3 on Venezuelan soil, culminating in the abduction of former President Nicolas Maduro and his wife Cilia Flores.

Image from Al Jazeera
Al JazeeraAl Jazeera

Since Maduro’s removal, the socialist leader’s former vice president, Delcy Rodriguez, has taken over as interim president, with Trump’s approval.

But the Trump administration has pressed Rodriguez’s government for multiple concessions, including access to the country’s vast oil reserves and other natural resources.

Oil leverage and rhetoric

Trump and his allies have framed such developments as the beginning of a new era of comity with Venezuela, after years of tension between Caracas and Washington.

But critics point to comments Trump has made threatening Rodriguez as evidence of potential coercion.

“If she doesn’t do what’s right, she is going to pay a very big price, probably bigger than Maduro,” Trump said in an interview with The Atlantic magazine, published on January 4.

In the lead-up to Maduro’s abduction, Trump and advisers like Stephen Miller had argued that Venezuelan oil was, in fact, US property, given the history of US oil exploration in the region and the 2007 push to expropriate property from US companies like ExxonMobil.

“American sweat, ingenuity and toil created the oil industry in Venezuela,” Miller wrote last December on social media. “Its tyrannical expropriation was the largest recorded theft of American wealth and property.”

Sovereignty and US control

Legal experts, however, say such statements represent an erasure of Venezuelan sovereignty.

International law guarantees each country “permanent sovereignty” over its own natural resources.

Image from Al Jazeera
Al JazeeraAl Jazeera

But the Trump administration has openly talked about controlling Venezuela’s resources “indefinitely“.

“We’re going to run it, essentially,” Trump said of Venezuela in his speech on January 3.

The US has continued to exert substantial control over Venezuela’s oil sales, even blocking its fuel trade with Cuba.

Proceeds from US-led oil sales, meanwhile, are deposited in a US-controlled bank account, to be divided up between the two countries.

Rodriguez urged Trump on Friday to ease remaining US sanctions on Venezuela in order to open the door for improved economic conditions in the country.

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