CARACAS (Reuters) – Venezuela will seek to reestablish its military ties with neighbor Colombia, the country’s defense minister said on Tuesday, after years of conflictive relations between the two nations.
Venezuelan General Vladimir Padrino said on his Twitter account that the effort to contact the Colombian defense minister Ivan Velasquez is due to a resolution by Venezuela’s president Nicolas Maduro to “reestablish their military relations.”
Colombia’s defense ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The two countries are in the process of repairing diplomatic relations, after Caracas fully broke them off in 2019, following a U.S.-backed attempt by the Venezuelan opposition to move humanitarian aid into the country from Colombia, which Caracas regarded as aggression from Bogota.
A 2021 audit from the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) found the former U.S. Trump administration’s aid effort was not planned in alignment with humanitarian principles.
On July 28, Colombia’s new government and Venezuela announced they would appoint ambassadors to the two countries’ capitals after years without diplomatic relations and will work to boost security along their shared border.
Colombia and Venezuela share a 2,219-kilometer land border with dozens of irregular crossings and activities such as fuel and food smuggling, as well as drug trafficking. Previously, Colombian and Venezuelan officials have traded blame for the lack of security.
Colombia’s newly appointed leftist President Gustavo Petro, however, has already announced his willingness to reestablish and normalize border crossings.
(Reporting by Vivian Sequera, Additional reporting by Luis Jaime Acosta; Editing by Aurora Ellis)