Guyana monitoring deployment of Russian bombers to Venezuela
One of the two TU-160 supersonic bombers
One of the two TU-160 supersonic bombers

The Guyana Government said it is monitoring the deployment of two Russian bomber aircraft to Venezuela.

In a statement issued on Wednesday, Foreign Affairs Minister Carl Greenidge said his ministry has been approached with regards to reports of the deployment of two TU-160 supersonic bombers from the Russian Federation to the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela. “The Ministry is monitoring ongoing related developments. It is important to note that military exercises are a regular feature of state relations and do not in themselves constitute a threat,” Greenidge who is also the Second Vice President said.

Further, he said Guyana is fully committed to the rule of international law, including the peaceful resolution of disputes. “Notwithstanding the ongoing border controversy, Guyana remains open to pursuing meaningful functional cooperation with Venezuela whenever that opportunity arises. Guyana and Russia have had cordial diplomatic relations since December 17, 1970,” Vice President Greenidge said.

Meanwhile, according to a BBC report Russian and US officials have been involved in a spat over the landing in Venezuela of the two Russian bombers capable of carrying nuclear weapons. The two Tu-160 bombers landed in Venezuela on Monday in a Russian show of support for the government of socialist President Nicolás Maduro.

Foreign Affairs Minister Carl Greenidge

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said it amounted to “two corrupt governments squandering public funds”. The Russian government called his words “completely inappropriate”. The long-range strategic bombers landed at Simón Bolívar airport outside of the Venezuelan capital, Caracas, on Monday along with two other Russian planes. Venezuela and Russia have long been close allies, and the Russian bombers – as well as a missile cruiser – were sent to the Latin American country in 2008.

The supersonic bombers also visited Venezuela in 2013. The latest visit comes just days after President Maduro met Russian President Vladimir Putin in Moscow. Venezuelan Defence Minister Vladimir Padrino said they were part of air force exercises with its Russian allies: “This we are going to do with our friends, because we have friends in the world who defend respectful, balanced relations.”

“We are preparing to defend Venezuela to the last inch when necessary,” the minister said in a reference to his government’s frequent accusations that imperialist powers are trying to topple it.

President Maduro said on Sunday that there was an attempt under way “directly co-ordinated from the White House to disturb democratic life in Venezuela and to try to launch a coup d’etat against the constitutional, democratic and free government of our country”.
Mr Pompeo denounced the deployment of the Russian bombers on Twitter. Russian President Vladimir Putin’s spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Mr Pompeo’s comments were “very undiplomatic”. Mr Pompeo was not the only one to criticise the Russian move to send the bombers to Caracas. US defence department spokesman Col Rob Manning noted the US recently deployed a navy hospital ship to Latin America to offer medical support to the millions of Venezuelans who have fled hyperinflation and shortages of goods and medicine in their home country since 2014. “Contrast this with Russia, whose approach to the manmade disaster in Venezuela is to send bomber aircraft instead of humanitarian assistance,” Col Manning said, according to NBC. But Russia is not the only one sending its military jets to other countries. The US has also sent planes to its allies, including Ukraine, whose relations with Moscow remain tense following Russia’s annexation of Crimea in 2014.

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