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    Report: Trump sours on Venezuela opposition leader over Nobel Peace Prize

    By ELINA SHIRAZI, US SENIOR POLITICAL REPORTER

    Published: | Updated:

    President Donald Trump is noticeably distancing himself from Venezuela’s opposition leader Mara Corina Machado, with White House insiders revealing his displeasure stems from her acceptance of the Nobel Peace Prizean honor Trump has long coveted for himself. ‘If she had turned it down and said, ‘I can’t accept it because it’s Donald Trump’s,’ she’d be the president of Venezuela today,’ a person familiar with Trump’s thinking told the Washington Post. ‘Her acceptance of the prize was an ‘ultimate sin.’ While Machado later dedicated the award to Trump, one person said the damage was already done.

    Trump’s Comments OnMachado

    Trump said this weekend he has not yet spoken with Venezuela’s new leader, Delcy Rodrguez, following the military coup that removed Nicols Maduro from power. A day earlier, Trump had largely dismissed Machado’s prospects, saying ‘it would be very tough for her to be the leader’ and claiming she ‘doesn’t have the support or the respect within the country.’ His comments caught Machado’s team off guard, according to people close to her. Machado’s proxy candidate, Edmundo Gonzlez, won more than twothirds of the vote in last year’s election, which Maduro refused to honor by stepping down.

    US officials say Venezuela’s vast oil wealth offers both an incentive for Rodrguez to engage with Trump and a source of leverage if she doesn’t. Operation ‘Absolute Resolve,’ which achieved Maduro’s military removal, comes as Trump issues compounding threats to Cuba, Colombia and Iran, warning they ‘should be very careful’ following his military success in Caracas. In Venezuela, the armed forces have recognized Rodrguez, who served as vice president under Maduro, as acting president. People close to Machado say their team was caught off guard by Trump’s comments.

    Republicans Voice Support ForMachado

    Some have taken to social media to defend her including Republicans.Representative Carlos Gimenez said in an interview that Machado would win an election if it were held today. Florida Republican Representatives Mara Elvira Salazar and Mario Daz-Balart also held a press conference in Doral on January 3 to forcefully reaffirm their support for Machado. Salazar, a longtime ally who frequently refers to Machado as Venezuela’s ‘Iron Lady,’ has made note that any democratic transition must occur ‘under the leadership of Mara Corina Machado.’Daz-Balart also shut down suggestions that she lacked respect by declaring that ‘the next democratically elected President of Venezuela is going to be Mara Corina Machado.’

    Former US ambassador to Russia Michael McFaul suggested Trump threw Machado ‘under the bus,’ over the Nobel Peace Prize. ‘Is he that petty? … I was genuinely surprised and disappointed by his dismissive remarks about her,’ McFaul said. A former White House staffer is also calling the president’s reasoning ‘petty.”The reason it’s not Machado, is Trump is petty! Machado took his Nobel Peace Prize,’ the former Director for European Affairs for the United States National Security Council wrote on X.

    US officials argue that Venezuela’s vast oil wealth cuts both ways for Rodrguezoffering a powerful reason to engage with Trump, and a potent source of pressure if she does not. Operation ‘Absolute Resolve,’ the military removal of Maduro, comes as Trump makes compounding threats to other countries on the heels of his military success in Caracas saying Cuba, Colombia and Iran should be very careful.