The Daily Star – AFP, April 24, 2013
WASHINGTON:
The United States voiced hope Wednesday for a "productive"
relationship with Venezuela as it welcomed the appointment of a new envoy to
Washington by the successor of leftist leader Hugo Chavez.
President
Nicolas Maduro on Tuesday named ruling lawmaker Calixto Ortega as the charge
d'affaires at the embassy in Washington after the United States clarified that
it was not seeking sanctions over Venezuela's disputed election.
State
Department spokesman Patrick Ventrell said Ortega was "known and
respected" for work in a group seeking to improve relations between the
United States and Venezuela, which have not exchanged full ambassadors since
2010.
"With
all bilateral diplomatic relationships, it's important to establish effective
channels of communication between governments so we can discuss matters of
mutual concern," Ventrell told reporters.
The
appointment of Ortega "could be a step in that direction," he said.
"We
believe it is important and timely to establish a productive relationship based
on mutual interests such as counternarcotics, counterterrorism, the energy
relationship," he said.
However,
Ventrell repeated US support for a recount of votes in the bitterly fought
April 14 election "to ensure that the Venezuelan people feel that their
democratic aspirations are being met."
Chavez, who
died last month after a long fight with cancer, was a strident critic of the
United States and accused Washington of supporting a 2002 coup in which he was
briefly overthrown.
But
Venezuela, which relies on oil sales for 90 percent of its revenue, nonetheless
exports 900,000 barrels a day to the United States.
Maduro
briefly threatened to cut off such commerce after a US official was quoted as
saying that Washington was open to economic sanctions against Venezuela over
its election.
The State
Department on Tuesday denied sanctions were under consideration, a statement
welcomed by Maduro.

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