WASHINGTON — Secretary of State Marco Rubio has begun his much-anticipated congressional testimony about Venezuela, defending the Trump administration's military operation to oust and arrest then-President Nicolas Maduro as Republican and Democratic lawmakers offered starkly different readings of the current situation.
Rubio told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on Wednesday that President Donald Trump had acted to take out a major U.S. national security threat in its own hemisphere with the Jan. 3 operation to depose Maduro. Trump's top diplomat said America was safer and more secure as a result and that the Republican administration would work with interim authorities to stabilize the South American country.
''We're not going to have this thing turn around overnight, but I think we're making good and decent progress,'' Rubio said. ''We are certainly better off today in Venezuela than we were four weeks ago and I think and hope and expect that we'll be better off in three months and six months and nine months than we would have been had Maduro still been there."
The former Florida senator said that Venezuela's interim leaders are cooperating and would soon begin to see benefits. Venezuela will be allowed to sell oil that is now subject to U.S. sanctions, with the revenue set aside to pay for basic government services such as policing and health care, Rubio said. He said money from oil sales will be deposited in an account controlled by the U.S. Treasury and will be released after Washington approves monthly budgets to be submitted by Venezuelan authorities.
''The funds from that will be deposited into an account that we will have oversight over,'' Rubio said. Venezuela, he said, ''will spend that money for the benefit of the Venezuelan people.''
The committee chairman, Idaho Sen. Jim Risch, praised Trump's decisions to remove Maduro, continue deadly military strikes on boats suspected of smuggling drugs in the Caribbean Sea and eastern Pacific Ocean and seize sanctioned tankers.
Risch also offered new details on the operation in Caracas, saying it involved ''only about 200 troops'' and a ''firefight that lasted less than 27 minutes.''
''This military action was incredibly brief, targeted and successful,'' Risch said, adding that the U.S. and other nations may have to assist Venezuela when it seeks to restore democratic elections. ''Venezuela may require U.S. and international oversight to ensure these elections are indeed free and fair,'' he said.