House Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Eliot Engel (D-N.Y.) on Wednesday ruled out U.S. military intervention in Venezuela.
“I do worry about the president’s saber rattling, his hints that U.S. military intervention remains an option. I want to make clear to our witnesses and to anyone else watching: U.S. military intervention is not an option,” Engel said in his opening statement at a hearing on the political situation in Venezuela.
{mosads}Rep. Bill Keating (D-Mass.) asked Elliot Abrams, the United States’ special representative for Venezuela, about whether other countries have discussed using military force in the country. Abrams said that he could not think of any.
President Trump has repeatedly floated using U.S. forces to push out Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro. Earlier this month, he said U.S. military intervention in the country is an “option.”
Rep. David Cicilline (D-R.I.) urged Abrams to tell the administration to make it clear that military intervention is off of the table.
The increase in pressure on Venezuela and threats of intervention come after National Assembly leader Juan Guaidó declared himself interim president last month. The U.S. immediately recognized him as the legitimate president of the country. Canada, the Organization of American States, Brazil, Argentina, Chile and Colombia all followed suit.
Guaidó gave an interview with AFP earlier this month in which he refused to rule out allowing U.S. forces to help push Maduro out of power.
Guaidó told AFP that he would do “everything that is necessary … to save human lives” while acknowledging that U.S. intervention is “a very controversial subject,” the outlet reported.
Sen. James Inhofe (R-Okla.), chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, said Tuesday that the military may have to intervene in Venezuela if Russia places weapons there.
Engel made it clear, however, that the Democratic-controlled House would not support such a move.