National president on US actions: Trying to hurt us, they hurt themselves
Presidential Press
Published at: 22/04/2024 07:32 PM
The president of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela,
Nicolás Maduro, reiterated this Monday that the United States (USA) is hurting its own
economy with attacks against the Venezuelan oil industry, stressing
that “they shot themselves in every foot” with license 44A, which replaces license 44.
During the 42nd broadcast of his show Con Maduro+,
the Venezuelan head of state pointed out that imperial actions “try to hurt Venezuela again”, but “trying to hurt us, as a friend of mine
says, they hurt them.”
In conversation with Spanish journalist Ignacio Ramonet,
in the Digital Zone segment, Maduro noted that this “has been demonstrated with the
documents in hand, official documents signed by the US government.
The United States of America did not comply with a comma or a
word of the agreement signed in October in Qatar after intense negotiations.”
He recalled that Washington and Caracas held five meetings
in Qatar, two meetings in Milan and around 10 videoconferences, “which
led to an agreement where the United States should have
lifted all illegal, immoral and criminal sanctions against Venezuela and, contrary to keeping their signed
and written word, they revoke a
license that they have taken charge of assassinating,” he said in reference to the license
44.
The Venezuelan dignitary stressed that the United States announced the
license and the next day it was assassinated. That license was born dead, so the
only thing they half did to pretend that they were in the process of complying with
the signed agreement, negotiated from government to government, we Bolivarian Government
and they, the government of President Joe Biden, were responsible for finishing pulverizing it.”
In this regard, he indicated that there are two conclusions that derive from
the non-compliance with the agreements by the United States: “
North American imperialism cannot be believed even so much, as Ernesto 'Che' Guevara said.
And the second conclusion: Venezuela does not need a license to grow,
to expand, to develop and to take its own path of
economic social well-being and political stability.”
Mazo News Team