
Colombia's President Gustavo Petro visits Caracas to meet with Venezuela's President NicolĂĄs Maduro on November 1, 2022. Photo: MultipolaristaÂ

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Colombia's President Gustavo Petro visits Caracas to meet with Venezuela's President NicolĂĄs Maduro on November 1, 2022. Photo: MultipolaristaÂ
Colombiaâs first-ever left-wing leader Gustavo Petro took a historic trip to Venezuela, pledging regional unity following the anti-imperialist model of SimĂłn BolĂvar. Meeting with President NicolĂĄs Maduro, Petro said it is âsuicidalâ to divide the countries, âbecause we are the same people,â in âhistorically one single Bolivarian nation, reunited.â
Colombiaâs first ever left-wing President Gustavo Petro made history on November 1 by visiting his neighbor Venezuela, officially normalizing relations after years of hostility.
After a meeting with Venezuelan President NicolĂĄs Maduro, the two leaders signed a joint declaration pledging to unify the countries and integrate Latin America, following the anti-imperialist model of SimĂłn BolĂvar.
Petro said it is âsuicidalâ to divide the countries, âbecause we are the same people,â in âhistorically one single Bolivarian nation, reunited.â
The presidents symbolically posed for photos in front of large portraits of BolĂvar, the revolutionary general who led a successful armed uprising against Spanish colonialism and established many of the modern states of South America.
Sostuve una amena reuniĂłn con el Presidente de Colombia, @petrogustavo, en la que tratamos temas de interĂŠs comĂşn entre ambas naciones; que fortalecen la cooperaciĂłn, el encuentro y el bienestar a favor de nuestros pueblos. pic.twitter.com/13d9dYwnoi
— NicolĂĄs Maduro (@NicolasMaduro) November 1, 2022
Colombiaâs previous administration had formally cut off diplomatic relations with Venezuela in 2019, when the United States initiated a coup attempt against the nationâs democratically elected leftist Chavista government.
The right-wing government in BogotĂĄ at the time became Washingtonâs most important ally in its often violent attempts to overthrow President Maduro.
Petro is the first Colombian leader to travel to Caracas since 2011, when Hugo ChĂĄvez was Venezuelaâs elected president. And in that year more than a decade ago, Colombiaâs President Juan Manuel Santos did not visit specifically to meet with ChĂĄvez, but rather to attend the international summit of the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States (CELAC).
En imĂĄgenes đ¸ | Encuentro entre el Presidente de Colombia @petrogustavo y el Presidente de Venezuela, @NicolasMaduro. đ¨đ´đťđŞ pic.twitter.com/qfFSFIXXQO
— Presidencia Colombia đ¨đ´ (@infopresidencia) November 1, 2022
Petroâs office said one of the main goals of the meeting was to âkickstart the economy of the region and socialize its agenda in the favor of the interests of the Latin American bloc and the protection of the Amazon.â
Venezuela called the historic visit the beginning of a ânew era of cooperation.â Maduro declared, âWe keep taking good steps toward integration!â
El destino comĂşn nos convoca a la uniĂłn por el crecimiento, el desarrollo y la Paz de Colombia y Venezuela. Trabajaremos firmemente por eso. ÂĄSigamos dando buenos pasos hacia la integraciĂłn! pic.twitter.com/pmYZjzUIae
— NicolĂĄs Maduro (@NicolasMaduro) November 2, 2022
The two countries signed a joint declaration pledging to advance âtoward the union and peace of our countries, as our Liberators did in the same patriotic emancipatory achievement.â
Maduro and Petro wrote that they were âinspired by the historical legacy of union and the spirit of fraternity that we inherited from the Father Liberator SimĂłn BolĂvar and the brotherhood of our peoples, which now are geographically and politically two sovereign republics, but historically one single Bolivarian nation, reunited.â
DeclaraciĂłn conjunta de los presidentes de la RepĂşblica Bolivariana de Venezuela y de la RepĂşblica de Colombia. pic.twitter.com/e7v28xpJkG
— Gustavo Petro (@petrogustavo) November 2, 2022
The agreement emphasized the importance of economic relations between the neighboring countries.
The document called for cooperation in trade, transport, and agricultural production. It also proposed coordination of mining and exploration efforts.
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Venezuela and Colombia share a massive, 2341-kilometer border. Colombia closed this crossing in 2015. It was temporarily unblocked in 2016, but later shut again, until Petroâs government agreed to re-open it this September 26.
The new joint declaration prioritized security cooperation on the border, in order to âfight against organized crime.â
Petro said, âWe are here to start over on a path, which is difficult, but we must go down it. That path begins with rebuilding the border. The border is in the hands of mafias.â
âAquĂ estamos para recomenzar un camino, que es difĂcil, pero que hay que andar. Ese camino comienza por reconstruir la frontera. La frontera estĂĄ en manos de las mafiasâ: Presidente @petrogustavo. pic.twitter.com/58OCldVuG3
— Presidencia Colombia đ¨đ´ (@infopresidencia) November 1, 2022
Petro called for Venezuela to be re-integrated into regional institutions.
The Colombian leader also pressured Maduro to hold a dialogue process with the opposition.
Petro said it would be âsuicidalâ to divide the countries: âIt is not natural. In more human terms, it is anti-historical that Colombia and Venezuela be separated, because we are the same people.â
âEs antinatural, en tĂŠrminos mĂĄs humanos, es antihistĂłrico el que Colombia y Venezuela se separen porque somos el mismo puebloâ: Presidente @petrogustavo. pic.twitter.com/Y25T6gX2KV
— Presidencia Colombia đ¨đ´ (@infopresidencia) November 1, 2022
In press statements on the historic meeting, Caracas criticized the âinterventionist conductâ of the previous right-wing Colombian administrations and their âattack against the Venezuelan government.â
Petroâs predecessor, right-wing former President IvĂĄn Duque, had been Washingtonâs top asset in the US-led coup attempt against Venezuelaâs elected leftist government.
In 2019, the Donald Trump recognized Juan GuaidĂł, a little-known opposition figure, as supposed âinterim presidentâ of Venezuela, despite the fact that he had never participated in a presidential election.
Duqueâs government immediately joined in backing GuaidĂł and sponsoring his gang of coup-plotters, many of whom were physically based in Colombia.
En fotos: ReuniĂłn del vicepresidente Pence con el presidente de Colombia, IvĂĄn Duque, y el presidente interino de Venezuela, Juan GuaidĂł, en BogotĂĄ. pic.twitter.com/CzNyZpX0b8
— USA en EspaĂąol (@USAenEspanol) February 25, 2019
The Trump administration sponsored a series of training camps in northern Colombia, where right-wing extremists prepared cross-border attacks and made plans to try to violently overthrow President Maduro.
Trumpâs Defense Secretary Mark Esper revealed in a memoir he published after leaving office that senior US officials had often discussed launching military strikes on Venezuela.
After Trump met with GuaidĂł in the Oval Office in February 2020, Esper, GuaidĂł, and other coup-plotters talked about the training of far-right militants in Colombia and plans to invade Venezuela.
In May 2020, these terrorists launched a failed invasion of Venezuela, known as Operation Gideon. Top coup-plotters involved in the operation said they had the support of the CIA and Colombian intelligence services.
Colombia's right-wing ex President IvĂĄn Duque allowed US-backed terrorists to create camps near the Venezuelan border to train for an armed insurgency, with plans to invade and overthrow elected President Maduro.
Gustavo Petro has completely reversed thishttps://t.co/t6ozVJ36zF
— Ben Norton (@BenjaminNorton) November 1, 2022
Still today, the Joe Biden administration technically recognizes GuaidĂł as Venezuelaâs supposed head of state. Colombia, too, had still sponsored GuaidĂł, until Petro won the June 19 presidential election.
Petro immediately pushed to normalize relations with Venezuela. On June 22, Colombiaâs then president-elect called Maduro to inform him that he prioritized restoring diplomatic and commercial ties as soon as possible.
Soon after entering office on August 7, Petro moved to re-open Colombiaâs border with Venezuela.
In September, Venezuela also agreed to help mediate peace talks between armed socialist militia the ELN and the Colombian government. The parties signed an agreement formally initiating the diplomatic process in Caracas in October.
Venezuela had previously played a similar role in co-sponsoring successful peace talks between the Colombian government and another armed socialist militia, the FARC.
Firmamos una DeclaraciĂłn Conjunta Colombia – Venezuela que apunta al bienestar y el desarrollo para ambos pueblos. Rumbo hacia un 2023 de integraciĂłn, fortalecimiento de relaciones de hermandad y entendimiento entre nuestros paĂses. pic.twitter.com/DY2VvPbWTM
— NicolĂĄs Maduro (@NicolasMaduro) November 1, 2022
The historic meeting of Maduro and Petro and their pledge to pursue regional unity is reminiscent of the political integration of Egypt and Syria in 1958, under the revolutionary left-wing nationalist President Gamal Abdel Nasser.

Benjamin Norton is the founder and editor of the independent news website Multipolarista, where he does original reporting in both English and Spanish. Benjamin has reported from numerous countries, including Venezuela, Nicaragua, Bolivia, Ecuador, Honduras, Colombia, and more. His journalistic work has been published in dozens of media outlets, and he has done interviews on Sky News, Al Jazeera, Democracy Now, El Financiero Bloomberg, Al Mayadeen teleSUR, RT, TRT World, CGTN, Press TV, HispanTV, Sin Censura, and various TV channels in Mexico, Nicaragua, Venezuela, Ecuador, and Bolivia. Benjamin writes a regular column for Al Mayadeen (in English and Spanish). He was formerly a reporter with the investigative journalism website The Grayzone, and previously produced the political podcast and video show Moderate Rebels. His personal website is BenNorton.com, and he tweets at @BenjaminNorton.
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