Secretary of State
Marco Rubio was said to have listed the Trump administration’s demands to
Venezuela’s new leader,
Delcy Rodríguez, in a classified meeting Monday with senior congressional leaders.Secretary of State
Marco Rubio at the Capitol on Monday. He spoke at a classified meeting with senior congressional leaders.Credit...Eric Lee for The New York TimesJan. 6, 2026Updated 8:08 p.m. ETThe
United States is pressuring the interim Venezuelan government to expel official advisers from
China,
Russia,
Cuba and
Iran, American officials said.
Marco Rubio, the secretary of state, listed the Trump administration’s demands to
Venezuela’s new leader,
Delcy Rodríguez, in a classified meeting on Monday with senior congressional leaders. The U.S. officials, who were granted anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the matter publicly, said that spies and military personnel from
Cuba,
Russia,
China and
Iran would be forced out, while some diplomats would be permitted to stay in
Venezuela.Army Delta Force commandos engaged in an intense firefight on Saturday with the Cuban security forces that had protected the ousted leader,
Nicolás Maduro, outside his compound in
Caracas, the Venezuelan capital. Mr. Maduro used the Cuban forces as bodyguards instead of his own military because he perceived them as more trustworthy.Mr. Rubio also said he had told Ms. Rodríguez that he wanted
Venezuela to reopen the oil trade with the
United States, a demand that President Trump has made publicly.
Venezuela would most likely have to relax or end its nationalization of the oil industry to entice the American companies that left the country to come back. It may also have to pay restitution of some form.Minutes after Army Delta Force soldiers captured Mr. Maduro and his wife,
Cilia Flores, and flew them out of the country to an American warship, Mr. Rubio called Ms. Rodríguez, two U.S. officials said. It is not clear if he laid out the administration’s demands in that first call or during subsequent talks.Ms. Rodríguez has tried to defend her country’s sovereignty in the face of the seizing of Mr. Maduro, while also striking a conciliatory tone. In her new role, she must maintain a precarious balance — protecting her political future without antagonizing the
United States, given the American naval armada that remains off the coast and Mr. Trump’s direct threats against her.Mr. Rubio told lawmakers that the administration did not want to see animosity toward the
United States from the interim leadership, the officials said, underscoring Ms. Rodríguez’s difficult position. In Monday’s meeting, Mr. Rubio did not offer any substantive comments on a timetable to hold elections or restore democracy to
Venezuela. International election experts and the Biden administration said Mr. Maduro falsified the results of a 2024 vote that the opposition candidate had won handily.Julian E. Barnes covers the U.S. intelligence agencies and international security matters for The Times. He has written about security issues for more than two decades.Edward Wong reports on global affairs, U.S. foreign policy and the State Department for The Times.Eric Schmitt is a national security correspondent for The Times. He has reported on U.S. military affairs and counterterrorism for more than three decades.SKIP Site IndexNewsHome PageU.S.WorldPoliticsNew YorkEducationSportsBusinessTechScienceWeatherThe Great ReadObituariesHeadwayVisual InvestigationsThe MagazineArtsBook ReviewBest Sellers Book ListDanceMoviesMusicPop CultureTelevisionTheaterVisual ArtsLifestyleHealthWellFoodRestaurant ReviewsLoveTravelStyleFashionReal EstateT MagazineOpinionToday's OpinionColumnistsEditorialsGuest EssaysOp-DocsLettersSunday OpinionOpinion VideoOpinion AudioMoreAudioGamesCookingWirecutterThe AthleticJobsVideoGraphicsTrendingLive EventsCorrectionsReader CenterTimesMachineThe Learning NetworkSchool of The NYTinEducationAccountSubscribeManage My AccountHome DeliveryGift SubscriptionsGroup SubscriptionsGift ArticlesEmail NewslettersNYT LicensingReplica EditionTimes Store