Consulado venezuela puerto rico: Embassy of Venezuela in Puerto Rico

Embassy of Venezuela in Puerto Rico

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Venezuela Consulate in San Juan

Venezuela Consulate in San Juan



Venezuelan Diplomatic mission in Puerto Rico. On this page you will find info on specific details such as consulate contact information,
web presence, consular office hours and directions to the consulate. The consulate in San Juan is not the only diplomatic representation of Venezuela in Puerto Rico.
On this page you can also find all other Venezuelan consulates located in Puerto Rico.

Address:

Venezuelan Consulate General in San Juan, Puerto Rico – Avenida Ponce De Leon – Edificio Mercantil Plaza, Oficina 601 – Hato Rey 00918 – Puerto Rico

Telephone:

(+1 787) 766-4250 / 766-4251

Fax:

(+1 787) 766-4255

E-mail:

consulado@puertorico. embavenez-us.org

Website:

embavenez-us.org/_puertorico/

Consul:

Mr Jesus Rafael Sevillano Ferraz – Consul General

Office Hours:

Consulate Appointment

For an appointment at the Venezuelan consulate in Puerto Rico, please check in first instance the consulate website embavenez-us.org/_puertorico/.

In the case that you are not able to arrange an appointment through the website you can contact the consulate in San Juan by telephone (+1 787) 766-4250 / 766-4251
or email [email protected]

Visa and Passports

The consulate of Venezuela in San Juan can inform you about the scope of services they offer.

Always contact the Venezuelan consulate before a visit since not every consulate in Puerto Rico offers visa and/or passport services.

Travel Insurance for Puerto Rico

A valid travel insurance is very important when you visit Puerto Rico. Check for details on our
Travel page

Opening Hours

Please note: Consulate opening hours can vary. Always contact the Consulate before a visit.

Venezuelan Consulates in Puerto Rico

The Venezuelan Consulate in San Juan is not the only Venezuelan consular office in the region. For your
convenience we also listed below all other consulates of Venezuela located in Puerto Rico. A Venezuelan consulate can be found in the city of:

San Juan

Keep in mind that a consulate can have more or
less or different consular services.


Search your Hotel close to the Venezuelan Consulate in San Juan

When you need to find a place to stay close to the Venezuelan consulate we provide a handy hotel search
box for accommodation in a hotel or guesthouse in San Juan, Puerto Rico.

Coronavirus (COVID-19)

The Consulate of Venezuela in San Juan could have adjusted its services due to the Coronavirus (COVID-19).

Contact the consulate before visiting.


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Address

2 Avenida de la Constitucion, San Juan, Puerto Rico, 00917

Email address

For general requests:

[email protected]

Address

2 Avenida de la Constitucion, San Juan, Puerto Rico, 00917

Email address

For general requests:

consulado@puertorico. embavenez-us.org

What will the war with Venezuela be like if the US decides to remove Maduro by force

“All options are being considered” – this is how Donald Trump answered the question about Washington’s possible military intervention in the conflict in Venezuela. Does this mean that the Pentagon is developing a plan to invade this Latin American republic? The military observer of Gazeta.Ru, Mikhail Khodarenok, dealt with the situations.

By definition, there are no difficulties for the US armed forces to plan and carry out an operation to invade Venezuela (Amphibious Assault). To do this, they may not even need the military bases that the Pentagon has in Latin America – Soto Cano in Honduras, Guantanamo Bay in Cuba and San Juan in Puerto Rico.

Venezuela is only 2,000 km from the coast of the United States, and this distance is not currently some insurmountable obstacle to the effective operation of all branches of the US military and military.

Although, most likely, part of the tactical and army aviation will still have to be transferred to the airfields of military bases in the Caribbean.

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The U.S. military has everything it needs to invade Venezuela – airborne and air assault troops, amphibious assault forces, all types of landing craft, numerous and well-trained special operations forces, a powerful air force and more than a sufficient number of military transport aircraft, and all the necessary materiel can be easily transferred by ships of the Sealift Command.

Well-trained officers-operators at the US headquarters can plan such an operation in less than a day, and with the mobility of the American army and navy, the Americans will need only a few days to carry out the necessary transfer of troops and the creation of appropriate strike groups.

During the operation to invade Venezuela, the armed forces of the United States will need a week at the most to crush the army of the Bolivarian Republic to zero.

No amount of courage and heroism will help the fighters of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro in this case. The basic law will simply come into effect – the course and outcome of the war depends on the ratio of the combined military power of the warring parties, as well as the degree of implementation by the state (coalition) of combat, military-economic, moral-political, scientific-technical and other potentials, which together make up military power .

In other words, the chances of the armed forces of Venezuela to offer any effective armed resistance to the strongest army in the world, if not equal to zero, are rapidly approaching this value.

In addition, Washington already has experience in conducting similar operations in the Caribbean.

Suffice it to recall Urgent Fury, the 1983 invasion of Grenada, undertaken to protect American citizens and restore stability to the country at the request of the Organization of American States. The basis of the invasion forces were then units of rangers and marines, and their reinforcement was to be carried out by the 82nd airborne division of the United States. The fighting ended in a complete victory for the US troops. The purpose of the operation was to eliminate the consequences of an earlier armed coup, as a result of which the country’s government was overthrown and its leader Maurice Bishop was executed.

Or consider the US invasion of Panama on December 20, 1989. The fighting was completed on the morning of December 25th. The US officially motivated the invasion by protecting the lives of 35,000 American citizens and “restoring democracy” in Panama.

Finally, let’s not forget Operation Power Pack, the US military invasion of the Dominican Republic in 1965, which was undertaken to overthrow the left-wing government of Francisco Caamaño that came to power as a result of the civil war.

In other words, there have already been several precedents for “bringing democracy” by the United States to certain countries of the Caribbean region.

The United States will not repeat itself

At the same time, this time there will most likely not be a direct armed invasion of the US armed forces into Venezuela. It is unlikely that numerous parachute canopies of the 82nd Airborne and helicopters of the 101st Air Assault Division will appear in the sky of this country, and battalions of expeditionary divisions of the US Marine Corps will land on the beaches of the Bolivarian Republic.

Such a classical (“Grenada”) scenario of the outbreak of hostilities is unlikely.

First, it can lead to the most undesirable consequences for the United States – the unity of the population of Venezuela in the face of external aggression. Secondly, the international resonance will be extremely undesirable for the USA.

Thirdly, the territory of Venezuela itself is a space in which it is very difficult to conduct military operations – the jungle cannot be occupied, and the Americans know this very well from the experience of Vietnam. In addition, the Pentagon does not repeat itself from conflict to conflict, and never act according to a previously worked out scheme. With regard to Venezuela, all necessary measures will be taken, but most likely without bombing and rocket and air attacks.

However, one cannot rule out the realization in practice of a part of the Yugoslav scenario, when missile strikes were carried out on sensitive infrastructure facilities, and the population was warned about this in advance in order to minimize losses.

There is every reason to believe that in order to overthrow the regime of Nicolas Maduro, the US Armed Forces will use the most modern technologies, and primarily information. To this end, the capabilities of the US cybernetic command and psychological operations forces, which have very large capabilities to achieve the required results, will be fully utilized.

And there is reason to believe that this work will be carried out in two main directions:

– complete paralysis of the state and military administration of the regime of Nicolas Madura, the final discrediting of the authorities of the Bolivarian Republic;

– all possible support for opposition movements – informational, organizational, financial.

One of the most important areas of US activity in Venezuela is the neutralization and transfer to the side of the opposition of the senior officers of the armed forces of Venezuela. For this, work will be carried out according to the “Iraqi” version, taking into account local specifics.

Events here will most likely develop exclusively in accordance with the scenes described by Alexander Pushkin in the story “The Captain’s Daughter”. Let us briefly recall the debates at the military council in Orenburg besieged by the Pugachevites:

“… Now, gentlemen,” continued the commandant of the fortress of Orenburg, “it is necessary to decide how we should act against the rebels: offensively or defensively?”

And one of the members of the military council proposed to the commandant the following course of action: “… I think, Your Excellency, that you should not act either offensively or defensively – move in a bribe.”

It must be assumed that the generals and admirals of the armed forces of Venezuela have already made appropriate proposals.

Finally, there is no doubt that for actions in emergency situations that do not require any delay, the United States will use special operations forces in Venezuela – rangers, green berets, fur seals, special operations wings of the US Air Force and others. Moreover, up to the physical liquidation of individual leaders of the Bolivarian Republic, with whom it was not possible to reach an agreement for one reason or another.

It is possible that the United States will be able to form some kind of coalition of Latin American states aimed at confrontation with Nicolás Maduro. The main candidates here are

Colombia and Brazil. These two countries may well assume the functions of organizing control over border crossings and a partial sea blockade of Venezuela in order to prevent ships with humanitarian aid from entering the ports of the republic.

Apparently, the task assigned to the US armed forces is by no means to deliver massive missile and bomb strikes against the intractable President Maduro.

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