Whether it’s the threat of nuclear annihilation or economic devastation, there are all sorts of reasons why sworn enemies might link up.
In recent weeks, tensions between the United States and Venezuela, an oil-rich Russian ally, have thawed — even if only slightly — amid Russia’s ongoing invasion of Ukraine.
Renewed attempts at diplomacy between the two countries show just how quickly wars can alter the incentives for some adversaries to at least consider collaborating where their interests align. On Tuesday, the White House announced the release of two Americans who had been wrongfully detained in Venezuela, one since 2017.
The newly freed men, Gustavo Cardenas and Jorge Fernandez, are “fathers who lost precious time with their children and everyone they love, and their families have suffered every day of their absence,” President Joe Biden said in a statement.
Conversations over the weekend between U.S. officials and Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro’s government came amid a wave of U.S. sanctions levied against Russia’s oil industry and ahead of Biden’s Tuesday announcement of a ban on Russian oil imports.
Officials reportedly discussed potentially allowing Venezuela to sell some of its oil in the U.S., a move that would help stave off some of the inevitable price increases Americans will see at the gas pump as a result of the sanctions on Russia. The prisoner negotiations and the oil discussions were not part of the same deal, officials said.








