Top US diplomat in Venezuela leaves post after arriving in January.
- The San Juan Daily Star

- Apr 16
- 2 min read

By SIMON ROMERO
The top U.S. diplomat in Venezuela announced Wednesday that she was leaving her post just months after arriving, a shake-up that comes as the Trump administration presses ahead with efforts to wield control over Venezuela’s government.
Laura Dogu, who arrived in Venezuela’s capital, Caracas, in late January and reopened the U.S. Embassy, said in a statement that she would be replaced by John Barrett, the current top U.S. diplomat in Guatemala.
This leadership change raises questions about the Trump administration’s priorities in Venezuela following its capture and forced extraction in January of the country’s former leader, Nicolás Maduro.
After the U.S. military intervention, President Donald Trump said the United States would effectively “run” Venezuela and its oil industry, turning a country that for decades had been an adversary into something resembling a vassal state.
On the ground in Venezuela, Dogu was the face of these efforts. She gained a celebrity status in the country in public appearances alongside visiting U.S. company executives and Delcy Rodríguez, Maduro’s vice president, who took over as president.
It was not immediately clear why Dogu, a veteran U.S. diplomat who previously served as ambassador in Honduras and Nicaragua, is leaving her post. Officials at the U.S. Embassy in Caracas did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Barrett, the new U.S. envoy to Venezuela, had just arrived as the top diplomat at the U.S. Embassy in Guatemala in January. He previously held diplomatic posts in Panama, Peru and Brazil.
The restructuring at the U.S. Embassy in Caracas comes as the Trump administration has shifted its attention from Latin America in recent weeks to prioritize its war with Iran.
Dogu, in her statement, said her assignment in Caracas was temporary and that she was returning to her previous position as the foreign policy adviser to Gen. Dan Caine, the chair of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
Caine, the U.S. military’s highest-ranking and most visible officer, has recently struggled to justify Trump’s threats to blow up Iran’s power infrastructure, oil wells and desalination plants, actions which could constitute war crimes.
In Venezuela, concerns have also emerged over the slow pace of reform under Rodríguez. She has presented a conciliatory stance toward the United States, contrasting sharply with her predecessor, Maduro.
But Rodríguez’s government has not brought about significant political or economic changes in Venezuela. Legislators approved overhauls in the oil and mining sectors, but big U.S. investment deals have yet to materialize.




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