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China affirms policy continuity, stability toward Latin America, Caribbean region

China

China

China

China affirms policy continuity, stability toward Latin America, Caribbean region

2026-01-05 17:26 Last Updated At:01-06 13:11

China's policy toward Latin America and the Caribbean maintains continuity and stability no matter how the international situation changes, a Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman said on Monday.

Speaking at a regular press briefing in Beijing, Lin Jian, the spokesman, responded to a media query about whether the United States' recent actions in Venezuela will impact China's commitments in Latin America in terms of economic, military and diplomatic ties.

"No matter how the international situation changes, China will always be a good friend and a reliable partner of Latin American and Caribbean countries. China's policy toward Latin America maintains continuity and stability. We adhere to the principle of non-interference in internal affairs, respect the choices of the Latin American people, and do not draw lines based on ideology. In its exchanges and cooperation with Latin American countries, China always follows the principles of equality, mutual benefit and win-win cooperation, and never seeks sphere of influence or targets any party," said Lin.

"We are willing to continuously deepen strategic mutual trust with Latin American and Caribbean countries that have diplomatic relations with China, continue to build mutual understanding and maintain mutual support on issues bearing on our respective core interests and major concerns such as national sovereignty, security, and territorial integrity, continue to support each other in pursuing development paths suited to our respective national conditions, and oppose hegemonism and power politics," said the spokesman.

Venezuela is currently experiencing serious political uncertainty after the United States launched a large-scale, pre-dawn military operation against the oil-rich Latin American country on Saturday and illegally took Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro and his wife, a move that has drawn worldwide condemnation and concern.

China affirms policy continuity, stability toward Latin America, Caribbean region

China affirms policy continuity, stability toward Latin America, Caribbean region

A U.S. law expert has told China Global Television Network (CGTN) that the U.S. military operation in Venezuela is legally ungrounded, describing it as a violation of international law and the UN Charter, which is likely to set a dangerous precedent that challenges the global legal order.

In the early hours of Saturday, U.S. military forces carried out attacks and bombings in Caracas and other parts of Venezuela and took President Nicolas Maduro and his wife Cilia Flores, before putting them in custody in New York.

Julian Davis Mortenson, a professor at the University of Michigan Law School said that the U.S. actions in Venezuela have no justification under international law and violate the UN Charter's fundamental prohibition on the use of force.

"It is the general agreement of experts in the U.S., as abroad, that there is no international law justification for what the Trump administration has done in Venezuela, because the UN Charter is really quite straightforward. The use of force is prohibited under the UN Charter. Now you might think 'how can that be?' Sometimes nations must use force to defend themselves, and of course, that's exactly correct, but there's a procedural requirement," said Mortenson.

"That's the basic structure of how the UN Charter framework works -- a prohibition on using force combined with an exception from the prohibition, but only if you suffer an armed attack and are responding to it. I don't see any serious argument that there has been any kind of action by Venezuela, or even by non-state parties affiliated with Venezuela, that would come close to constituting an armed attack," he said.

Mortenson stressed the critical importance of global condemnation to prevent such actions from becoming a precedent, although he acknowledged that countries might struggle to strike a balance in how they responded.

"In my view, the way the international community right now is responding to what Trump has done is walking an uneasy balance between trying to assert the meaning and force of international law, on one hand, and on the other hand, just as a realistic practical matter, not picking a fight with the U.S. beyond what is needed," he said.

"It's important that other countries state that they think the U.S. is violating the law. And that's important because if they don't, actions like the U.S. is taking can become part of international law and can become a precedent for other countries or the U.S. again to do the same thing again," said the professor.

U.S. actions in Venezuela have no justification under international law, UN Charter: scholar

U.S. actions in Venezuela have no justification under international law, UN Charter: scholar

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