BY Brenden AckermanMarch 16, 2026
1 month ago
BY 
 | March 16, 2026
1 month ago

American flag flies over U.S. Embassy in Venezuela for the first time in seven years

The Stars and Stripes flew over the U.S. Embassy in Caracas on Saturday for the first time since 2019, marking another milestone in the dramatic reshaping of U.S.-Venezuela relations following the capture of dictator Nicolás Maduro by American troops in January.

The flag was raised "exactly seven years after it was taken down," the U.S. Embassy team said in a statement on social media. The building is still undergoing renovations, and no timeline has been set for a full reopening, PBS News reported.

The gesture follows President Trump's statements of support for acting President Delcy Rodríguez, Maduro's successor, who has kept diplomatic channels open with Washington.

Caracas residents celebrate

The flag-raising wasn't just a diplomatic formality. It drew local residents who responded with something the Maduro regime spent years trying to stamp out: optimism about ties with the United States.

Caracas resident Luz Verónica López captured the mood plainly:

"It's a good thing, really, what a joy. Other countries must come back too because that's what we need; progress, to move forward with good relations with the rest of the world, as it should be."

Another local, Alessandro Di Benedetto, described the scene similarly:

"I found several people here surprised and happy because today they raised the U.S. flag at the embassy. This is positive; this is another step."

These are ordinary Venezuelans, not politicians or activists, speaking with genuine relief about renewed American presence in their country. For people who lived through years of Maduro's economic catastrophe, the sight of that flag carries weight that transcends diplomacy.

The work that made this possible

Seven years is a long time for an embassy to sit without its flag. The closure reflected a complete breakdown in relations under Maduro, a socialist strongman who drove millions of his own citizens into exile, cratered one of South America's wealthiest economies, and turned Venezuela into a narco-state propped up by Cuba, Russia, and China.

That era ended in January when American troops captured Maduro and transported him to New York, where he now sits in jail alongside his wife. The speed with which diplomatic normalization has followed tells you something about how hollow the regime's foundations really were. Remove the dictator, and the path to normal relations opens almost immediately.

Critics remain, of course. Large portions of the Venezuelan political establishment still oppose Trump's decision to forcefully remove Maduro and object to growing U.S. influence in the country's oil industry. This is predictable. The beneficiaries of any authoritarian regime rarely welcome the force that dismantles it.

What the flag means

A flag over an embassy is symbolic, but symbols matter in foreign policy. They signal permanence, commitment, and a willingness to engage. For seven years, the absence of that flag told Venezuelans and the world that the United States had no functioning relationship with Caracas. Now it tells them something different.

The embassy isn't fully operational yet. Renovations continue. But the trajectory is clear: the U.S. and Venezuela are rebuilding ties from the ground up, with a post-Maduro government that has shown willingness to negotiate rather than antagonize.

The people of Caracas gathered to watch a flag go up a pole. They called it joy. They called it progress. After what they've endured, they would know.

Written by: Brenden Ackerman
Brendan is is a political writer reporting on Capitol Hill, social issues, and the intersection of politics and culture.

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