Maduro Got a Salt Bae Feast, But Turkey Gets Venezuela’s Gold
Turkey’s aid to Venezuela lets it access the nation’s gold—and thumb its nose at the West.
Maduro visits the set of a popular Turkish TV show about the father of the Ottoman Empire.
Photographer: Orhan Akkanat/Anadolu Agency/Getty ImagesWhen Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro was feted with thick cuts of beef and luxury cigars at Salt Bae’s celebrity steakhouse in Istanbul last month, he provoked outrage—his citizens at home are starving. But the visit also drew attention to an emerging alliance: As the West isolates his government over abuse and corruption, Turkey has become one of its most important backers.
Turkish products—pasta, rice, and corn flour—fill the heavily discounted food packets Venezuelan officials use to maintain political fealty among the increasingly cash-strapped citizenry. The two countries recently announced joint ventures for gold and coal exploration and have begun talks about Turkey investing in Venezuela’s crippled oil industry. And while most big North American and European air carriers have ended service to Venezuela, Turkish Airlines does a three-times-a-week run to Caracas, via Cuba, and plans to step it up to daily flights.
