Caracas reportedly asked for missiles, drones, radars, and aircraft repairs amid tensions with the US Venezuela has requested assistance from Russia, China, and Iran to strengthen its defenses amid the ongoing standoff with the United States, The Washington Post claimed on Friday, citing US government documents.According to the newspaper, Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro sent a letter to Chinese President Xi Jinping requesting radar detectors and directly citing the “escalation” with the US. Caracas also reportedly urged Iran to provide radar-jamming equipment and drones capable of flying up to 1,000 kilometers (about 600 miles).The Post cited documents indicating that Venezuelan Transport Minister Ramon Celestino Velazquez was set to deliver a letter to Russian President Vladimir Putin during his trip to Moscow last month, requesting unspecified missiles and assistance in repairing Su-30MK2 fighter jets and radar systems previously purchased by Venezuela. The report added that it was unclear how Russia, China, or Iran had responded to the requests. Read more Maduro’s ‘days are numbered’ – senior US Republican US President Donald Trump has accused Maduro of operating “macroterrorist” cartels that smuggle drugs into the United States and has offered a bounty for his arrest. Washington has deployed a naval armada in the western Caribbean and, since September, has carried out strikes in international waters against more than a dozen alleged cartel vessels. Maduro has denied the allegations and accused Trump of “fabricating a new war.”On Monday, Russia ratified the strategic partnership treaty with Venezuela that was signed in May. Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said this week that Moscow “supports Venezuela’s defense of its national sovereignty” and will help it “overcome any threats, regardless of where they come from.”