After the beginning of a revolutionary process initiated by Hugo Chávez Frías in 1999, Venezuela has entered into a complicated political, economic and social situation, which since 2013 with the coming to power of Nicolás Maduro Moros, the successor of President Chávez, has become a more acute polarization of the country around two different political visions, the official and the opposition, which has led to an internal political crisis causing the clear interest of the international organizations of the continent, not only those of a primarily political nature such as the Organization of American States, among others, but also those who prioritize economic interests such as the Common Market of the South. The objective of this research that addressed the 2013-2017 period, focuses on analyzing the scope of American cooperation mechanisms in the face of the current situation in Venezuela. From a neorealistic approach to International Relations, and through the review of meetings, declarations and statutes, it is evident among the results that an institutional consensus on how to deal with such a situation has not yet been achieved due not only to the diversity of approaches politicians who converge on them, but also to the very nature of organisms.