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Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel condemned in the strongest terms the imposition by the US government of an absolute blockade on fuel supplies to the island in order to asphyxiate its people and its economy.

On Friday, January 30, the Cuban president shared and endorsed his government’s declaration condemning the executive order of the US president that, with the narrative of a “national emergency” for the United States, intends to cut off the global oil trade with Cuba.

“The Trump administration is consolidating a dangerous way of conducting its country’s foreign policy through force and exercising its ambitions to protect its imperialist hegemony,” Díaz-Canel wrote on social media.

Condenamos en los términos más enérgicos la nueva escalada del gobierno de los Estados Unidos contra #Cuba, en su empeño por imponer un cerco absoluto a los suministros de combustible a nuestro país.https://t.co/V1W59wWcXG

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— Miguel Díaz-Canel Bermúdez (@DiazCanelB) January 31, 2026

The Cuban head of state pointed out that, with this measure, the United States is abrogating to itself a right that does not belong to it. “As announced, that country is claiming the right to dictate to sovereign states which nations they can trade with and which ones can export their national products,” he stated.

“We will face this new onslaught with firmness, equanimity, and the certainty that reason is absolutely on our side. The decision is clear: Homeland or Death! We will prevail!” Díaz-Canel declared.

At the Special Plenary of the Communist Party of Cuba in Havana, President Díaz-Canel outlined part of the strategy to confront the “fascist and genocidal” US threats and aggression.

He reaffirmed that Cuba will not surrender to the new US measure seeking to block fuel supplies and announced an “international emergency,” calling for solidarity against the Trump regime’s “criminal act.” “Even with a fuel blockade, Cuba will not be defeated by the empire,” he declared.

The Cuban leader added that his nation is a country of peace, and even amid aggression and a blockade for more than six decades, there is the capacity and willingness to dialogue with the US government. “But that dialogue cannot be under pressure; it has to be under conditions of equality and respect, without pre-conditions,” he emphasized.

“We have nothing against the US people,” he continued. “On the contrary, as we have always said, the Cuban people and the US people are being deprived of so much in their potential cultural, research, scientific, sporting, and educational relations because of the restrictive policies imposed by the blockade on everyone.”

The Cuban president further pointed out that the new measure against Cuba falls within a pattern of imperialist conduct that also includes Greenland and Iran, and called the Trump doctrine “a criminal policy of contempt that aims to take over the world.”

He called upon the people of Cuba to fight, create, transform, combat, and share the results. “We will not be intimidated, and we are certain that we will not be alone as we face this aggression from the United States,” he said, reaffirming the conviction to defend the homeland, the revolution, and socialism.

His statements came in response to a US executive order issued on January 29, which represents an extreme expansion of the economic, commercial, and financial blockade against Cuba by attempting to cut off one of its most vital oil supply lines through coercion of third countries, threatening them with sanctions if they sell oil to Cuba.

ALBA-TCP condemns US actions against Cuba
The Bolivarian Alliance for the Peoples of Our America – People’s Trade Treaty (ALBA-TCP) categorically condemned the new US actions against Cuba as a violation of international free trade norms and the sovereign prerogatives of each state.

On Friday, the Alliance released a statement labeling the US oil blockade as “part of the historical policy of economic, commercial, and financial blockade against Cuba that seeks to subject an entire people to extreme living conditions.”

ALBA-TCP maintained that, “Far from breaking the Cuban people, these actions, which have been repeatedly and almost unanimously condemned by the international community, have demonstrated the resilience, dignity, and resolve of a nation that defends its independence and its right to build its own political, economic, and social project, free from external interference, threats, and aggression.”

The Alliance reaffirmed that solidarity, cooperation, and unity of the peoples will remain stronger than any unilateral coercive measure.

Calls Mount for FIFA World Cup Boycott Amid US Rights Abuses

The full text of the statement follows:

The Bolivarian Alliance for the Peoples of Our America (ALBA) categorically rejects the recent executive order of the President of the United States that seeks to impose a total blockade on fuel supplies to the Republic of Cuba, under the threat of applying arbitrary tariffs against countries that maintain legitimate trade relations with Cuba, in violation of international free trade norms, as well as the sovereign prerogatives of each State.

This action, part of the historical policy of economic, commercial, and financial blockade against Cuba, seeks to subject an entire people to extreme living conditions. Far from breaking the Cuban people, these actions, which have been repeatedly and almost unanimously condemned by the international community, have demonstrated the resilience, dignity, and resolve of a nation that defends its independence and its right to build its own political, economic, and social project, free from external interference, threats, and aggression.

The ALBA member countries express their solidarity and support for the Government and people of Cuba, and reiterate their firm commitment to International Law and the Charter of the United Nations, as well as to the defense of multilateralism, fair trade, and unrestricted respect for the sovereignty of peoples.

ALBA reaffirms that solidarity, cooperation, and unity of the peoples will remain stronger than any unilateral coercive measure.

Caracas, January 30, 2026

(Telesur) with Orinoco Tribune content

Translation: Orinoco Tribune

OT/JRE/SC


From Orinoco Tribune – News and opinion pieces about Venezuela and beyond via This RSS Feed.

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US President Donald Trump tells India to stop purchasing Iranian oil and buy Venezuelan crude instead.


From Presstv via This RSS Feed.

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By Caitlin Johnstone  –  Jan 29, 2026

It flabbergasts them that I’m not saying harsh things about the latest Official Bad Guy of the Day.

Reading by Tim Foley:

Any time things heat up with an empire-targeted government I always get people demanding to know why I’m not critical of that government.

“Why don’t you criticize Iran? You spend all your time criticizing the west and Israel; you’re a hypocrite if you don’t criticize Iran.”

It flabbergasts them that I’m not saying harsh things about the latest Official Bad Guy of the Day. Everyone on TV is criticizing Iran. Both mainstream political parties are criticizing Iran. Their favorite mainstream political podcasters and online pundits are criticizing Iran. So why isn’t Caitlin Johnstone criticizing Iran? There must be something nefarious and treasonous about her.

It never occurs to them that a principled individual might prioritize opposing the abuses of the power structure they actually live under and can actually exert some influence upon, rather than impotently shouting at a foreign “regime” who has nothing to do with them.

It never occurs the them that the only reason we’re hearing so much about the Official Bad Guy of the Day is because the US is ramping up aggressions on the targeted country, and the imperial media are manufacturing consent for those hostilities.

‘No Two-Hour War’: Iran Vows Immediate Retaliation to Any US or Israeli Aggression

It never occurs to them that this frenzied propaganda campaign is the main reason the Official Bad Guy of the Day has been on their mind so much.

It never occurs to them to question who actually benefits from the western population chanting “IRAN BAD! REGIME MUST GO!” in unison like a bunch of animatronic theme park animals while the drums of war are beating louder and louder.

It never occurs to them that someone can simply oppose the warmongering agendas of the US empire on principle, because those agendas are reliably disastrous and the US empire is the most tyrannical power structure on earth.

These things never occur to them because most westerners spend their entire lives in a propaganda echo chamber which constantly feeds them stories about how evil the western empire’s enemies are, while telling them almost nothing about the empire’s own abuses.

The average westerner is not even aware that they live in an empire. The typical Australian thinks “I’m over here in my own separate, sovereign country, and the United States is another country over there doing their own thing, and also Israel is another independent country doing their own thing over there, and likewise with the UK and EU and New Zealand and Canada, and ever other country I’ve been taught to think favorably of.”

In reality they’re all member states of a giant globe-spanning power structure which functions more or less as a single empire with regard to foreign policy. And they work together to subvert, undermine and eventually devour the nations we’ve all been trained to hate.

The western press do not criticize this power structure. Westerners do not learn about it in school. They don’t know it exists, so it never occurs to them that it is something that can be justifiably criticized and opposed.

You don’t see the western press criticizing the US-centralized western empire. You don’t even see them criticizing the United States as a whole. You’ll see them publish criticisms of individual presidents, politicians or political parties, but you hardly ever see them talking about the behavior of the abusive warmongering, militarism, economic warfare and surveillance systems which persist from administration to administration regardless of who happens to be in office.

This is why it’s so baffling to a westerner to see another westerner criticizing western warmongering instead of the Official Bad Guy of the Day. They don’t normally encounter such criticisms. They haven’t been trained to expect it. All they’ve been trained to expect is criticism of Tehran, Putin, Hamas, Maduro, or whoever the empire happens to be angriest at on any given day. So any divergence from their conditioned expectations looks strange and suspicious to them. It looks like something bad is happening.

But it is not a sign that something bad is happening for a westerner to focus their criticism on the western empire. It’s a sign that something bad is happening that so few westerners ever do.

I don’t criticize Iran because I do not want to feed into an imperial war propaganda campaign for a horrific agenda that I do not support. I want to focus my criticisms on the power structure under which I actually live, because that is what one does when one is not a groveling bootlicker, and because the power structure under which I live happens to be the most abusive tyrant on the world stage.

(Caitlin Johnstone)


From Orinoco Tribune – News and opinion pieces about Venezuela and beyond via This RSS Feed.

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By Wayne Kublalsingh  –  Jan 29, 2026

Many of our Trinidad and Tobago (T&T) officials are casting a long eye on Venezuela’s crude. But the Kamla Persad-Bissessar government has a rap sheet of wrongs against the Bolivarian Republic. With this rap sheet, how are we getting Venezuelan crude again?

On 23rd January 2019, Donald Trump posted the following on social media: “Today, I am officially recognizing the President of the Venezuelan National Assembly, Juan Guaidó, as the Interim President of Venezuela.” Two days later, Mrs Persad-Bissessar, the then Leader of the Opposition rose in Parliament to effusively announce, “We’re preparing to join with the Venezuelan people and the free world in recognising Juan Guaidó as the interim president of Venezuela.” 

No sooner had Trump spoken than the current PM rose to parrot his words. The US instigated an uprising to have the Bolivarian revolution replaced by Guaidó. The uprising failed. This was the first attempt by our PM to hitch herself to the Trump bandwagon for regime change in Venezuela. Like Trump, she invoked the China and Russian threat in Venezuela, and over T&T skies. Trump: “I told China and Russia that we don’t want to see them in Venezuela.” 

When the US deployed a full-fledged naval force North of Venezuela in August 2025, Persad-Bissessar declared her government’s full support. She referred to the Bolivarian government as “the Maduro regime”, as “narco-terrorists”. She broke ranks with CARICOM and CELAC in support of Trump. She categorically denied that the US fleet had any plans for regime change in Venezuela – it was all about narcotics busting. On January 3rd, the US forces invaded Venezuela, killed one hundred persons, including thirty-two Cubans, destroyed homes and military infrastructure, and kidnapped President Maduro and his wife, Dr Celia Flores. A decapitation exercise. The PM was plainly wrong. She lied or misled or deceived herself. 

Relatives of Civilians Killed in US Caribbean Missile Strikes Sue Trump Administration

In September 2025, when US troops began the extrajudicial killing of Venezuelan, Colombian and Trinidad citizens, she declared: “May God bless and protect the members of the US military…The US military should kill them all violently.” No interdiction, no search, no verification, no arrest, no case, no court, no charge or conviction. More than one hundred persons have since been killed. 

In December 2025, a Colombian family, assisted by the Colombia President, filed a complaint before the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR). It named US Secretary of Defence Pete Hegseth as the perpetrator, claiming that he “was responsible for ordering the bombing of boats like those of Alejandro Carranza Medina and the murder of all those on such boats.” It also claims that Hegseth’s conduct was “ratified” by US President Donald Trump (CNN).

On 27th January, the American Civil Liberties Union filed a case in the US on behalf of two Trinidadians. It claims: “On October 14, 2025, the United States government authorized and launched a missile strike that killed Chad Joseph and Rishi Samaroo…These premeditated and intentional killings—carried out outside of the context of armed conflict and in circumstances where targeted individuals do not pose a concrete, specific, and immediate threat of grave harm—violate domestic law prohibiting murder and international law prohibiting extrajudicial killing, or the arbitrary or unlawful deprivation of the right to life. (Burnley v. US: Demanding Accountability on Caribbean Boat Strikes). 

What our PM callously impugned, the lives of our citizens, the ACLU has deemed sacred and taken legal responsibility for. The ACLU seems more Trini To De Bone than our PM. 

On 25th October 2025, the National Assembly of Venezuela declared that Persad-Bissessar was no longer welcome in Venezuela, having been declared “Persona Non Grata”, condemning her government for its support of the United States. On 25th November, Chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff General Dan Caine arrived in Trinidad to meet with the PM. Gradually, we learnt that our PM had afforded the US our maritime, land and air space for its operations in Venezuela. 

She afforded them Crown Point in Tobago to erect a radar in support of these operations. She permitted the US use of our airports at Crown Point and Piarco for the refuelling and landing of aircraft. We know for sure now that these operations involved the kidnapping of Maduro and his wife, a decapitation exercise. Such kidnapping constitutes an act of war. Extrajudicial “kinetic” and “double tap” strikes, as they are euphemistically called, constitute murder. 

Today, Trump is seizing Venezuelan oil tankers and confiscating the oil. He has claimed for himself authority for who gets to drill in Venezuela. He has blockaded Venezuela. He is using the Venezuelan example to threaten both Cuba and Iran. Unabashedly, with impunity, he has unleashed his full-fledged imperialist fangs. 

Our PM has granted tacit support to Trump and his decapitation, forced transfer and imprisonment of the Venezuelan President and First Lady. Whatever her subjective delusions might be, objectively, she has aligned with imperialism. She has put imperialism, Trump, before the interests of Trinidad and Tobago and Venezuela. She has sold our sovereignty to Trump. She has rendered our Republic a vassal, by choice. And has unbolted latches for the US to force vassalage on our pre-Kamla energy-cooperative neighbour. 

Twice, in 2019 and 2026, our PM has called the US, like any US imperialist or puppet would, the “leader of the free world.” Why would the Venezuelan government want a hardcore US puppet as a cross-border gas-field partner? Or risk betrayal again? Or risk the chance of proceeds from its own crude being weaponized to undermine its economy and sovereignty? 

WK/OT


From Orinoco Tribune – News and opinion pieces about Venezuela and beyond via This RSS Feed.

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By Camila Escalante  –  Jan 29, 2026

At least 15 nations scheduled to participate in the World Cup face U.S. travel bans and visa restrictions, as ICE abductions, disappearances and killings continue.

International calls to boycott the US-hosted FIFA World Cup 2026 are increasing in response to widespread U.S. human rights violations domestically and Washington’s atrocities and malign activities abroad.

Former FIFA President Sepp Blatter has become the latest prominent voice to echo calls for football fans to boycott World Cup matches in the United States as the world witnesses public executions-gone-viral in Minneapolis and mass-scale repression and raids by masked agents on U.S. workplaces and homes. Blatter’s remarks follow the likes of UK MPs, a leading German soccer official, and sports columnists.

The U.S. invasion and terror attack in Venezuela and the abduction of President Maduro and Cilia Flores in early January triggered a new wave of concern over Washington’s accelerated plans to launch military attacks against Cuba, Nicaragua, Colombia, Mexico, Iran, Greenland and Canada. In Caracas, there’s even talk in support of an outright boycott of U.S. products.

Eleven of the 16 cities selected by the Federation to host the matches are in the United States (Atlanta, Boston, Dallas, Houston, Kansas City, Los Angeles, Miami, New Jersey, Philadelphia, San Francisco and Seattle), in a tournament that is being promoted as jointly hosted with Canada and Mexico. The U.S. will host 78 matches, while Canada and Mexico each prepare to host just 13 matches, beginning June 11.

Sport Scholars for Justice in Palestine will be hosting a town hall to hear from movement organizations and activists regarding the boycott, alongside Scottish Sport for Palestine, NOlympics LA, No Team Israel at the Davis Cup, Irish Sport for Palestine, and Black Alliance for Peace.

The North-South Project for People(s)-Centered Human Rights published a video urging organizations and people of conscience to demand that FIFA move the matches out of the United States. The North-South Project, part of The Black Alliance for Peace (BAP), has also circulated a petition calling on both FIFA and the IOC to ban the United States and Israel from hosting or participating in international sporting events.

“Allowing the U.S. to host the World Cup or any other international games would be an affront to the victims of U.S. lawlessness and its support for an ongoing genocide against the Palestinian people,” according to Ajamu Baraka, director of the BAP’s North-South Project.

Baraka continues, “The U.S. is an unsafe and illegitimate host. FIFA’s own statutes commit it to respecting internationally recognized human rights, yet allowing the U.S. to host. At the same time, it enables genocide, military aggression, racialized repression, and the mass criminalization of migrants, normalizing and legitimizing these crimes. In doing so, FIFA becomes complicit.”

U.S. non-profit CodePink is also demanding that FIFA move the games, citing the U.S. bombings of Nigeria and Venezuela.

Football journalist Nima Tavallaey Roodsari was among the early voices to argue that U.S. travel bans imposed during Trump’s first term—disproportionately targeting citizens of Muslim-majority and African countries—should automatically disqualify the U.S. from hosting. He’s joined by a growing number of sports journalistssports content creators and podcasters sounding the alarm over travel to the U.S.

Leftwing Intellectuals and Artists Want Brazil To Stop Buying Weapons From Israel

Various forms of visa processing have been frozen for at least 15 of the World Cup qualified nations—nearly a third of participating teams. Citizens of Iran are subject to a blanket suspension of visas, with no guarantees for travel to the U.S. for Iranian players, coaches and staff, let alone fans. Haiti, whose national team qualified for the World Cup from Concacaf, is also among the 12 countries whose citizens face a full U.S. travel ban.

FIFA, under the leadership of President Gianni Infantino, invented a FIFA Peace Prize for the purpose of bestowing the award to Donald Trump, as U.S. massacres and extrajudicial killings in the Caribbean and Pacific hit the three month mark. The award drew criticism of sports broadcasters and pundits.

Infantino made multiple visits to the White House in 2025 to meet with Trump, beginning with Trump’s welcoming of Infantino to his Mar-a-Lago residence in Florida as part of a series of pre-inaugural events. The Trump-Infantino relationship spans years, with the U.S. president inviting the FIFA president to give an opening speech at a Trump-hosted dinner at the World Economic Forum in Davos in 2020.

President Trump speaks with FIFA President Gianni Infantino during the Global Chief Executive Officers dinner at the World Economic Forum in Davos

President Trump speaks with FIFA President Gianni Infantino during the Global Chief Executive Officers dinner at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland on January 21, 2020.

Israeli firm International Security & Defense Systems (ISDS) has provided services to at least four World Cups; Mexico (1986), Italy (1990), South Africa (2010) and Russia (2018). NoOlympics LA explains How The Olympics and World Cup Help Fuel Israeli War Crimes in Palestinewith event security schemes run by former Israeli Occupation Forces (IOF) soldiers and Mossad agents.

While the U.S. utilizes Mossad and IOF for domestic event security, the Department of Homeland Security has confirmed its overseas deploymentof U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) during the 2026 Winter Olympic Games in Italy.

European objection to the U.S. hosted tournament is becoming louder each day. In The Netherlands, a petition to boycott, launched by Dutch broadcaster Teun van de Keuken, has amassed 156,000 signatures. The petition calls on the Dutch government to not allow the Dutch national football team to participate in the World Cup in the United States: “We do not want our footballers to implicitly support President Donald Trump’s violent terror policy against innocent migrants..”

Calls to boycott the 2026 FIFA World Cup have also come from tournament co-host, Mexico, where protests against U.S. meddling are being organized. Organizations and activists are urging a boycott of U.S. chains that finance wars. An op-ed in one of Mexico’s leading newspapers calls FIFA, “a cubil of millionaire thieves”, which ought to be outright banned as a sports authority.

Global backlash over ticket prices forced FIFA to created a limited “Supporter Entry Tier” price category in December. Even still, this year’s World Cup will be the most expensive, and least accessible to football fans, in history.

Protests are expected in the 11 U.S. host cities.

(Kawsachun News)


From Orinoco Tribune – News and opinion pieces about Venezuela and beyond via This RSS Feed.

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By Aaron Kirshenbaum  –  Jan  29, 2026

Early on Saturday, January 3rd, Venezuela was attacked on behalf of oil, mineral, tech, and weapons profiteers in a regime change operation. Since then, the Trump administration has threatened Iran, Greenland, Cuba, Colombia, and Mexico. What unites these threats? The U.S.’s quest for endless resource extraction to power its increasingly deadly global empire. And it’s not slowing down. These resource wars and “operations” are emerging as the AI drive also ramps up. In July, Palantir and the Pentagon signed a 10-year, $10 billion agreement. In April 2025, Palantir won a $30 million contract with ICE — a significant development in their decade-plus-long partnership that we are now seeing play out in their increasingly militarized, unrestrained murders and abductions in Minneapolis and around the country. This increasingly inextricable partnership between AI and the war economy is throwing us into a fast track of climate and environmental chaos that threatens us all.

In August, I learned about an AI program created by the U.S.-armed Israeli military called “Where’s Daddy.” The program is designed to track individuals Israel is targeting in order to kill them at home with their families. In October 2023, the AI war giant Palantir entered into a contract with the Israeli military. Since 2021, the Israeli Occupation Forces have been working with tech companies like Google on AI programs such as Project Nimbus, used to surveil and murder Palestinians. “Where’s Daddy” and other overlapping systems represent the newest phase of this. The program characterizes the families of these alleged combatants as “collateral damage” and is often far from accurate, killing entire families without the “intended targets” even being there. The tech companies developing these programs do not have anyone’s “safety” or “security” in mind; they are solely motivated by profit. This cruelty is no surprise— these companies are the same ones building toxic data centers across the U.S., largely in working-class and Black and Brown communities, in the newest phase of environmental injustice.

We’ve been hearing about AI more and more as it enters the commercial market in increasingly pervasive ways. In particular, much has been reported about AI data centers entering communities and the opposition to them. Many of these fights have been taken up by environmental organizations; it’s estimated that data centers could consume approximately 21% of global energy by 2030. In order to sustain this energy use, data centers need cooling. Mid-sized data centers use as much water as a city of 50,000 people. Meta’s Hyperion data center in Louisiana is projected to use as much water as the entire city of New Orleans. Another Meta center in Cheyenne, Wyoming, is projected to use more power than the state of Wyoming itself.

These centers not only increase electricity bills for communities that can’t afford them, but they also generate significant air, water, and noise pollution. Some centers regularly use diesel “emergency” generators to meet increased demand. Each generator is the size of a railcar, and thousands are littered across data center hotspots like Northern Virginia. As a result, toxic chemicals are seeping into the lungs of residents, causing asthma and long-term illness. Data centers are known to create noise pollution, with constant hums that can lead to hearing loss, anxiety, cardiovascular stress, and a host of other long-term issues. Furthermore, equipment is certain to break down and lead to toxic waste and electronic pollution.

“Critical” minerals are required for the operation of these data centers. The process of obtaining these minerals, supposedly also used for green technology, requires the militarization, destabilization, and total plunder of mineral-rich regions. These minerals are supposedly “critical” for energy transitions, and some have advocated more “sustainable” methods for maintaining data centers through “green” technologies.

The use of these minerals is clear: The Pentagon recently became the largest shareholder in MP Minerals, one of the largest mining companies in the Western Hemisphere. Why? Aluminum for fighter jets. Titanium for missiles. And copper, lithium, cobalt, and many others for data center batteries and semiconductors. The more data centers are built, the more minerals are needed. This process of extraction has murdered millions in the Congo, destroying the soil, water, and forest: one of the largest “lungs” of the planet. It has led to the newest phase of imperialist aggression on Venezuela, a mineral-rich country with the largest oil reserves in the world (oil, of course, is also essential for data centers). Additionally, it has led to the attempted subordination of the Philippines to semiconductor production. The U.S. also seeks to use the archipelago as an “unsinkable aircraft carrier” for the U.S.’s looming war with China, its largest competitor in the AI and mineral race.

These are the impacts we already know to be devastating. But this is also new technology, which means there’s a lot we don’t know and a lot that’s being intentionally hidden. Lack of transparency is the norm in this industry. As data centers rapidly expand and buy up land around the country, the actual companies behind them hide behind non-disclosure agreements. This is not dissimilar to the intentional concealment of the military’s role in global emissions, enacted through U.S. pressure at the third U.N. Climate Change Conference in 1997. Decades later, the issue of militarism is still left out of climate conversations.

The parallel makes sense, considering how the AI industry has fused with the war machine. The U.S. military is one of the most environmentally destructive forces on the planet. In its oil consumption alone, the U.S. military is the world’s largest institutional polluter. The U.S.’s 800+ bases in 80 countries globally are known to regularly leak jet fuel and cancer-causing PFAS chemicals, along with a toxic cocktail of hundreds of other chemicals. While training exercises like RIMPAC in the Asia-Pacific region authorize the deaths of thousands of sea creatures, in environmental sacrifice zones like Camp Lejeune in North Carolina, toxic waste from military facilities has killed infants hours after birth. In bomb testing sites like Vieques, off the coast of mainland Puerto Rico, lung cancer and bronchitis rates have been shown to be 200% higher than on the mainland for men, and 280% for women. And the oil-motivated “war on terror” emitted 1.2 billion metric tons of carbon dioxide from 2001-2017.

The Genocide in Palestine Is Powered by Zionism, Not “AI”

Now we are entering a new era of resource wars that will further destroy the planet as the AI race with China accelerates. The relationship between AI and the U.S. military goes beyond the Pentagon’s contracts with Palantir, Meta, and Microsoft: last June, executives Shyam Sankar (Palantir), Andrew Bosworth (Meta), Kevin Well (OpenAI), and Bob McGrew (Thinking Machines Lab, previously OpenAI) were sworn into the U.S. Army as lieutenant colonels. Michael Obadal, executive of the AI-war manufacturing company Anduril, is now the Under Secretary of the U.S. Army, still with hundreds of thousands in Anduril stock. Peter Thiel, co-founder of Palantir, is himself a major funder of Anduril. In June 2025, OpenAI, Google, xAI, and Anthropic entered into $200 million contracts with the Department of War. The more you look at the partnerships between such companies and their executives, the Pentagon, governmental departments, and other entities, the more tangled this military-tech-industrial complex all becomes.

Many organizing groups are rightfully building power against the data centers that literally fuel it all, pushing for increased regulation and transparency. At the same time as Palantir makes new deals with the Pentagon, regulations in sacrifice zones are being thrown out the window. On December 18th, the House of Representatives passed a bill backed by Microsoft, Micron, and OpenAI to fast-track data centers. The bill significantly reduces the number of environmental and financial factors that can be considered in permitting processes. It’s simple. These communities are becoming the Camp Lejeunes of a new age: the new toxic waste dumps in the belly of the beast used to power the war machine. They must be fought against at all costs.

Regulation is crucial. It’s also far from a long-term solution. There is a lot that we don’t know, because a lot is hidden: just how much of these companies are tied up with weapons manufacturers, the Pentagon, and proxies like Israel; the environmental destruction caused by military usage of AI; the specific usage of all of these data centers. But it is obvious that AI is becoming inseparable from war-making, that increased AI means increased war-making, and that increased war-making is resulting in new and increased forms of unfathomable environmental destruction to communities around the world and here within the belly of the beast.

AI has been creeping up our necks. The horrific “Where’s Daddy” program existed long before I heard of it. It seems like these products are popping up in every corner of the market before we can even start discussing them. Their emergence has been intentionally designed to not only conceal their role in environmental destruction, but also their role in the militarism destroying communities from Virginia to Gaza.

No part of this is sustainable — not the war economy, not unending extraction, regardless of how much “green tech” it produces, and not an AI-driven speculative economy. We cannot afford to have splintered conversations either; these AI and tech companies are war profiteers. The new Cold War on China drives this. The genocide in Palestine drives this. The war on Venezuela, Latin America, and the Caribbean drives this. And so our organizing must be unified against the impacts, mechanisms, and causes. Against data centers and the wars that drive them. We need to stop the blood. But we can’t lose sight of why and how the bullets are fired.

Aaron Kirshenbaum is CODEPINK’s War is Not Green campaigner and East Coast regional organizer. Based in, and originally from, Brooklyn, New York, Aaron holds an M.A. in Community Development and Planning from Clark University. They also hold a B.A. in Human-Environmental and Urban-Economic Geography from Clark. During their time in school, Aaron worked on internationalist climate justice organizing and educational program development, as well as Palestine, tenant, and abolitionist organizing.

(CounterPunch)


From Orinoco Tribune – News and opinion pieces about Venezuela and beyond via This RSS Feed.

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By Betzabeth Aldana Vivas  –  Jan 30, 2026

On January 29, after a decade of near-total prohibitions on the involvement of US companies in Venezuela’s oil sector, the US Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) issued General License (GL) No. 46 under the regulatory framework of the Venezuela Sanctions Regulations (31 CFR Part 591).

This measure entails a carefully calibrated administrative review that adjusts the existing regulatory framework and redefines the conditions under which US participation in Venezuelan oil operations is permitted.

It is a broad-scope license that authorizes, under specific conditions, transactions that were previously prohibited, covering almost the entire value chain of the sector: from crude oil extraction and lifting to its export, refining, marketing, transportation, and associated logistics services.

The authorization includes the export, re-export, sale, resale, supply, storage, purchase, delivery, and transportation of Venezuelan oil, as well as the refining of such oil.

We use the word “almost” because the new exemption does not mention primary activities, such as production, in line with the partial reform of the Organic Law of Hydrocarbons, since production remains under the control of the Venezuelan State, either directly through wholly state-owned companies, or through subsidiaries or joint ventures.

In essence, the core of this administrative reengineering prioritizes established US entities, making them the linchpin around which the new authorization is developed, with a vast focus on hydrocarbon commercialization.

After years in which various US governments, by political decision, chose to withdraw from the Venezuelan oil business and limit the participation of US companies in the sector under a sanctions regime, this license establishes a framework in which those companies can once again participate in accordance with regulations, without altering Venezuelan state control over primary production.

Established US entities
One of the central elements of this license is the reference to “established US entities,” a concept that precisely defines who may benefit from the authorization.

According to the interpretive note included in the license itself (Note 1 to paragraph (a)), an established US entity means “any entity organized under the laws of the United States or any jurisdiction within the United States on or before January 29, 2025.”

This definition directly includes US oil and energy companies, as well as other legal entities incorporated in the United States that engage in activities ordinarily incidental and necessary for oil operations, such as maritime transport, insurance, logistics, port services, and terminals.

In fact, foreign companies are allowed to apply for authorization if they legally establish an entity or subsidiary in the United States.

This new scheme represents a substantial modification to the previous license management regime.

Before the issuance of General License No. 46, oil companies, especially US ones, had to apply to OFAC for specific licenses to carry out any activity related to Venezuelan oil, which entailed case-by-case processes, limited authorizations, and a high degree of administrative discretion.

With this general license, an ex ante authorization is established that allows US oil companies, in their entirety, to re-enter the Venezuelan oil business without having to obtain individual authorizations.

The license also introduces contractual requirements that reinforce US jurisdiction over the operations authorized to its companies.

Therefore, the license stipulates that every contract entered into with the Venezuelan government or PDVSA must expressly stipulate that it is governed by US law and that any dispute resolution mechanism will be carried out within US territory.

While the reform of the Organic Law of Hydrocarbons stipulates that contracts related to regulated activities may provide for dispute resolution mechanisms through Venezuelan courts or alternative means such as arbitration and mediation, in the case of US companies operating under GL 46, any dispute arising from their operations must be resolved in accordance with US law and within its jurisdiction.

In this framework, the Venezuelan Ministry of Hydrocarbons could, as appropriate, coordinate the inclusion of these clauses in the contracts, ensuring that both Venezuelan law and the terms of the license are respected, thereby guaranteeing the legal certainty of the parties and compliance with OFAC requirements.

On the other hand, since these are US companies, a surgical relief is introduced in one of the most critical bottlenecks of the Venezuelan oil trade: maritime insurance and P&I services. Amid the sanctions onslaught, these had been a real thorn in the side for crude oil shipments. By expressly authorizing the contracting of charters, maritime insurance, logistics, and port services, the license restores the link connecting Venezuelan oil to the traditional market.

The payments
In financial matters, General License No. 46 establishes a specific framework for handling payments to blockaded persons.

Such payments must be channeled through the “Foreign Government Deposit Funds,” a legal and technical concept defined in Executive Order 14373, or through any other account expressly designated by the Treasury Department.

This mechanism does not involve unblocking assets. Rather, it allows funds to remain under US regulatory oversight.

Similarly, the license leaves open the possibility that, in the future, other funds or accounts may be designated for use, which must be administered through the Treasury Department.

The license also authorizes commercially reasonable payments through crude oil, diluent, or refined product swaps, provided they comply with standard market practices.

At the same time, the license expressly prohibits debt swaps, gold payments, and transactions denominated in digital currencies.

This means that all transactions must be settled in US dollars, reaffirming a structural principle of US financial policy: ensuring that the region’s strategic energy continues to circulate in the global reserve currency.

In this way, the license allows US companies to resume access to Venezuelan oil without compromising the central role of the petrodollar in international transactions.

Geopolitical and trade logic
A central element of General License No. 46 is the precise delineation of the actors excluded from the authorized scheme.

Paragraph (b) operates as a legal and geopolitical cordon sanitaire, since it does not list prohibited oil activities for the companies but rather identifies modalities, actors, and corporate structures that remain off-limits, even under the new framework of flexibility.

First, the license absolutely excludes any transaction on the traditional market that involves, directly or indirectly, individuals or entities linked to Russia, Iran, North Korea, or Cuba, as well as corporate structures controlled by them or established in partnership with these actors.

This exclusion is due both to their status as strategic adversaries of the United States and to the fact that they are all subject to comprehensive sanctions regimes imposed by OFAC.

In these cases, the prohibition operates automatically, based solely on the jurisdiction of the party involved, almost as if it were determined by their nationality, regardless of the legal form of the transaction or its commercial design. Any connection, direct or indirect, with this group of countries is sufficient for the transaction to be excluded.

By contrast, the treatment of China follows a substantially different logic, since it is not a jurisdiction subject to comprehensive US sanctions.

OFAC does not impose a general prohibition based on Chinese nationality, nor does it exclude China as a potential market or final destination for Venezuelan crude oil commercialized by the US companies.

Paragraph (b) prohibits the corporate structure of the entity seeking to use the license and does not automatically identify all Chinese companies or the Chinese market as the final destination.

Thus, the license design intends to prevent Chinese actors from obtaining direct benefits within the license regime, without completely closing off the possibility of Venezuelan oil reaching the Chinese market through commercial channels outside the licensed framework, since the exemption includes broad authorizations, such as resale, re-export, and other successive commercial steps that introduce a degree of flexibility.

It should be noted that the explicit inclusion of practices such as resale and re-export, for example, opens a controlled loophole allowing Venezuelan crude to circulate beyond the initial buyer, even to third countries, albeit under a traceability and ex post oversight framework materialized in the obligation for the US oil companies to submit detailed reports to the State Department and the Department of Energy.

In certain scenarios, this would allow the indirect participation of private Chinese actors in the energy sector, provided that such participation occurs outside the Venezuelan or US entities covered by the license, without involving control, ownership, or any prohibited corporate association.

In other words, the exemption appears to allow these secondary transactions, but not in the gray market. Rather, it can be within a monitored framework that reintegrates Venezuelan oil into the traditional commercial circuit.

Venezuela’s National Assembly Unanimously Approves Hydrocarbons Law Reform

The key is being turned: administration of licenses
This new administrative maneuver in no way constitutes a lifting of sanctions.

The legal framework underpinning the sanctions regime against Venezuela remains intact, as the Venezuela Defense of Human Rights and Civil Society Act of 2014 and its successive extensions have not been repealed—something that is also politically unlikely, since the United States typically does not repeal such framework laws but rather administers them, reinterprets them, or overlays them with executive instruments.

Similarly, the executive orders declaring a “national emergency” with respect to Venezuela (and the new one of January 9) remain in effect. They form the direct legal basis upon which the Venezuela Sanctions Regulations (31 CFR Part 591) are built.

In other words, the parent legal framework has not been dismantled.

In that regard, it is appropriate to mention that the Sanctions Regulations derive from an act of Congress and presidential executive orders, and it is within that framework that the Treasury, through OFAC, deploys its administrative licensing mechanism.

General License No. 46 should therefore be read as a tool for administering the sanctions regime, not as a reversal of it.

It is a technical-political adjustment that allows certain operations without touching the legal core that enables the sanctions.

Now, within the broad catalog of general and specific licenses that Washington has issued, suspended, or modified in recent years, this license introduces a relevant nuance: it fully maintains the punitive nature of the scheme, but selectively eases its application at this stage, especially at the operational and commercial levels.

The system is made more flexible under strict conditions, with clear geopolitical exclusions, reinforced financial controls, and reporting mechanisms that preserve the US government’s monitoring and enforcement capabilities.

What is distinctive is that, while retaining that restrictive character, the license grants an unusually broad operational scope for certain oil activities, particularly for US companies that the US government itself had de facto expelled from the Venezuelan market under the sanctions umbrella.

Thus, rather than a dismantling of the measures, what is observed is a functional recalibration.

Finally, amid a complex geopolitical landscape, the Venezuelan government has carefully pieced together the elements within the sanctions regime, preserving control over the resource and primary activities, expanding operational capacity, and ensuring the continuity of public policies that benefit the country.

The strategy demonstrates skillful management of room for maneuver, as well as the ability to maintain essential operations and ensure that Venezuelan crude continues to flow, even in the context of historically severe international restrictions.

At the same time, it is clear that the United States’ strategic interest has always revolved around Venezuelan oil.

On the part of the Venezuelan government, trade and engagement channels were never completely closed. Rather, the sanctions policy itself imposed limits that are now being modified by General License No. 46.

Indeed, this shift in the sanctions regime tacitly reflects the gradual return of the United States to the Venezuelan oil business, a market it has considered strategic since time immemorial.

(Misión Verdad)

Translation: Orinoco Tribune

OT/SC/SF


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Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum warned that US leader Donald Trump’s decision to impose tariffs on countries that send oil to Cuba could trigger a severe humanitarian crisis.

“It would directly affect hospitals, food, and other basic services for the Cuban people, a situation that must be avoided out of respect for international law and through dialogue between the parties,” the president stated as she read an official response during her regular press conference on Friday, January 30. Mexico is one of the countries that has oil contracts with Cuba and could therefore be sanctioned under the new tariffs imposed by Trump.

“We need to know the scope [of the tariffs] because we also do not want to put our country at risk in terms of tariffs,” she added.

Sheinbaum revealed that she had asked Mexican Foreign Affairs Secretary Juan Ramón de la Fuente to seek immediate communication with US Secretary of State Marco Rubio in order to learn the precise details of the new measure, as well as to emphasize to Rubio that “a humanitarian crisis must be prevented.”

She also clarified that Mexico only sends 1% of its oil production to Cuba and that, before making any decision on whether to maintain these contracts with the island, she will wait to engage in dialogue and explain to the US government that many lives could be put at risk. “Our concern is that the Cuban people should not suffer, because not having oil means no electricity generation. Imagine a hospital that cannot function, or an intensive care unit,” she insisted.

Trump Admin Weighs Oil Blockade on Cuba for Regime Change: Politico

Solidarity
Sheinbaum added that Mexico upholds the sovereignty and right to self-determination of peoples, and that it will seek alternative ways to help Cubans going through “a difficult time,” as this is in line with a long-standing tradition of Mexico’s solidarity with Cuba.

On Thursday, Trump signed an executive order that went into effect at midnight, giving him the power to impose tariffs on imports from countries that sell or supply oil to Cuba. This order was signed on the basis that Cuba “constitutes an unusual and extraordinary threat” to US security and foreign policy.

Earlier this week, the Mexican national oil company Petróleos Mexicanos (Pemex) suspended oil shipments to Cuba, but Sheinbaum said that this was due to the terms of the contracts signed with the Cuban government, not to political pressure from the US. “It is a sovereign decision by Pemex,” she said, while guaranteeing that humanitarian aid shipments to Cuba will continue.

The president clarified that Mexico will explore avenues for humanitarian support that do not compromise the country’s economic stability. “We want to explore diplomatic channels and various ways to support…We will find a way, without putting Mexico at risk,” she stated.

For his part, Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel called Trump’s executive order an attempt to suffocate his country’s economy. “Under a mendacious pretext devoid of any arguments, peddled by those who engage in politicizing and enriching themselves at the expense of our people’s suffering, President Trump intends to suffocate the Cuban economy by imposing tariffs on countries that, in their sovereign right, trade oil with Cuba,” he wrote on social media.

“This new measure demonstrates the fascist, criminal, and genocidal nature of a clique that has hijacked the interests of the American people for purely personal gain,” the Cuban president added. “Did the Secretary of State and his clowns not claim that the blockade did not exist?”

(Diario VEA)

Translation: Orinoco Tribune

OT/SC/SF


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984
 
 

By Eva Karene Bartlett – Jan 28, 2026

No one is safe from the ‘Russian propaganda’ sanctions – even those who never touch Russian sources. Baud is one of nearly 60 public figures under sanctions from the EU

January 27, 2026, RT.com

On December 15, 2025, the European Union slapped sanctions on former Swiss intelligence officer and ex-NATO employee Jacques Baud. No day in court, no charges filed, just abrupt, suffocating, sanctions.

Why did the EU sanction Baud? For “Russian propaganda,” of course, although many of the sources he cites in his reports on the West provoking war with Russia years prior to Russia’s military operation are Western and Ukrainian – including the SBU and Aleksey Arestovich, a former adviser to Vladimir Zelensky.

Welcome to the latest EU insanity.

Widely respected for his deep knowledge and analysis, much of which is based on his own research while working with NATO, Baud has grown increasingly popular over the years, appearing on numerous podcasts and interviews, authoring numerous books and articles as well.

Since Russia began its military operation in Ukraine, Western media have been howling about an “unprovoked invasion.” Baud has written and spoken extensively about realities which counter this claim: facts on the ground prior to February 2022, going back (unlike most legacy media who have developed selective amnesia) to even before the 2014 Maidan coup.

What is interesting about Baud is he does not use Russian sources to back his claims and he has not taken a public position in favor of either Russia or Ukraine.

He has simply analyzed the situation, based on information he had access to. How did he have access to this information? In 2014, when working for NATO in charge of countering proliferation of small arms, he was tasked with investigating accusations of Russia supplying arms to Donbass resistance.

He wrote of this in 2022, noting, “The information we received then came almost entirely from Polish intelligence services and did not ‘fit’ with the information coming from the OSCE – despite rather crude allegations, there were no deliveries of weapons and military equipment from Russia.”

“The rebels were armed thanks to the defection of Russian-speaking Ukrainian units that went over to the rebel side. As Ukrainian failures continued, tank, artillery and anti-aircraft battalions swelled the ranks of the autonomists.

As a result of his research, he was also able to unequivocally debunk accusations of Russia sending military units into Donbass, by quoting the SBU (Ukrainian security service) itself as well as other Ukrainian sources.

In a September 2024 interview I did with Baud, he spoke of this.

“I can categorically say no, there were no Russian forces in Donbass. The guy you encountered (I had mentioned*meeting*one sole Russian former soldier when I went to the Donbass in 2019) represents exactly the kind of Russian presence that was at that time, recognized by the SBU and recognized also by the Ukrainian Chief of Staff.

“In a public interview in 2015, just after the signature of the Minsk Agreement 2, the head of the Ukrainian General Staff said publicly that there were no Russian military units fighting in Donbass; that there were only individual soldiers exactly the same case as the one you just mentioned.”

It is clear he is not citing Russian information (or “propaganda”) but Ukrainian and Western sources. An even better illustration of this is what he had to say about the prelude to Russia commencing its Special Military Operation in February 2022.

Referring to a March 2021 decree by Zelensky (to take back Crimea and the south of Ukraine), Baud spoke of an interview two years prior with Zelensky’s former adviser, Arestovich.

“He says in order to join NATO, we had to have a war with Russia. When the interviewer asked him when would this conflict happen, Arestovich says end of 2021 or 2022.” A position, Baud noted, which aligned with a March 2019 300-page document published by the Rand Corporation, “that explains how to defeat and to destabilize Russia.

The EU is almost certainly pissed off that Baud likewise demolished the Western propaganda claims about Russia invading Crimea in 2014. He told me“The Ukrainian army at that time was a conscript army, meaning that within the Ukrainian army you had both Ukrainian speakers and Russian speakers. When the army was ordered to shoot or to fight against demonstrators, those who were Russian speakers just defected, they just changed side. They just went to support the protesters and they became in fact those the famous ‘little green men’.”

Keep in mind that Baud was working for NATO then. “There was absolutely not the slightest indication that Russia brought new troops to Crimea. Based on the status of force agreement signed between Russia and Ukraine, you had up to 25,000 Russian troops stationed in the Crimean peninsula. At that time they were not even 25,000, there were 22,000. A Ukrainian lawmaker on Ukrainian TV said that out of the 20,000 (sic) Ukrainian soldiers that were deployed in Crimea, 20,000 defected to the Russian-speaking side.”

As for “Russian propaganda,” it is a term bandied about quite easily by legacy media and NATO mouthpieces to taint reputations or lead to censorship of voices. The war backers are upset that their own “Russia started it” propaganda isn’t working

The Military Situation in the Ukraine

Sanctions prevent Baud from even buying food

Baud lives in Brussels, and now as a result of the sanctions is unable to even buy food for himself. Nor can well-intending people do so on his behalf. In an interview on Dialogue Works at the end of December, 2025, Baud said:

“Yesterday, a friend of mine tried from Switzerland to buy food for me, to be delivered to my home (in Belgium). She could order, but the payment was blocked. Any delivery to my home is prohibited, even if the funds come from Switzerland.”

People who are aware of his unjust situation have been physically bringing him food, to alleviate his inability to purchase it himself.

In a more recent interview on Judging Freedom, Baud highlighted that his case was a foreign policy decision, denying him due process.

“This is not a decision that has been taken by any court. I was not judged by anybody. In fact I was not in front of a jury. I could not present my case. I could not defend my case. This decision was not taken by a court but by the council of the foreign ministers of the European union.”

The most he can do, Baud explained, is, “go to the European Court of Justice and try to make my case saying that the decision was not just, and the court of justice may then study the case and have an assessment on that.” Even if the court concludes the sanctions are not justified, all it can then do is “advise the council of foreign ministers to change their mind.”

Given that the sanctions against Baud are punitive for his not toeing the line, it is unlikely minds will be changed.

A growing list of EU sanctioned voices

Hüseyin Dogru@hussedogru

You literally sanctioned me for exercising my freedom of speech.

Ursula von der Leyen @vonderleyen

Freedom of speech is the foundation of our strong and vibrant European democracy. We are proud of it. We will protect it. Because the @EU_Commission is the guardian of our values.

9:38 PM · Dec 24, 2025 · 2.39M Views

513 Replies · 13.3K Reposts · 66.5K Likes

Jacques Baud isn’t the first to be sanctioned by the EU. Many journalists and public figures have been sanctioned for their writings or words on the Donbass, Crimea, corruption in Ukraine, and so on. However, many have safety in Russia or elsewhere, and while their foreign bank accounts have been unjustly frozen, they can at least buy food and otherwise live normally.

A recent article in Forum Geopolitica notes the brazen illegality of these sanctions. “In contrast to Article 11 of its own charter, the EU has decided to punish, disenfranchise and expropriate the citizens of all countries without any offence having been committed, as was last seen in Nazi Germany.

“This elimination of dissidents is not ordered by a court, but by the ‘Council of the European Union’, the political arm of the EU. The Council, in which non-democratically elected apparatchiks lead a good life, is chaired by Kaja Kallas, herself not democratically elected. We are back in the Middle Ages.

French journalist Xavier Moreau was also sanctioned, and roughly half a year prior, Swiss-Cameroonian political activist Nathalie Yamb was targeted.

Nathalie Yamb@Nath_Yamb

Pour tous ceux qui veulent savoir ce que ça signifie être placé sous sanctions de l’Union européenne et quels seront les impacts pour Jacques Baud ou Xavier Moreau, je partage d’expérience, puisque je suis la première suissesse sanctionnée (depuis le 26 juin 2025). Pour Xavier,

5:46 PM · Dec 16, 2025 · 235K Views

323 Replies · 1.73K Reposts · 4.21K Likes

German journalist, Hüseyin Doğru, was sanctioned in May 2025 for, being a “Russian disinformation actor, and for, according to him, “pro-Palestine reporting and documenting the repression of activists in Germany + the EU.”

As with the others sanctioned, no evidence of the EU’s accusations was provided, particularly no proof of financial ties to Russia or Russian media.

Hüseyin Dogru@hussedogru

This is the entirety of the so-called “evidence” gathered by the EU to sanction me. Not a single word, let alone evidence or proof (not even falsified ones) about my alleged financial ties to “Russian state propaganda” apparatus – which is the whole basis of me being sanctioned.

9:01 AM · Sep 3, 2025 · 5.12K Views

4 Replies · 70 Reposts · 315 Likes

petition demanding “the immediate lifting of the illegal sanctions against Jacques Baud as well as against all journalists, scholars, and EU citizens,” rightly notes it is not a crime to name the true reasons for the Ukraine war.

It is not a crime to draw readers’ attention to untruths and to the EU’s and NATO’s own propaganda. It is not a crime to point out the thoughtless cooperation of the West with Ukrainian forces that show a dangerous proximity to fascists.

Further noting the sanctions have targeted 59 journalists and scholars, it points out, the EU is “using the sanctions list as an instrument to silence critics and is maneuvering itself ever deeper into an abyss of lawlessness.”

Quite amusingly, President of the EU Commission, Ursula von der Leyen (also known as Ursula von der Lying), posted of “protecting” freedom of speech. The EU Commission website claims the right to freedom of expression, “also means the freedom and pluralism of the media shall be respected.”

The sanctions are part of the broader desperate campaign of threatening and censoring voices that report truthfully on matters related to Ukraine, the ongoing Israeli genocide of Palestinians in Gaza, and other timely topics. Yes, they can censor us by deleting our Youtube and social media platforms, or by imposing sanctions on journalists, authors, and other public figures.

But, it doesn’t work. Baud said he now has more visibility and more credibility. “It’s always a bad idea when you start preventing someone to speak. This attracts more more attention.

Related:

-Under Fire from Ukraine and Misperceived by the West, The People of the DPR Share Their Stories, October 16, 2019, Mint Press News (In Gaza)

JACQUES BAUD: NATO ATTEMPTED TO DESTABILIZE & THREATEN RUSSIA DECADES BEFORE 2022, September 19, 2024

JACQUES BAUD: US MEDIA SHIFT NARRATIVE ON UKRAINE BEFORE PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONS, October 7, 2024

-Jacques Baud’s writings published on The Postil

Donbass: My Articles, Videos & Interviews (2019-present)

–Return to Russia: Crimeans Tell the Real Story of the 2014 Referendum and Their Lives Since, October 19, 2019, Mint Press News (In Gaza)

Crimean Tatar & Interethnic and Interfaith Relations Chair, Ibraim Shirin, Counters Western Lies on Crimea, May 2024

(Substack)


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Caracas (OrinocoTribune.com)—On Friday, during the solemn opening session of the 2026 judicial year at the Supreme Court of Justice (TSJ) headquarters in Caracas, Venezuela, Acting President Delcy Rodríguez announced the decision to promote a General Amnesty Law. The law will cover the entire period of far-right political violence from 1999 to the present.

The measure, which will be presented to the National Assembly by the Commission for Judicial Revolution and the Program for Coexistence and Peace, follows precedents of two amnesty laws decreed by former President Hugo Chávez and one by President Nicolás Maduro.

During her address, Rodríguez indicated that the Venezuelan government maintains communication with President Nicolás Maduro and First Lady Cilia Flores. “We have exchanges with them,” she noted.

Addressing the context of the amnesty law, Rodríguez added that “it is very difficult to talk about justice in a world with fewer and fewer rights every day.” She pointed out that the events in Venezuela in the early morning of January 3, 2026, serve as a primary example. “It is a violation of international law. The attack, the foreign military aggression, and the kidnapping of a president, a first lady and a member of parliament can only mean that there is less law in the world.”

“However, we already knew that when we witnessed such painful situations as the genocide in Palestine, when I heard Venezuelan girls and boys express their pain over the aggression of that early morning,” she added, paying tribute to those who died fighting on January 3, “in conditions of great inequality.”

She emphasized that those who fell were “both Venezuelans and Cubans, but I say citizens of the Patria Grande, who fought in the name of Our America and the Caribbean, for humanity, defending international law, Bolívar, Martí, and the dignity of humble peoples like those of Venezuela and Cuba.”

In announcing the law, she stated: “May it be a law that serves to repair the wounds left by political confrontation stemming from violence and extremism, that serves to strengthen justice in our country, and that serves to restore coexistence among Venezuelans.”

The acting president specified that those excluded from the amnesty will be individuals “prosecuted and convicted of homicide, drug trafficking, corruption, and serious human rights violations.”

Transformation of El Helicoide
Rodríguez announced that El Helicoide will cease operating as a detention center. “We have decided that the Helicoide facilities, which currently serve as a detention center, will be transformed into a social, sports, cultural, and commercial center for police families and the surrounding communities,” she added. The transformation of the building will be coordinated by the Commission for Democratic Coexistence and Peace, along with other ministries.

She stated that this measure is an opportunity to live in peace and tranquility in Venezuela. “Despite the differences that exist, we can coexist with respect, and above all, with respect for the law and justice in Venezuela, given the diversity and plurality that exists,” she added.

The acting president also asked the TSJ to pronounce itself on the recent US OFAC license 46. “I want to ask the TSJ Constitutional Chamber for a ruling on the general license issued yesterday by the US Department of the Treasury… In order to preserve Venezuela’s jurisdiction and to preserve Venezuela’s right to diverse international relations and economic cooperation with the whole world.”

Judicial revolution and national consultation
During the ceremony, Rodríguez called for a major national consultation on a new justice system, with the goal of making “justice the queen of republican virtues and ensuring peace and the future of Venezuela as an independent, free, sovereign, and peaceful nation.” She also emphasized that these decisions embody “the spirit of Chávez and Maduro.”

She presented revealing data on the incarcerated population in Venezuela to highlight the need for reform:

• 68.8% belong to socioeconomic strata 4 and 5 (the lowest-income groups), while only 1.14% are from stratum 1.
• 75% of those convicted admitted to the crimes—a decision often made due to procedural delays and the high costs of the criminal process to reduce waiting times.
• 89% are first-time offenders.
• 63.51% have only an elementary education.

Given this assessment, Rodríguez called for a “change in this reality” and greater social intervention in health, education, and support for the most vulnerable sectors. She emphasized the need for a justice system that prioritizes prevention, inclusion, and social justice.

Statements by Justice Caryslia Rodríguez
Before Delcy Rodríguez’s speech, the president of the TSJ, Justice Caryslia Rodríguez, stated that the judicial branch has formed a cohesive bloc to defend Venezuela’s sacred interests. She noted that the branch embraces Bolivarian Diplomacy of Peace as the guiding principle of sovereignty and commits to providing absolute support for the construction of the new legal framework proposed by the acting president.

She also announced that the TSJ will provide unrestricted legal support to the state’s diplomatic efforts to achieve the immediate return of President Nicolás Maduro and First Lady Cilia Flores.

During her speech, the justice emphasized that the judiciary stands as an “unyielding bastion of peace.” She highlighted that, in times of trial for the national soul, justice constitutes the fundamental foundation of a free nation, and the loyalty of its officials is a non-negotiable commitment to the collective destiny.

Venezuela’s National Assembly Unanimously Approves Hydrocarbons Law Reform

“We declare that the Venezuelan rule of law remains firm and that legality cannot be broken by acts of force,” she stated, emphasizing that the judiciary will not yield to pressure. She also highlighted the commitment to continue transforming the justice system toward an alternative model that promotes equal opportunities and direct support for the people.

The Supreme Court also reaffirmed its commitment to the country’s stability by expressing its full support for Delcy Rodríguez in her role as acting president. Justice Rodríguez reiterated the validity of the ruling that underpins Delcy Rodríguez’s appointment as acting president, assuring that the court guarantees institutional continuity and the legality of the leadership, who currently also serves as commander-in-chief of the Bolivarian National Armed Force (FANB).

Special for Orinoco Tribune by staff

OT/JRE/SF


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On Thursday, US President Donald Trump signed an executive order authorizing him to impose tariffs on imports from countries that sell or supply oil to Cuba. According to Trump, the situation in Cuba “constitutes an unusual and extraordinary threat” to the security and foreign policy of Washington, and he has therefore declared a “national emergency.”

Based on these unfounded accusations, Trump has established a tariff system. According to this system, “an additional ad valorem duty may be imposed on imports of goods that are products of a foreign country that directly or indirectly sells or otherwise provides any oil to Cuba.”

The measure will take effect at midnight on January 30. The document states that the order may be modified if new information emerges, recommendations from senior officials arise, or circumstances change. It also outlines actions to be taken should a foreign country retaliate against the United States in response to this aggression, in order to maintain effectiveness.

The blockade against #Cuba that some people say it is a fiction, now would implemented through blackmail on third countries. Voila.https://t.co/THXI0mkUmT

— Dr C José Ramón Cabañas Rodriguez (@JoseRCabanas) January 30, 2026

The order also indicates that if the government of Cuba or another affected country adopts significant measures and “aligns itself” with Washington on national security and foreign policy matters, the order could also be modified.

The US ruler argued that the Cuban government has adopted extraordinary measures that harm and threaten the United States, aligning itself with and providing support to countries considered hostile, as well as to “transnational terrorist groups,  and other malign actors opposed” to Washington.

It accuses the Cuban government, without providing evidence, of having long provided “defense, intelligence, and security assistance to adversaries” of the United States in the Western Hemisphere, evading US and international sanctions, and trying to hinder Washington’s efforts to deal with malicious actors in the region.

For over six decades, Cuba has been subjected to a criminal US blockade and illegal sanctions in a multifaceted, unsuccessful regime-change operation. The most recent US sanctions launched during Trump’s first term, which were recently strengthened, have brought pain and despair upon many defenseless Cubans.

Cuba’s condemnation
On Thursday night, Cuban Foreign Minister Bruno Rodríguez harshly criticized the new measures taken by the US against Cuba. “We condemn in the strongest terms the new escalation by the US against Cuba,” the minister wrote.

He explained that a total blockade of fuel supplies to Cuba is currently being proposed. “To justify this, they rely on a long list of lies that attempt to portray Cuba as a threat it is not,” he added.

“Every day, there is new evidence that the only threat to the peace, security, and stability of the region, and the only malignant influence, is that exerted by the US government against the nations and peoples of Our America, whom it tries to subject to its dictates, deprive of their resources, mutilate their sovereignty, and deprive of their independence,” Rodríguez added.

According to the Cuban foreign minister, Washington “also resorts to blackmail and coercion to get other countries to join its universally condemned blockade policy against Cuba, threatening them with the imposition of arbitrary and abusive tariffs if they refuse, in violation of the rules of free trade.”

“We condemn before the world this brutal act of aggression against Cuba and its people, who, for over 65 years, have been subjected to the longest and cruelest economic blockade ever applied against an entire nation, and who are now promised to be subjected to extreme living conditions,” he summarized.

Venezuela’s condemnation
Venezuela strongly condemned the new US executive order against Cuba. A statement released by Foreign Minister Yván Gil noted that these actions flagrantly violate international law and the principles of global trade.

Likewise, it denounced any measure aimed at conditioning the exchange of goods and services as a violation of sovereignty. The communique adds that free trade is a fundamental pillar of international economic relations, and should not be subject to coercion that impedes the development of sovereign peoples.

Marco Rubio Testifies to US Senate About Attack on Venezuela: His Claims Do Not Add Up

The following is the full unofficial translation of the Venezuelan statement:

The Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela condemns the executive order issued by the government of the United States of America. The order seeks to impose punitive measures on countries that decide to maintain legitimate trade relations with the Republic of Cuba.

Any measure that limits or conditions the exchange of goods and services, as well as the freedom of states to sovereignly choose their trading partners, constitutes a violation of international law and the fundamental principles governing global trade. Free trade is a core principle of international economic relations between sovereign states. It cannot be subject to any form of coercion that impedes the free exchange of goods and services.

Venezuela expresses its solidarity with the people of Cuba and calls for collective action from the international community to address the humanitarian consequences of aggression of this nature. To consider Cuba a threat to the national security of the United States of America is absurd and poses a serious threat to its very existence as a nation.

Caracas, Jan. 30, 2026

(Alba Ciudad) with Orinoco Tribune content

Translation: Orinoco Tribune

OT/JRE/SF


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Caracas, January 30, 2026 (venezuelanalysis.com) – The Venezuelan National Assembly has approved a sweeping reform of the country’s 2001 Hydrocarbon Law that rolls back the state’s role in the energy sector in favor of private capital.

Legislators unanimously endorsed the bill at its second discussion on Thursday, with only opposition deputy Henrique Capriles abstaining. The legislative overhaul follows years of US sanctions against the Venezuelan oil industry and a naval blockade imposed in December.

National Assembly President Jorge Rodríguez hailed the vote a “historic day” and claimed the new bill will lead oil production to “skyrocket.”

“The reform will make the oil sector much more competitive for national and foreign corporations to extract crude,” he told reporters. “We are implementing mechanisms that have proven very successful.”

Venezuelan Acting President Delcy Rodríguez signed and enacted the law after the parliamentary session, claiming that the industry will be guided by “the best international practices” and undertake a “historic leap forward.”

Former President Hugo Chávez revamped the country’s oil legislation in 2001 and introduced further reforms in 2006 and 2007 to assert the Venezuelan state’s primacy over the industry. Policies included a mandatory stakeholding majority for state oil company PDVSA in joint ventures, PDVSA control over operations and sales, and increased royalties and income tax to 30 and 50 percent, respectively. Increased oil revenues bankrolled the Venezuelan government’s expanded social programs in the 2000s.

The text approved during Thursday’s legislative session, following meetings between Venezuelan authorities and oil executives, went further than the draft preliminarily endorsed one week earlier.

The final version of the legislation establishes 30 percent as an upper bound for royalties, with the Venezuelan government given the discretionary power to determine the rate for each project. A 33 percent extraction tax in the present law was scrapped in favor of an “integrated hydrocarbon tax” to be set by the executive with a 15 percent limit.

Similarly, the Venezuelan government can reduce income taxes for companies involved in oil activities while also granting several other fiscal exemptions. The bill cites the “need to ensure international competitiveness” as a factor to be considered when decreasing royalty and tax demands for private corporations.

The reform additionally grants operational and sales control to minority partners and private contractors. PDVSA can furthermore lease out oilfields and projects in exchange for a fixed portion of extracted crude. The new legislation likewise allows disputes to be settled by outside arbitration instances.

Thursday’s legislative reform was immediately followed by a US Treasury general license allowing US corporations to re-engage with the Venezuelan oil sector.

General License 46 (GL46) authorizes US firms to purchase and market Venezuelan crude while demanding that contracts be subjected to US jurisdiction so potential disputes are referred to US courts. The license bars transactions with companies from Russia, Iran, North Korea, or Cuba. Concerning China, it only blocks dealings with Venezuelan joint ventures with Chinese involvement.

Economist Francisco Rodríguez pointed out that the sanctions waiver does not explicitly allow for production or investment and that companies would require an additional license before signing contracts with Venezuelan authorities.

GL46 also mandates that payments to blocked agents, including PDVSA, be made to the US Foreign Government Deposit Funds or another account defined by the US Treasury Department.

Following the January 3 military strikes and kidnapping of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro, the Trump administration has vowed to take control of the Venezuelan oil industry by administering crude transactions. Proceeds from initial sales have been deposited in US-run bank accounts in Qatar, with a portion rerouted to Caracas for forex injections run by private banks. US Secretary of State Marco Rubio vowed that the resources will begin to be channeled to US Treasury accounts in the near future.

In a press conference on Friday, Trump said his administration is “very happy” with the actions of Venezuelan authorities and would soon invite other countries to get involved in the Caribbean nation’s oil industry. Rubio had previously argued that Caracas “deserved credit” for the oil reform that “eradicates Chávez-era restrictions on private investments.”

Despite the White House’s calls for substantial investment, Western oil corporations have expressed reservations over major projects in the Venezuelan energy sector. Chevron, the largest US company operating in the country, stated that it is looking to fund increased production with revenues from oil sales as opposed to new capital commitments.

Since 2017, Venezuela’s oil industry has been under wide-reaching US unilateral coercive measures, including financial sanctions and an export embargo, in an effort to strangle the country’s most important revenue source. The US Treasury Department has also levied and threatened secondary sanctions against third-country companies to deter involvement in the Venezuelan petroleum sector.

The post Venezuela Approves Pro-Business Oil Reform as Trump Issues New Sanctions Waiver appeared first on Venezuelanalysis.


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By James Patrick Jordan  –  Jan 28, 2026

Illegal US military strikes on January 3, 2026, against Venezuela have elicited a flood of resolutions from labor unions. Some of these have focused solely on the US aggression and solidarity with the Venezuelan people. Others have gone further to condemn the kidnapping and arrest of President Nicolás Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores. In at least one case, a resolution by the Tucson chapter of the National Writers Union has called for systemic changes to how the AFL-CIO, the US’ largest labor confederation, and its Solidarity Center (formerly the American Center for International Labor Solidarity), conducts its international relations. In each case, union members are undertaking important steps towards peace and solidarity as well as opening up possibilities for the emergence of a truly independent US labor movement. 

These resolutions are the latest in a series of cases where labor has broken with US foreign policies, including military strikes and acts of war. Beginning with the AFL-CIO’s 2005 passage of the USLAW Resolution 53: “The War in Iraq”, the federation and both affiliated and unaffiliated unions have gone on to speak out against coups in Honduras and Bolivia, repressive immigration policies, neoliberal trade agreements, and other global wars and threats of war.

In contrast, the Solidarity Center, the AFL-CIO’s primary channel for international activities, has continued to collaborate with US policies of regime change. The AFL-CIO’s Solidarity Center is historically 90 to 96% funded by the US government, and its policies are set in consultation with the White House rather than with representatives from its member unions. The Solidarity Center is one of the core institutes of the National Endowment for Democracy (NED), along with the International Republican Institute (IRI), the Center for International Private Enterprise (US Chamber of Commerce), and the National Democratic Institute (NDI). The NED was created by the US Congress in 1983 in large part to “…do today [what] was done covertly 25 years ago by the CIA.”

The Solidarity Center has played support roles in coups and coup attempts as well as invasions and occupations in Haiti, Venezuela, and Iraq, to name a few examples. In Haiti, the Solidarity Center withheld support for the largest union during the IRI orchestrated coup and instead funded a small labor organization that refused to oppose the coup. In Iraq, the Solidarity Center ignored unions and workers organizations protesting the US occupation in order to support union organizing that would avoid such direct challenges. 

In Venezuela, the Solidarity Center funneled hundreds of thousands of dollars to plotters of the failed coup of 2002. Since then, the Solidarity Center has provided a black box worth millions in funding for activities in Venezuela. However, it has provided no details about how those funds are being used or to whom they are being distributed. 

The recent freeze in funding for the NED and the Solidarity Center by the Trump Administration is being treated as a crisis. It has resulted in lawsuits by both institutions to recover funding. However, orphaned by the White House, there is another way forward for the AFL-CIO and the Solidarity Center. The Tucson NWU resolution calls for the Solidarity Center to open its books on its activities and to wean itself off government funding. The recent experiences of unions declaring their solidarity with both Palestine and Venezuela have shown many the profound need for a new era of labor independence. 

Labor unionists in solidarity with Venezuela should study and learn from experiences regarding Palestine. Labor mobilizations against the genocide in Gaza represented a break not only with international US policies but, specifically, with the leadership of the AFL-CIO which has long supported Zionism and even to this day, acted to stifle solidarity with Palestine. In an article for Left Voice, Jason Koslowski informs us that, 

“By October 18, a little fewer than 2,000 were dead in Gaza. That’s when one of the AFL-CIO’s organs in Washington State — the Thurston-Lewis-Mason Central Labor Council, or TMLCLC — met and passed a resolution demanding a ceasefire. 

The TMLCLC’s resolution ‘opposes in principle any union involvement in the production or transportation of weapons destined for Israel.’ And it challenges the AFL-CIO leadership, too: 

‘[W]hile the TLMCLC agrees with the AFL-CIO’s statement calling for a ‘just and lasting peace,’ we would ask our parent federation to also publicly support an immediate ceasefire and equal rights for Palestinians and Israelis.

The AFL-CIO leadership caught wind of this dissent. That’s when it stepped in. 

Labor Activists Launch New Organization to Challenge AFL-CIO Foreign Policy

A representative of the AFL-CIO leaders contacted the labor council to declare the dissenting statement void. Under pressure, the Washington labor council deleted the statement from its Twitter account.”

Jeff Shurke is the author of the must-read book No Neutrals There: US Labor, Zionism, and the Struggle for Palestine. Shurke, in an article for Jacobin, adds that, 

“…an AFL-CIO senior field representative informed the council’s board members that their resolution was null and void because it did not conform to the national federation’s official policy…. About a week later, AFL-CIO president Liz Shuler sent a memorandum to all local labor councils and state labor federations across the United States telling them that ‘the national AFL-CIO is the only body that can render an official public position or action on national or international issues.’ Without explicitly referencing the unfolding carnage in Gaza, she was all but telling the federation’s local and statewide bodies they were not allowed to stand in solidarity with Palestine.

Still, the AFL-CIO’s individual member unions — which, unlike central labor councils, operate as autonomous affiliates of the federation — were free to take their own positions. Beginning with the American Postal Workers Union and United Auto Workers (UAW), over the following weeks and months several of them formally joined the growing chorus of international voices demanding a ceasefire in Gaza… culminating in the establishment of a new union coalition dubbed the National Labor Network for Ceasefire.

The AFL-CIO itself eventually came out in favor of a “negotiated cease-fire” in early February 2024, after at least twenty-five thousand Palestinians had already been killed. Despite these positive developments, the AFL-CIO and its affiliated unions at the national level still failed to answer the explicit Palestinian call to refrain from building or shipping weapons for Israel.”

In the case of the Tucson NWU’s resolution, rather than going through labor federations, the resolution has been sent to the national NWU for passage and forwarding to the AFL-CIO for consideration in the next convention. Other unions are debating similar resolutions. There also is discussion of bringing resolutions before labor counsels and federations despite the AFL-CIO’s admonishments. 

Right now, three kinds of resolutions have emerged from labor in response to the January 3rd attack on Venezuela. They are all good. 

•  The first kind is to condemn the attacks without further elaboration. That is positive, but by leaving out reference to the kidnapping of President Maduro and Cilia Flores, the resolutions sidestep the issue of regime change itself. 
•  The second kind adds a demand for the release of Maduro and Flores. This is better and implicitly breaks with the AFL-CIO’s and the Solidarity Center’s support for regime change. 
•  The Tucson NWU resolution is an example of the third approach. It takes worker-to-worker solidarity to its logical conclusion, calling for systemic change so that the AFL-CIO will never again support US coups and invasions but, instead, plot an independent course. That is the most meaningful kind of change, one that lasts beyond just the current moment and conflict. 

The opportunity to achieve that kind of change is here. Abandoned by the White House, pressured by its own rank and file, the time has come for the AFL-CIO to choose a new path. What will be its response?  

Notes:

For those seeking to delve further,  labor sociologist Kim Scipes wrote regarding the 2002 coup attempt in his 2004 article AFL-CIO in Venezuela: Déjà Vu All Over Again. Fellow labor sociologist Tim Gill provided details regarding Solidarity Center activities in Venezuela between 2006 and 2014. One may look to the Alliance for Global Justice website to find reports about funding for Venezuela since 2014. For  even more in-depth reading: Jeff Schuhrke’s book, Blue Collar Empire: The Untold Story of US Labor’s Global Anticommunist Crusade (Verso, 2024), which details AFL-CIO operations during the Cold War.  The other, a little older, is by Kim Scipes and talks about labor’s foreign policy from the late 1890s until 2007, but which includes a specific look at the AFL-CIO’s operations in Venezuela around the 2002 coup attempt against Hugo Chavez; it’s titled AFL-CIO’s Secret War against Developing Country Workers:  Solidarity or Sabotage?(Bloomsbury Press, 2011).  Scipes has written extensively on this, and his writings can be found on-line for free here.

JPJ/OT


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Every day, President Claudia Sheinbaum gives a morning presidential press conference and Mexico Solidarity Media posts English language summaries, translated by Mexico Solidarity’s Pedro Gellert Frank. Previous press conference summaries are available here.

Editor’s note: Mexico will not be sending oil to Cuba.

Baja California Reduces Violence with Results

Governor Marina del Pilar reported that intentional homicides in Baja California decreased more than 40% in November 2025. In addition, high-impact crimes have posted an accumulated reduction of close to 46%.

Cuba and National Dignity

President Claudia Sheinbaum stated Mexico’s position regarding U.S. tariffs on countries exporting oil to Cuba: support for sovereignty and self-determination, and warning of a possible humanitarian crisis. She clarified that Mexico sends less than 1% of its oil production as humanitarian aid for transportation and electric power generation.

Memory, Context, and Contrast

Sheinbaum noted that the goal is to avoid a humanitarian crisis, so Mexico will send an official statement to the U.S. government and instructed Minister of Foreign Relations Juan Ramón de la Fuente to communicate with the State Department, while also exploring alternative support options for the Cuban people.

The President recalled that in 2013, then president Enrique Peña Nieto and PRI leader forgave Cuba’s oil debt and she reiterated that today Mexico sends less than 1% of its oil production to Havana.

Migration with a Humanitarian Focus

Migration to the United States has decreased significantly, and a humanitarian policy has been developed from the southern to the northern border. Sheinbaum sent a message to Mexican migrants, emphasizing that they are heroes of the homeland, who not only contribute to their families in Mexico but also make California what it is today.

End to Tax Privileges

It was reported that Grupo Salinas made an initial payment of slightly over 10 million pesos (US$580,000) to the Tax Administration System (SAT), as part of a fiscal debt amounting to 32 billion pesos (US$1.85 billion), to be paid off over 18 months. This is the highest amount settled in a case of this nature. President Sheinbaum recalled that during López Obrador’s administration, constitutional prohibition of tax forgiveness was enacted, enabling the collection of record high back tax debts.

An Economy That Delivers

Mexico’s economic performance in 2025 was better than analysts predicted. Confidence is reflected in the strength of the peso against the dollar, at an exchange rate of 17.3 pesos. The President reminded her adversaries that the country’s reality outweighs any argument seeking to minimize these achievements.

Interoceanic Train: Investigation Underway

It was reported that the conductors of the Interoceanic Train that derailed did not have valid licenses as machinists; the incident was described as an administrative issue, not a direct cause of the accident. The President emphasized that it is up to the Federal Attorney General’s Office (FGR) to conduct expert analyses to clarify the causes of the accident and assign responsibilities; the report that was delivered is preliminary, and investigations continue.


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This article originally appeared in the January 29, 2026 edition of Sin Embargo.

Mexico City. The Tax Administration Service (SAT) reported that Grupo Salinas, owned by businessman Ricardo Salinas Pliego, made an initial payment of 10,400,630,537 pesos, which was deposited into the Federal Treasury this Thursday. The remaining debt of 32,132,897,658 pesos will be paid in “small installments” over 18 payments.

This means that the owner of Elektra will have to settle the remaining 21,732,267,121 pesos of the debt in installments of 1,207,349,174.39 pesos.

“The Tax Administration Service (SAT) reports that, in accordance with the benefits established in the Federal Tax Code and in compliance with applicable court rulings, a business group will make a payment totaling 32,132,897,658 pesos. Of this amount, 10,400,630,537 pesos were already deposited into the Federal Treasury today, while the remaining amount will be covered through 18 payments,” the agency explained in a press release.

For its part, Grupo Salinas announced that it has decided to “turn the page” and conclude all the litigation it has been waging against the Mexican government.

“We have always said it, and we reiterate it today: Grupo Salinas and its founding president, Ricardo Benjamin Salinas Pliego, comply—and have always complied—with tax payments. In the last 20 years, our companies have paid more than 300 billion pesos in tax obligations. No one can deny that we are fulfilling our obligations to Mexico,” the business group stated in a press release.

Grupo Salinas Asserts it “no longer owes anything to the Government”

The business group stated that it has already fulfilled its obligations and owes nothing to the Government; however, there are still other lawsuits in which at least 23 billion pesos are being disputed.

“With this payment—which goes beyond the limits of the agreements originally reached in 2024—we will have covered absolutely everything the tax authorities demanded in this long legal battle. From now on, we owe nothing to the government, for any reason,” he stated, even though the administration of President Claudia Sheinbaum Pardo denied the existence of such agreements.

“At Grupo Salinas we are convinced that, in order for things to change in our country, the first thing we must do is modify our way of thinking and call for a true cultural revolution,” the business group stated.

“To the Mexican people, we say: rest assured that Ricardo Benjamín Salinas Pliego and Grupo Salinas will always be allies of Mexico. We will never stop speaking the truth, seeking to restore to our nation and to every Mexican the prosperity that will reinstate us as a world-class example,” Grupo Salinas concluded.

This morning, Mayor Claudia Sheinbaum Pardo explained that Grupo Salinas formally expressed its intention to pay its tax debt on January 22. Following that communication, the amount to be paid and the application of discounts provided for in current legislation were under review, and the payment was finalized this afternoon.

“That’s the one currently on the table. It should be resolved this week. It has to be resolved this week. The Supreme Court of Justice of the Nation (SCJN) ruled that the injunction is invalid and that the latest ruling by the collegiate courts is valid. In that latest ruling by the collegiate courts, for two of the companies in the Salinas Group, it was established that they can receive the benefits provided by the Tax Code. So the Tax Administration Service (SAT) presented the benefits they are entitled to, and they are evaluating whether they will be able to implement them,” Sheinbaum commented.

Total Play Asks Court to Withdraw Injunction

Total Play Telecomunicaciones, SAPI de CV withdrew the direct appeal in review 2526/2025, filed in April of last year against the payment of a tax credit exceeding 645 million pesos, reported Lenia Batres Guadarrama, Minister of the Supreme Court of Justice of the Nation (SCJN).

“The announcement made today by the SAT, regarding an initial payment of more than 10 billion pesos, out of a total exceeding 32 billion, made by Grupo Salinas, represents a historic victory for the rule of law and a very encouraging message about equality in the fulfillment of obligations by Mexicans, regardless of their economic capacity,” the constitutional judge stated.

The debt was determined by the Tax Administration Service (SAT) on September 6, 2017 and has been challenged since then through various appeals.

One of these trials was resolved in March 2024 by the now-defunct Second Chamber of the SCJN, which ordered the Federal Court of Administrative Justice (TFJA) to annul a sentence and issue another one that deducted 621 million pesos.

“The Federal Court of Administrative Justice (TFJA) reviewed its initial ruling, but without quantifying the corresponding deduction. Dissatisfied, the company filed a new appeal, which was denied, and requested a review before the Supreme Court of Justice of the Nation (SCJN). The company requested to withdraw from this case, which was assigned to me,” the Minister revealed.

Complaint Before IACHR Remains Pending

In the middle of this month, Salinas Pliego, president of Grupo Salinas, went to Washington to meet with Pedro Vaca, Special Rapporteur for Freedom of Expression of the IACHR, before whom he filed a formal complaint against the Mexican State, due to “systematic harassment by the Government: fiscal, judicial and administrative persecution, coordinated to intimidate, wear down and silence those of us who think differently and raise our voices.”

“This sets a very dangerous precedent: the use of the state and organized crime as weapons to punish political opponents and restrict freedom of expression. In Mexico, they are trying to impose fear as a method of control,” he had stated.

The post Debt on the Installment Plan: Salinas Pliego Pays $10B MXN; $22B in Installments appeared first on Mexico Solidarity Media.


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This article by Alonso Urrutia originally appeared in the January 30, 2026 edition of La Jornada, Mexico’s premier left wing daily newspaper.

Tijuana, BC. In stating Mexico’s position regarding the warning from White House chief Donald Trump about imposing tariffs on countries that send oil to Cuba, Mayor Claudia Sheinbaum called for avoiding a humanitarian crisis on the island that could affect hospitals, food, and basic services.

In this context, she reported that he had instructed Foreign Minister Juan Ramón de la Fuente to contact the State Department to ascertain the implications of Trump’s announcement. The goal is to prevent a humanitarian crisis in Cuba without jeopardizing Mexico.

“Mexico will explore various alternatives to provide humanitarian aid to the Cuban people, in accordance with international law.” He noted that the United States has been sending humanitarian aid, food, and other supplies; “we will find ways to maintain solidarity with the Cuban people without putting Mexico at risk.”

“We will find ways to maintain solidarity with the Cuban people without putting Mexico at risk.”

President Sheinbaum emphasized that the imposition of tariffs on oil shipments to Cuba was not a topic discussed in her phone conversation with Trump yesterday. “We didn’t touch on the subject. The issue of Cuba wasn’t discussed. This afternoon, a diplomatic appeal will be made to avoid a humanitarian crisis.”

She stressed that in this context Mexico unequivocally reaffirms the principle of respect for the sovereignty and self-determination of peoples.

Sheinbaum said that less than one percent of national production is being sent to Cuba to put the quantities into perspective. This is the oil used in power plants because, imagine if there were no electricity, it would affect hospitals and refrigerators. The goal is to avoid a humanitarian crisis.

He pointed out that preventing this social impact in Cuba is in the interest not only of the government but also of the Cuban people. That is what we want to convey to the United States government, but without risking further tariffs on Mexican exports.

Editor’s note: There is a protest in solidarity with Cuba this Sunday in Mexico City, starting noon at the old US Embassy at Reforma 305, located 15 minutes march from PEMEX headquarters.

The post “Cooperation, Not Subordination?” No Oil from Mexico for Cuba, Sheinbaum Says Will Help “without putting Mexico at risk” appeared first on Mexico Solidarity Media.


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Iran’s Army has issued a stark warning that any new act of aggression against Iran will be met with an immediate and decisive response, stressing that the experience of the June war has fundamentally reshaped Iran’s military posture and rules of engagement.

Speaking on the televised program “To the Horizon of Palestine,” Army spokesman Brigadier General Mohammad Akraminia said Iran’s Armed Forces are now operating under clear instructions that leave no room for delay if the enemy repeats a “miscalculation.”

“If the enemy commits another foolish move and once again falls into miscalculation, we will respond instantly and in real time,” Akraminia said.

“We learned in the 12-day war that hesitation and giving the enemy time is absolutely unacceptable. The response must be immediate, and this has been formally communicated as a directive to the Armed Forces.”

The 12-day war in June involved direct confrontation with the Israeli regime and US involvement. According to the army spokesman, the central failure of Washington and Tel Aviv in that war was a fundamental misreading of Iran’s capabilities, cohesion, and national will.

He said the enemy’s strategic design was based on the assumption that Iran was weak in the aftermath of Operation Al-Aqsa Storm and that a rapid, lightning-style military strike could trigger chaos, internal unrest, and ultimately the collapse and fragmentation of the Islamic Republic.

“This was the core American miscalculation,” Akraminia said. “They believed that with a swift military operation they could create disorder, push the system into crisis, and move toward regime overthrow and even the disintegration of Iran. But the world witnessed something completely different.”

Operation Al-Aqsa Storm was a sudden, large-scale, and coordinated operation carried out by the Palestinian resistance inside Israeli settlements in the southern occupied territories on October 7, 2023, which shattered Israeli security assumptions.

According to Akraminia, Iran responded immediately to the Israeli military assault in June, neutralizing the enemy’s objectives and transforming what was meant to be a shock operation into a strategic failure.

“Not only did chaos and unrest fail to materialize, but national unity and social cohesion grew stronger than before,” he said. “The Americans received their answer in this war.”

Akraminia devoted a significant portion of his remarks to the United States under President Donald Trump, describing Washington’s approach as unpredictable and rooted in outdated coercive doctrines.

“When it comes to Trump’s America, it is not possible to make precise predictions,” he said. “We are dealing with a narcissistic and delusional individual who constantly changes his positions.”

Army spokesman Brigadier General Mohammad Akraminia

The army spokesman said Trump sought Iran’s submission during the 12-day war but quickly moved to halt the aggression after encountering Iran’s deterrent power.

“Trump wanted Iran to surrender, but after several days he worked to stop the war,” Akraminia said. “In this war, the Armed Forces demonstrated their deterrent capability, and we forced the Zionist regime into a ceasefire.”

He warned against any new illusion in Washington that a limited or symbolic strike could be launched and quickly concluded.

“This is not a scenario where the US president orders an operation and two hours later tweets that it’s over,” he said. “That kind of thinking is pure fantasy. Such an attack would ignite a fire that would engulf the entire West Asia region.”

Addressing the possibility of a future US or Israeli attack, Akraminia said Iran has already finalized operational plans and issued the necessary orders.

“For a potential enemy attack, the required plans have been prepared and directives have been issued,” he said. “For different enemy scenarios, we will have appropriate and proportionate responses.”

He emphasized that even the smallest strike against Iran would not go unanswered.

“They may attack us militarily, but they are again suffering from miscalculation,” he said. “If we are hit even slightly, we will respond, and that response may not be desirable for the United States.”

Akraminia made clear that the geographical scope of any future conflict would not be limited.

“The scope of war will certainly extend across the entire region,” he said. “From the Zionist regime to countries that host American military bases, all will be within range of our missiles and drones.”

In one of his most explicit warnings, the army spokesman said US military bases across the region are fully within Iran’s strike envelope.

“We can target American bases with semi-heavy weapons, drones, and missiles,” he said, adding that US aircraft carriers and naval assets are not immune.

“Warships are important tools in modern warfare, but it is not the case that all American military power is concentrated in these fleets,” Akraminia said. “These aircraft carriers are vulnerable to the missile and hypersonic missile capabilities of the Islamic Republic of Iran.”

Akraminia said the 12-day war significantly increased Iran’s military readiness across all four branches of the army.

The Iran Insurgency

“After the 12-day war, we are at a much higher level of preparedness,” he said. “This war provided us with valuable experience, and we are using those lessons.”

He noted that damaged air defense systems were rapidly repaired or replaced and that new systems have been introduced to further strengthen Iran’s defensive network. He also pointed to new measures taken in the air force, navy, ground forces, and air defense units.

“We were not completely surprised in the war,” he said. “Our intelligence assessment was that Israel would attack, though we did not expect a terrorist-style attack on such a scale.”

The army spokesman highlighted the role of the Leader of the Islamic Revolution, Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei, describing his actions during the war as decisive and inspiring.

“The Leader played his command role excellently during the 12-day war through the immediate appointment of commanders and direct messaging to senior military leaders,” Akraminia said.

“Beyond the Armed Forces, he also exercised broad leadership and management, shaping the narrative of the war with a powerful and epic message.”

He also emphasized the morale and spiritual strength of Iran’s military personnel.

“One aspect that has been discussed less is the spirit, motivation, and will among our personnel,” he said. “This motivation has been strengthened. Our colleagues in the Army and the IRGC stood against the Zionist regime until their last breath during the 12-day war.”

Akraminia said that if war is imposed again, Iranian forces are ready to avenge the martyrs of the June war.

“The Army of the Islamic Republic of Iran is a people’s army, formed from the heart of the nation,” he said. “Its duty is to defend the people and the country.”

Akraminia stressed that strengthening deterrence is not a choice but a necessity in today’s world.

“One of the key lessons of the 12-day war is that we must enhance our deterrence and preserve national cohesion and self-confidence,” he said.

“We must also stand firm in other domains of warfare, including cognitive and psychological warfare, where the enemy seeks to strike us.”

He added that when diplomacy reaches its limits, the responsibility shifts to soldiers and, increasingly, to those engaged in “soft war.”

“In international relations, when the diplomat’s work ends, the soldier’s work begins,” Akraminia said. “Alongside diplomats and soldiers, soft-war officers also play a decisive role.”

(PressTV)


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This article by María del Pilar Martínez originally appeared in the January 29, 2026 edition of El Economista.

Women’s collectives and civil society organizations presented the report Connected to Change, a study conducted while the Mexican Social Security Institute ( IMSS ) pilot program for digital platform workers was in effect. The report, released now that the labor reform has taken effect with some adjustments, highlights that, while the reform is historic, its implementation has not closed pre-existing gender gaps.

In a press conference, the specialists urged the correction of “critical knots” in public policy to prevent the new rules from reproducing the inequalities they seek to combat.

The diagnosis, built from workshops and testimonies, identifies four main barriers that disproportionately impact female workers, most of whom are mothers and the economic breadwinners of their households.

The first finding is the high exposure to violence and insecurity: “almost 7 out of 10 women have suffered harassment, physical and verbal violence and even death,” said Verónica Álvarez, a member of the Lady Drivers collective in Guadalajara.

Photo: Unión Nacional de Trabajadores por Aplicación

Added to this is the so-called Exclusion Factor, a discount that forces drivers and delivery workers to generate income far above the net target to access the minimum contribution floor to the Mexican Social Security Institute (IMSS). “This results not only in indirect exclusion in terms of full access to social security, but also, for example, in lower contributions once they do gain access to social security,” explained Néstor Génis, one of the analysts of the report.

“The lack of transparency in algorithmic management and the 30-day inactivity rules, which can mean the loss of the employment relationship during pregnancy or postpartum, are other factors that generate “indirect discrimination,” said Marianela Fernández of OXFAM .

Faced with these challenges, the organizations and spokespeople are proposing an immediate course of action, demanding that platform companies implement real protocols against violence, with effective sanctions and the guarantee that “reporting will not bring us algorithmic punishments,” in the words of Frida, a delivery worker from Hermandad Delivery.

They requested that federal authorities adjust or eliminate the exclusion factor thresholds and ensure that labor inspections incorporate a gender perspective into the digital realm to audit algorithmic management. They also asked the Mexican Social Security Institute (IMSS) to develop clear guidelines on health insurance, publish gender-disaggregated data, and adapt childcare services to the non-traditional work schedules—evenings, nights, and weekends—of women in the sector.

Valentina Zendejas, Mexico’s representative at the Avina Foundation , emphasized that the work of the collectives, technical partners in the report’s development, is fundamental to ensuring that “implementation does not reproduce the inequalities it seeks to correct.” The final proposal is clear: to work with institutions and companies to ensure a dignified and safe future for women in the digital sector.

The post Mexico’s Gig Worker Reform Risks Institutionalizing Exclusion of Women Workers appeared first on Mexico Solidarity Media.


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By Ben Norton – Jan 25, 2o26

Self-declared “peacemaker” Donald Trump has bombed 10 countries, more than any other US leader. Now he plans to raise the military budget to $1.5 trillion — nearly the rest of the world’s defense spending combined.

Donald Trump claims to be a so-called “peace president”, but he has bombed more countries than any other US leader.

After proudly renaming the Pentagon from the Department of Defense to the Department of War, Trump now plans to raise the US military budget from $1 trillion to a staggering $1.5 trillion.

This means that, if Trump succeeds, the United States will soon spend more on its military than all of the other countries in the world combined, excluding China.

This is deeply hypocritical, because in his January 2025 inauguration speech, as he started his second term as US president, Trump declared that he would be a “peacemaker”.

Similarly, in the victory speech that Trump gave after he won the November 2024 presidential election, he claimed, falsely, that during his first term, “we had no wars”.

“I’m not going to start a war; I’m going to stop wars”, Trump promised.

He lied. In the first year of his second term, the Trump administration bombed seven countries: Iran, Iraq, Nigeria, Somalia, Syria, Venezuela, and Yemen.

When his first and second terms are combined, Trump has bombed 10 nations (the aforementioned seven, plus Afghanistan, Libya, and Pakistan).

This means Trump has bombed more countries than all other presidents in US history.

Moreover, Trump is threatening to attack at least four more nations: Colombia, Cuba, Mexico, and Greenland. He has vowed to colonize Greenland and forcibly turn it into US territory.

In a publication on his website Truth Social on January 20, 2026, Trump posted a photoshopped image of himself sitting in the White House next to a map showing Canada, Greenland, and Venezuela all annexed by the US empire.

trump truth social post map US Canada Venezuela Greenland flag

Bipartisan US wars kill millions of people
Trump is certainly not unique when it comes to waging wars; every US president in modern history has intervened abroad and overseen war crimes.

George W. Bush bombed five countries, and invaded Iraq in an illegal war of aggression.

Barack Obama won the so-called Nobel “Peace” Prize, before his administration went on to bomb seven countries: Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya, Pakistan, Somalia, Syria, and Yemen.

Trump bombed the same seven nations attacked by Obama, adding three more: Iran, Nigeria, and Venezuela.

In fact, the wars waged by the US in the two decades after September 11, 2001 had a death toll of at least 4.5 million people, in a conservative estimate by researchers at the elite Brown University.

They also found that 38 million people were displaced due to these US-fueled wars. This was the largest refugee crisis since World War Two.

post 911 us wars displaced 38 million people

These imperial wars have been bipartisan. All modern US presidents have been complicit.

But what is especially hypocritical about Trump is that his administration constantly spreads propaganda claiming that the man who has bombed more countries than any other US leader is “the peace president”.

Trump launched more airstrikes in 6 months than Biden did in 4 years
Just in 2025, in the first 11 months of his second term, Trump carried out more than 500 bombings of countries around the world, according to data from the monitoring group Armed Conflict Location and Event Data (ACLED).

Trump launched more airstrikes on foreign nations in the first six months of his second term than Biden did in all four years he was in office”, CBC reported, citing ACLED figures.

Joe Biden himself also oversaw extreme war crimes and crimes against humanity.

The Biden administration strongly supported the Israeli regime, giving it tens of billions of dollars of military aid and shielding it from any legal consequences by repeatedly vetoing resolutions at the UN Security Council, as US-backed Israeli forces committed genocide against the Palestinian people in Gaza.

Trump has continued doing the same. In September, the Trump administration pressured Congress to approve the sale of $6.4 billion more in military equipment to help Israel further colonize Palestinian land.

US military aid to Israel 2025 CRS

Trump bombed civilian sites in Venezuela
Moreover, when Trump attacked Venezuela and kidnapped its internationally recognized President Nicolás Maduro on January 3, 2026, he also killed more than 100 people, including civilians.

In the illegal invasion of Venezuelan sovereign territory, the US military bombed civilian sites in addition to military targets.

Among the civilian areas hit by the US military was a medical warehouse that stored supplies for Venezuelan dialysis patients. Thousands of civilians could now die, because they lost access to this life-saving treatment.

The US military similarly destroyed an important scientific research center in Venezuela.

Trump’s Secretary of War Pete Hegseth proudly declared that the US attack on Venezuela was aimed at China and Russia.

“We’re re-establishing deterrence that’s so absolute and so unquestioned that our enemies will not dare to test us”, he stated.

US Committed a War Crime: Protester Speaks Out in US Senate

Trump wants $1.5 trillion US military budget
Just a few days after Trump bombed Venezuela, he announced that he plans to increase the US military budget from $1 trillion to $1.5 trillion by 2027.

Fortune magazine reported that “a $1.5 trillion U.S. military budget would exceed the combined military expenditures of the next 35 highest-spending countries. And starting from the bottom up, a $1.5 trillion U.S. military budget would exceed the military expenditures of every other nation combined except for China”.

For context, in 2024, the entire world’s military expenditure was $2.7 trillion.

As of that year, the United States alone accounted for 37% of global military spending, according to data collected by the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI).

Nearly half, 47%, of US federal government discretionary spending was dedicated to the Pentagon — which was previously known as the Department of Defense, but which self-declared “peacemaker” Trump renamed the Department of War.

world military spending top countries US 2024 SIPRI

In 2024, the US spent more on its military than the next nine largest military spenders in the world combined.

The combined defense expenditure of China, Russia, Germany, India, the UK, Saudi Arabia, Ukraine, France, and Japan was $984 billion, compared to $997 billion in the US (and most of these top military spenders are US allies).

China’s defense spending in 2024 was $314 billion, or less than one-third of that of the US, according to SIPRI.

China has not fought a war since 1979, while the United States bombed seven countries just in 2025.

us military spending 2024 more than next 9 countries combined

Trump’s $1.5 trillion US military budget will increase federal debt by $5.8 trillion
When he announced his intention to raise the military budget to $1.5 trillion, Trump claimed he will, “at the same time, pay down Debt”.

This is false.

A report by the nonpartisan Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget found that Trump boosting annual military expenditure to $1.5 trillion will add $5.8 trillion to US federal debt over the next decade.

Trump claimed that the tariff revenue that the US government makes will supposedly cover this increase in military spending. This is not true.

Tariff revenue is estimated to be around $300 billion per year, according to the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget. That is significantly smaller than the additional cost of increasing the military budget to $1.5 trillion.

trump 1 5 trillion military budget spending tariff revenue debt

This assumption that tariff revenue will stay high, at roughly $300 billion annually throughout the next decade, likewise suggests that Trump’s assertion that his tariffs will reindustrialize the US is false.

If Trump’s levies truly aimed to accomplish this, it would be expected that tariff revenue would fall over time, as they would reduce imports and instead encourage domestic consumption of goods.

Nevertheless, Trump’s insistence that his tariffs could help pay off US federal debt demonstrate that he knows they will not re-industrialize the US.

Trump cuts taxes on the rich while raising taxes on the poor
In reality, Trump’s tariffs are a regressive tax on Americans. They represent a shift of the tax burden off of rich Americans onto poorer ones.

Trump constantly claims that other countries will supposedly pay for his tariffs. This is not true. It is US importers and consumers that pay the tariffs.

This tax on consumption of imported goods is extremely regressive. The biggest burden by far is felt by lower-income Americans, who spend much more of their paycheck on basic imported goods.

At least 55% of the cost of Trump’s tariffs have been paid by US consumers, Goldman Sachs estimated in October 2025.

Meanwhile, Trump has been cutting taxes on the richest Americans. The policies included in his “One Big Beautiful Bill” will overwhelmingly benefit the wealthiest people in the country.

Trump’s policies will result in 69% of tax cuts going to the richest 20% of Americans.

While a mere 1% of tax cuts will benefit the poorest 20% of Americans, 94% of Trump’s tax cuts will go to the richest 60%.

tax cuts trump big beautiful bill 2026 income group

69% of the tax cuts in Trump’s “Big Beautiful Bill” go to the richest 20% of Americans. Just 6% go to the poorest 40%.

In fact, due to Trump’s tariffs, the bottom 95% of Americans will actually see an effective tax increase.

The poorer a person is, the higher the percentage of their income will go to paying taxes to the Trump administration, while only the richest 5% of Americans will actually see their taxes fall.

Trump tax cuts rich poor 2026

This is because, as Trump reduced progressive income taxation in one area, he increased regressive taxation in another area, in the form of tariffs.

Trump tariffs April 2 2025 income distribution effect rich poor tax

The Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget calculated that Trump’s “One Big Beautiful Bill” and his tax cuts on the rich will cause US federal debt to balloon by $5.5 trillion by 2034. This is in addition to the $5.8 trillion federal debt increase that will result from his $1.5 trillion military budget.

This is all profoundly hypocritical, because Trump oversaw the so-called Department of Government Efficiency, or DOGE, which he appointed the world’s richest billionaire oligarch, top US government contractor Elon Musk, to lead.

Trump and Musk claimed DOGE would root out government “waste, fraud, and abuse”.

In reality, the Trump administration gutted social spending and the parts of the state that actually help working families, while not reducing spending overall.

Trump’s plans to increase US federal debt by trillions — by cutting taxes on the rich and raising the military budget to $1.5 trillion to wage war around the world — come at the same time when he is eliminating $186 billion of funding for SNAP, the food program that helps poor and working-class Americans feed their families.

In other words, Trump is slashing government support for the poorest people in the country, while providing tax relief for the richest and massively increasing the Pentagon budget, which will further enrich corporate shareholders in the military-industrial complex.

Donald Trump, the billionaire self-declared “peacemaker” who now holds the record for bombing more countries that any other US president, is demonstrating to the world that all US wars are indeed a form of class war.

(Geopolitical Economy)


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The Venezuelan National Assembly has unanimously approved the partial reform of the Organic Law of Hydrocarbons.

The discussion, held on Thursday, January 29, during the plenary session of the parliament, was chaired by the president of the National Assembly, Deputy Jorge Rodríguez. Participating in the debate were oil industry workers, PDVSA President Héctor Obregón, Minister of Economy and Finance Anabel Pereira, Sectoral Vice President of Economy Calixto Ortega, PDVSA Vice President of Exploration and Production Eduardo Pinto, PDVSA Vice President of Gas Yaniel Viloria, President of the Bank of Venezuela and Acting President of Pequiven Román Maniglia, as well as other officials linked to the hydrocarbons industry and the economy sector.

Deputy Orlando Camacho, president of the Standing Committee on Energy and Petroleum, highlighted that the reform was previously submitted for public consultation with the participation of industry workers throughout the country, in order to learn about their experiences, and that more than 120 written proposals were received from various locations. He added that this reform “will change the country’s economy and bring about great transformations.”

He explained that the proposals were systematized and that the 35 articles of the law were submitted for consideration and approved by the deputies of the Standing Committee on Energy and Petroleum. “Today, a reform is being brought up for a second discussion that will change the economy and bring about great transformations for us, for our children, for our grandchildren, and for the future of Venezuela.”

Several articles were modified, taking into consideration the proposals of some parliamentarians regarding the incorporation of terms, including that of Deputy Antonio Ecarri, of the opposition Alianza Lápiz party. He described the session as historic, saying that “the just content of this law will change the next 50 years for better or for worse.”

The president of the National Assembly, Jorge Rodríguez, responded that a good transitional provision would be “that the Venezuelan opposition will never again call for or paralyze the oil industry, never again ask for blockades, sanctions, or thefts such as that of Citgo,” a statement that was met with applause from the members of the parliament. He added that “only one sector has turned off the lights on the oil industry,” referring to far-right opposition.

Some articles regulating oil operations
Article 1 of the law was approved by consensus as follows: “The purpose of this Law is to regulate all matters relating to the exploration, extraction, collection, transportation, storage, processing, upgrading, refining, industrialization, marketing, conservation, and comprehensive use of hydrocarbons, under the principles of energy sovereignty, public ownership of deposits, progressive maximization of profits, legal certainty, contractual transparency, accountability, environmental protection, and adaptation to the energy transition, in accordance with the provisions of Article 141 of the Constitution of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela.”

Article 8, which was also incorporated, establishes that: “In contracts for the execution of activities regulated by this law, the parties may agree that any doubts or disputes of any nature arising from the execution of such activities, which cannot be resolved amicably by the parties, may be decided by the competent courts of the Republic or through alternative dispute resolution mechanisms, including mediation and arbitration. The Ministry with Competence in Hydrocarbons, in consultation with the Attorney General’s Office of the Republic, shall establish the general guidelines for establishing the dispute resolution clauses referred to in this article. The clauses agreed upon in accordance with these guidelines shall not require the opinion or authorization provided for in the decree with the rank, value, and force of Organic Law of the Attorney General’s Office and the Commercial Arbitration Law.”

Article 25 reads as follows: “The Ministry with Competence in Hydrocarbons may grant operating companies, referred to in paragraphs one and two of Article 23, the right to carry out primary activities. It may also transfer to them ownership or other rights over movable or immovable property belonging to the private domain of the Republic, required for the efficient exercise of such activities. The Ministry with Competence in Hydrocarbons may revoke these rights when the operators fail to comply with their substantial obligations, thereby preventing the achievement of the purpose for which such rights were transferred. Operating companies wholly owned by the Republic or their subsidiaries may assign, in whole or in part, by contract to the companies referred to in paragraph three of Article 23 of this law, the rights that have been granted to them in accordance with the provisions of this article, with the prior authorization of the Ministry with Competence in Hydrocarbons.”

Article 34 states the following: “The establishment of joint ventures and the conditions governing the execution of primary activities shall be authorized by the President of the Republic and notified to the National Assembly for the purposes of exercising parliamentary control. The National Government, through the Ministry with Competence in Hydrocarbons, shall submit a report containing the relevant circumstances of said establishment and the agreed conditions, including the special advantages in favor of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela. Joint ventures shall be governed by this law and, in each particular case, by the decree authorizing their creation, their articles of incorporation, and, supplementarily, by the Commercial Code and other applicable laws. Joint ventures shall be excluded from the scope of application of the decree with the rank, value, and force of law on public procurement and its regulations, and shall implement transparent procurement mechanisms in accordance with the principles of honesty, efficiency, equality, planning, publicity, and simplification.”

Article 35 states that: “The establishment of joint ventures shall be subject to the following conditions:

  1. Maximum duration of 25 years, extendable for a period to be agreed upon by the parties, not exceeding 15 years. This extension must be requested by the operating company to the Ministry with Competence in Hydrocarbons after half of the period for which the right to carry out the activities was granted has elapsed and before 5 years of its expiration.
  2. Determination of the location, orientation, extent, and shape of the area where the activities are to be carried out and other specifications established by the regulations.
  3. Right of first refusal of the majority shareholder for the acquisition of shares in the event of assignment, disposal, or transfer by the private shareholder of the joint venture.
  4. The reversion or transfer to the Republic of the land and permanent works, including the facilities, accessories, and equipment that form an integral part thereof, as well as those acquired, generated, processed, and interpreted, and any other assets obtained for the purpose of carrying out such activities, regardless of their nature or title of acquisition. Upon the expiry of the rights granted for any reason, the operating companies undertake to maintain the assets mentioned in this section in good condition so that they may be transferred to the Republic, free of encumbrances and without compensation, in order to ensure the possibility of continuing the activities, if applicable, or their cessation with the least economic and environmental damage.”

Delcy Rodríguez Rejects US ‘Orders’ as Venezuela Advances Hydrocarbons Law Reform

“Only good things will come after the suffering”
After the Partial Reform of the Hydrocarbons Law was unanimously approved, the president of the National Assembly, Jorge Rodríguez, emphasized that this legal instrument has been enacted “for history, for the future, for our children” and stressed that “only good things will come after the suffering.”

Rodríguez explained that the reform was the result of “an arduous process of consultations throughout the country, with more than 120 proposals received from across the national territory, with an in-depth debate” that took place in the Standing Committee on Energy and Petroleum. He congratulated the committee “for the strength and tenacity, patience, and depth with which they handled such complex issues.”

He also congratulated “the Venezuelan patriotic bloc for the strength with which it is carrying out these transformations. I congratulate the opposition for the constructive nature of its proposals. I congratulate the oil sector workers who will carry out the most important elements of this reform of the law, and I congratulate the people of Venezuela. Only good things will come after the suffering. Only good things for everyone, which we must build together, irrespective of how we think, for the prosperity of our republic.”

He then invited PDVSA President Héctor Obregón and the board of directors of the company to come up to the podium to receive the approved bill.

Communication to Acting President Delcy Rodríguez
The president of the parliament also read out in the chamber the communication that would be sent to the acting president of Venezuela, Delcy Rodríguez: “Dear President, please accept my warmest regards. I am pleased to address you on the occasion of sending you the Partial Reform of the Organic Law on Hydrocarbons, approved in a plenary session on Thursday, January 29 of this year, in accordance with Article 213 of the Constitution of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela, reiterating my feelings of high esteem and consideration. Sincerely, Deputy Jorge Rodríguez Gómez, President of the National Assembly.”

(Últimas Noticias) by Aura Torrealba

Translation: Orinoco Tribune

OT/SC/SH


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This article by Jared Laureles and Jessica Xantomila originally appeared in the January 30, 2026 edition of La Jornada, Mexico’s premier left wing daily newspaper.

Faced with the crisis in 15 maquiladoras on Mexico’s northern border, following the bankruptcy of First Brands Group, the National Independent Union of Workers of Industries and Services Movement 20/32 seeks to influence the legal process taking place in the United States against the company for alleged financial irregularities that impact more than 5,000 workers.

Susana Prieto Terrazas, legal representative of this union holding the only active collective agreement in one of the nine subsidiaries of the US company, requested to appear at the next hearing before the Bankruptcy Court based in Houston, Texas, to explain the problems of the Mexican workers.

In yesterday’s session, First Brands argued that it needed access to a $144 million fund to ensure the continuity of its operations and the payment of salaries; otherwise, the corporation warned that it would close and 13,000 jobs would be lost in its subsidiaries, the labor lawyer indicated.

The judge postponed the decision on the loan application for two weeks to gather more information about the company’s financial situation, she added.

The U.S. Department of Justice reported yesterday that Patrick James, founder and former CEO of First Brands Group, and his brother were arrested in Ohio on charges of defrauding the company, which led to its bankruptcy in September 2025.

“At the time of its bankruptcy, First Brands – a company that reported approximately $5 billion in annual net sales worldwide – declared only $12 million in cash in its corporate bank accounts and more than $9 billion in liabilities.

As a result of the defendants’ fraudulent schemes, First Brands’ lenders and creditors now face losses in the millions,” the company stated on its official website.

Former employees of the Tridonex factory, some with up to 25 years of service, maintain a vigil outside the plant in Matamoros, Tamaulipas. Photo: Julia Le Duc

In an interview, Prieto Terrazas pointed out that at Tridonex-Cardone, in Matamoros, Tamaulipas, and at Subensambles Internacionales there are workers with 30 years of seniority, who were told by the legal advisors of the US company that “there was no money to pay salaries or continue operations.”

In response, he announced that a lawsuit would be filed to “seize assets as a precautionary measure” and guarantee workers’ compensation. He also asked them to maintain a presence at any First Brands-related plant.

Separately, Serafín Garza, leader of the Autonomous Federation of Independent Unions in Mexico, indicated that there are potential buyers for the Subensambles and JPP plants. He emphasized that a strike was called at these facilities as a precautionary measure to ensure workers receive their severance pay.

Meanwhile, he considered that in the four BPI Manufacturing plants in Ciudad Juárez, Chihuahua –where it has proof of representation– there is no interest in acquiring them, since “they are not profitable”.

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By Misión Verdad  –  Jan 28, 2026

Over the past few weeks, the Venezuelan exchange rate system, both official and unofficial, has been subject to significant volatility. The exchange rate between the bolívar and the US dollar (USD) has fluctuated considerably, distorting price systems and fueling inflation in Venezuela.

In summary, the official rate reported by the Central Bank of Venezuela (BCV), which represents the weighted average of bank exchange rates, showed a steady upward trend in an effort to narrow the gap with the parallel (black market) dollar.

On December 1, 2025, the exchange rate opened at 247.30 bolívars (Bs) per USD. By December 31, 2025, the rate broke the 300 barrier and then reached 301.37 Bs/USD on January 2, 2026.

During the first few weeks of the year, the pace of adjustment intensified. On January 13, it stood at 330.37 Bs/USD. As of January 27, the official exchange rate exceeded 358 bolívars, representing an increase of over 20% in just the first month of the year.

As for unofficial rates, the Binance P2P (peer-to-peer) market served as the primary gauge of foreign exchange in the unofficial sphere, exhibiting volatility and prices significantly higher than the official rate. By early December 2025, the average was already over 360 Bs/USD. By mid-December, the average on digital platforms was around 436.40 Bs/USD.

In January 2026, the gap peaked, reaching extreme distortion by mid-month. On January 13, while the BCV rate was 330, sale prices on Binance peaked at up to 608 Bs/USD. In some cases, prices reached 700, 800, and even 900 Bs/USD.

However, after reaching historic highs, the market experienced an adjustment towards the end of that period. By January 24, the Binance P2P marker was trading at approximately 470.52 Bs/USD. In mid-January, the highest exchange rate gaps between the BCV reference dollar and the P2P market were observed, fluctuating on an intraday basis between 80%, 110%, and even 200%. After the adjustment, the gap narrowed to 20%.

The component factors
While the BCV rate has maintained a steady upward trend, the P2P market referred to by Binance for the USD showed extreme volatility. It should be noted that the value of the latter affects the price of cash currencies in informal or “street” transactions.

The composition of prices on unofficial markers was clearly influenced by political variables. During the month of November, the Trump administration deployed direct coercive actions and physical blockades of Venezuela’s maritime oil activity, a situation that led to the theft of oil tankers, which in turn resulted in the interruption of currency sales mechanisms by the BCV through the exchange intervention mechanism.

Throughout December and until mid-January, BCV conducted no foreign exchange interventions, which increased the “currency drought,” uncertainty, and, consequently, speculation.

When the US invasion of Venezuela and the kidnapping of President Nicolás Maduro took place on January 3, the variables of uncertainty, exchange rate fluctuations, and the absence of foreign currency supply increased, creating the ideal environment for speculators. Traditional price setting in the P2P system favored disproportionate upward trends that were, in many cases, unmanageable.

This reflects the distortions emanating from the P2P ecosystem: a small conglomerate of suppliers and buyers, which does not represent the majority of daily currency transactions carried out in the country, where transaction amounts are not comparable to those of the regular currency supply in foreign exchange interventions.

The distortions fueled by speculation spread beyond that system and had collateral effects on the real economy. Many businesses adjusted their prices, which led to increased inflation.

However, Venezuelan politics has now been overshadowed by an “oil détente” between the governments of the US and Venezuela, suggesting a process of easing illegal coercive sanctions. In this regard, the Venezuelan government announced the release of foreign currency that came from the sale of Venezuelan oil to the United States, a mechanism executed via the BCV and then through national banks, which are the suppliers of foreign currency for the benefit of prioritized economic activities such as health, food, and production.

This element led to an adjustment in the unofficial exchange rate system, which had an impact on various markers and led to a downward differential of up to 20% between the BCV dollar and Binance’s P2P.

Once again, the persistence of significant structural vulnerability in the Venezuelan economy is evident. This vulnerability stems from the link between oil activity, which is susceptible to blockades and turbulence, and variable monetary conditions.

Reuters’ ‘Market Story’ and the American Pole: PetroChina, Venezuelan Oil, and the Siege That Calls Itself Trade

Short-term and medium-term questions
The stability of the exchange rate system depends on many factors, such as currency flows, the release of foreign currency by non-priority sectors, and price formation in the official and unofficial spheres that mitigates exchange rate gaps.

One of the major difficulties in setting prices in the unofficial sphere is the serious problem of persistent speculative practices involving the USD, both in its physical form and in digital versions. Agents on various unofficial platforms have turned foreign currency into a commodity in itself, benefiting from speculation and cartelizing prices, always on the rise, taking advantage of the limitations of the official exchange mechanism.

Another complex element is the psychosocial and economic pattern in the market and the informal retail sale of foreign currency. This is the tendency to seek the highest rate on any platform in order to transfer those reference values to the real market, either for the purchase and sale of banknotes or for referencing prices for certain goods and services in the economy.

Any scenario of stabilization and reduction of exchange rate gaps—and their psychosocial and economic consequences—will necessarily be possible within the framework of expanding the supply of foreign currency in the country.

However, the future is not necessarily uncertain. In fact, there is a strong possibility that the emergence of a general license issued by Washington for oil activities in Venezuela would allow for the regularization of energy flows, which will increase access to foreign currency.

Acting President Delcy Rodríguez proposed to the National Assembly a partial reform of the Organic Law of Hydrocarbons, which is shaping up to be an important mechanism for channeling new investments into Venezuela, which would be in foreign currency.

Rodríguez has also indicated that some $1.4 billion is expected to be invested in oil activities in the country this year, a figure that could vary considerably with the emergence of new oil exploration agreements, which may increase the flow of foreign currency into the exchange system at the expense of direct investment in capital goods and other goods and services.

There are other measures that are pending in terms of national monetary policy. One of them is the authorization of interbank transactions and payments between national entities in dollars, which could reduce the incidence of the use of stablecoin platforms such as Binance.

The operation of currency exchange offices remains another pending element, a postponement that is due to the physical availability of foreign currency in banknotes, which exist in the economy but are kept as savings or as means of payment, in amounts that are insufficient for a sustained process of currency buying and selling.

The exchange rate context in 2026 could resemble that of 2024, when the gap between the official and unofficial reference dollars reached minimum levels, of 5%-9% difference, a range that fostered a system of imports, supply of goods, prices of goods and services, and manageable containment of devaluation of the bolívar.

(Misión Verdad)

Translation: Orinoco Tribune

OT/SC/SH


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Oil workers in Venezuela, together with the people, have rallied in support of amendments to a law promoted by the government that will reform the country’s oil sector.


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This article by Alejandro Alegría originally appeared in the January 30, 2026 edition of La Jornada, Mexico’s premier left wing daily newspaper.

Neither the Ministry of Energy (Sener) nor Petróleos Mexicanos (Pemex) issued comments regarding the tariff measures that the United States will take against countries that sell oil to Cuba

After US President Donald Trump signed an executive order imposing tariffs on goods from nations that supply crude oil to the island, La Jornada requested a statement from both the company and the Ministry of Energy (Sener); however, the Ministry of Economy’s communications department indicated that there would be no comment, as the matter was not within its purview.

This comes just days after Bloomberg and Reuters reported that Mexico had suspended fuel shipments to Cuba, which are used for electricity generation. Granma reported energy shortages, despite the island having around 49 photovoltaic plants, which are insufficient to meet demand.

In recent days, President Claudia Sheinbaum Pardo stated that the shipments to the island are for humanitarian reasons, which is not a new claim. She added that on other occasions, shipments are also made under existing contracts.

According to reports submitted by Pemex to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), since July 2023, its subsidiary Gasolinas Bienestar has been purchasing energy products from the company for sale to Cuba. Between January and September 2025, Gasolinas Bienestar exported 17,200 barrels per day of crude oil and 2,000 barrels per day of petroleum products, for a total of 7.9 billion pesos, equivalent to 400 million dollars.

Information released by the company indicates that these sales represented 3.3 percent of total crude oil exports and 1.8 percent of total petroleum product exports, respectively.

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Caracas, January 30, 2026 (venezuelanalysis.com) – Venezuelan Acting President, Delcy Rodríguez, welcomed the “lifting of restrictions on the country’s commercial airspace”, which had been in place since last November, following talks with the US government.

Speaking at a rally on Thursday, Rodríguez said she received a phone call from US President Donald Trump and Secretary of State Marco Rubio to address the issue as part of a “working agenda” between the two countries that includes the resumption of diplomatic relations.

“Let all the airlines that need to come, come. Let all the investors that need to come, come”, Rodríguez said. She assumed office following the kidnapping of President Nicolás Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores, amid the January 3 US attacks.

Earlier in the day, Trump ordered the reopening of “all Venezuelan airspace” to commercial flights, stating that US citizens would be able to travel safely and that Venezuelans wishing to return—either permanently or temporarily—would also be able to do so.

Trump ordered Secretary of Transportation Sean Duffy and other officials, including military commanders, to ensure the reopening was “immediate.”

Trump went on to describe the exchange with his Venezuelan counterpart as “highly positive,” emphasizing that “relations have been very solid and very good.” He further sought to reassure international travelers by stressing that they would be safe while in Venezuelan territory.

Following the announcements, the US Federal Aviation Administration confirmed that it had removed four Notices to Airmen (NOTAM) in the Caribbean region, including one related to Venezuela. “They were issued as a precautionary measure and are no longer necessary”, the agency argued.

Likewise on Thursday, American Airlines announced its intention to resume daily direct flights between the United States and Venezuela, becoming the first US airline to take such a step.

The company, which began operations in Venezuela in 1987, stated that the resumption of the route would be subject to approval by both US and Venezuelan authorities, as well as the corresponding security assessments.

American Airlines Chief Commercial Officer Nat Pieper said the company was eager to offer its customers the opportunity to reunite with family members and to generate new business and trade opportunities with the United States.

Direct flights between the two countries were suspended in 2019, the same year diplomatic relations between Washington and Caracas were severed after the US recognized Juan Guaidó as Venezuela’s interim president.

Last November, Trump declared that Venezuela’s airspace should be considered “completely closed.” A flurry of NOTAM warnings led international airlines to suspend their connections to the Caribbean country. Caracas withdrew licenses from several companies, including TAP, Iberia and Turkish Airlines.

On January 13, Panama’s Copa Airlines announced the resumption of flights to and from Caracas.

Embassy reopening in the works

Secretary of State Marco Rubio said on Wednesday during a Senate hearing that he expects the United States to reestablish a diplomatic presence in Venezuela in the near future. “We have a team there evaluating it, and I think we’ll be able to open a diplomatic presence soon,” he said.

Rubio argued that such a presence would allow Washington to “have real-time information and interact not only with government officials but also with members of civil society and the opposition.”

Laura Dogu has so far been appointed to lead the diplomatic mission from the Venezuela Affairs Unit in Bogotá, Colombia. According to CNN, the CIA is looking to establish a “foothold” in the South American country that may preced the formal arrival of US diplomats.

For her part, Rodríguez has defended her administration’s diplomatic engagement with the United States, while also urging Venezuelan political sectors to resolve their differences and internal conflicts without “orders from Washington.”

Edited by Ricardo Vaz in Caracas.

The post Caracas and Washington Agree to ‘Reopen’ Venezuelan Airspace, American Airlines to Resume Flights appeared first on Venezuelanalysis.


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