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Since 2002, the date of the 47-hour coup against Hugo Chávez, Washington has unsuccessfully sponsored and supported regime change in Venezuela time and again. In the name of human rights, freedom, and democracy, economic sanctions, color revolutions, oil strikes, recognition of illegitimate leaders, theft of foreign currency and infrastructure, assassination attempts, media offensives, military uprisings, and threats of ground invasion have been instigated or combined without interruption.

Many of these attacks, aimed at seizing the largest oil reserves on the planet, are acts of international piracy. They have caused immense damage to the country and enormous suffering to its people. They have resulted in billions of dollars in lost oil revenue. Countless Venezuelans have been forced to migrate to other nations to survive. Meanwhile, a segment of the old, corrupt oligarchy lives the high life in their mansions in Miami and Madrid.

But despite the lethality of the punishments and the harshness of the siege, the Bolivarian Revolution continues. Certainly, some Chavista political leaders have betrayed the cause. A few military and intelligence officers have gone over to the enemy ranks. Intellectuals have succumbed to the siren song of metropolitan power. But, against all odds, the majority of the population draws a line in the sand against gunboat democracy; they remain loyal to a project that allowed them to recover their dignity and advance in popular power.

For 27 years, Bolivarianism has won almost every election. Desperate in the face of this setback, the empire has tried other formulas for regime change. In December 2007, Enrique Krauze laid his cards on the table. “If Hugo Chávez has thought of turning Venezuela into a Cuba with oil, the Venezuelans who oppose him have discovered the antidote. It is the student movement,” he wrote. So the far right latched onto this movement and tested an insurrectionary scheme. However, the reactionary forces clashed with a reality that wasn’t in their playbooks. So they left to make their fortunes abroad.

All imperial attempts at regime change have run up against what, until now, seems insurmountable: the unity of the Bolivarian National Armed Forces (FANB). There is not a single indicator showing any internal divisions. Part of the key to this unity is the development of a new military doctrine known as the Comprehensive Defense of the Nation. This doctrine seeks to confront the US military threat based on a set of actions designed to deter a technologically and numerically superior enemy.

This strategy has three central elements: strengthening military power, deepening the civil-military union (between the people and the soldiers), and bolstering popular participation in national defense tasks. Previously, the armed forces were fragmented into divisions and brigades. Commander Chávez organized the country into regions, and each region has a military structure with all its components: Army, Navy, Air Force, National Guard, militias, and the people.

If someone attacks a region, that region has the capacity to defend itself. It doesn’t need to move units from elsewhere. On February 23, 2019, under the pretext of bringing in humanitarian aid from Colombia, the Contras and Washington attempted to establish a beachhead in Táchira that would give the illegitimate Juan Guaidó control of a strip of Venezuelan territory to establish a “seat of government.” For 17 hours, fierce clashes erupted between Chavistas and Venezuelan paramilitaries and guarimberos, who operated mostly from the Colombian side. The skirmish ended with the opposition’s defeat.

There, amidst the events, at the military installation beside the Simón Bolívar Bridge, I spoke with Diosdado Cabello, then president of the National Constituent Assembly. Most of the FANB (National Bolivarian Armed Forces) chiefs were also present, whom he introduced to me as his friends and as longtime collaborators of Hugo Chávez. I asked him about the resolve of his troops. In good spirits, he explained:

“President Maduro has visited every barracks. He shows up in the early morning. He arrives, runs with them, shares, does military exercises with them. We have total contact with them. We are like brothers. Many of us have been in this movement since we were children. We support each other and follow each other. We are a family. They will not break us…”

Regarding the role of the militias, he told me: “For the friends of the State, they are a diamond. For the enemies of the State, they are the worst news.” A military intervention by a foreign country in Venezuela is very complicated, and not only because of the civil-military alliance.

Caracas has modernized its weaponry by acquiring it from Russia, China, and Iran, with whom it also maintains an alliance. Furthermore, it covers an area of ​​almost one million square kilometers. Its topography is highly diverse: the Andes mountain range, the Coastal Range, and the Guiana Shield, along with the extensive Orinoco River basin. It boasts 4,208 kilometers of coastline and dense rainforests. The poor neighborhoods of cities like Caracas are dangerous. It shares a 2,341-kilometer border with Colombia, a 2,199-kilometer border with Brazil, and a 789-kilometer border with Guyana.

No neighboring country desires armed conflict on its borders. Venezuela possesses the men, weapons, determination, and territory capable of sustaining a prolonged popular resistance, turning any attempt to occupy the country into a quagmire for whoever tries it. Regardless of what might happen on the day of the occupation, the true military challenge for an invading force lies in what to do in the days that follow. However, beyond what may happen in the future, in Venezuela, today is the time for peace.

The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect those of the Venezuelanalysis editorial staff.

Luis Hernández Navarro is the Opinion editor ofLa Jornada*, and the author of numerous books, includingChiapas: La nueva lucha indiaandSelf-Defense in Mexico: Indigenous Community Policing and the New Dirty Wars.*

Translated by Mexico Solidarity Media.

Source: La Jornada

The post Venezuela, The Day After appeared first on Venezuelanalysis.


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The Turkish Armed Forces have completed their preparations to join a peacekeeping mission in the Gaza Strip. The units designated for this task are ready and awaiting orders for deployment to the region, as part of an international effort led by Egypt at the United Nations (UN).

Egyptian Foreign Minister Badr Abdellaty confirmed that Cairo is working to secure an urgent resolution from the UN Security Council. The primary mission of this contingent would be to monitor the flow of humanitarian aid and ensure its proper distribution to the population in Gaza.

RELATED:

Israel Redefines its Military Position in Gaza as a New Internal Frontier

Turkey’s integration has the support of the United States, which welcomes its participation in the peace process. However, the proposal has met with opposition from Israel.

UN figures show 1,857 Palestinians have been killed while seeking food, most by Israel’s military.

Over a thousand of these killings occurred near Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) distribution points, which commentators argue are being used as a front for Israel to lure and… pic.twitter.com/uNKDU30S3S

— PalPulse (@PulseofPal) August 20, 2025

While the details are being finalized, Indonesia, Azerbaijan, and Pakistan are also in negotiations to contribute troops to the future stabilization force. A senior US official noted that these three countries are the leading candidates to contribute troops to a future stabilization force in the enclave.

Alongside peace diplomacy, Egypt has hardened its stance on actions in the enclave. Recently, Abdelatty denounced the “daily Israeli violations” in Gaza, despite the existing truce, warning that these actions threaten the ceasefire.

Assessing the cessation of hostilities, the Egyptian foreign minister described the situation as mixed, acknowledging the prisoner exchange but criticizing the continued incursions by the Israeli army.

The Egyptian foreign minister stated that any plan to displace Palestinians is a “red line” that will not be accepted by Egypt, a rejection shared by eight other Muslim countries. He also questioned Israel’s plans for the unilateral reopening of the Rafah border crossing and insisted on the Zionist entity’s legal obligation to open the five crossings that connect it to Gaza.

Along the same lines, Abdellaty assured that, on the Egyptian side, the Rafah crossing operates 24 hours a day to facilitate the entry of aid.


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During his address to the People’s Assembly for Sovereignty and Peace of Our America, the president of the National Assembly (AN) of Venezuela, Jorge Rodríguez, denounced that Washington is waging a war to “devastate” Venezuela, in collaboration with “subservient” internal actors, with the objective of seizing its resources. This was a reference to the imperial threat, present for the past four months, with US troops deployed in the Caribbean under the pretext of a supposed fight against drug trafficking.

“The brutal aggression” deployed by the United States involves the presence of “22 percent of the naval force of the most brutal empire that humanity has ever known in the Caribbean Sea,” Rodríguez stated.

RELATED:

The Peoples’ Assembly for Peace and Sovereignty Kicks Off in Venezuela

This action, Rodríguez declared, constitutes “Monroe Doctrine 2.0.” The president of the National Assembly also criticized the U.S. strategy, based on an “extravagant narrative” about drug trafficking, which, in his view, seeks to justify recent actions in the region. “They’re smarting from the fact they haven’t been able to isolate us,” he asserted, referring to the United States’ frustration with Venezuelan resistance.

Rodríguez recalled that the blockade imposed by Washington reduced the country’s income “to one percent,” affecting the supply of food, medicine, and other essential resources for the Venezuelan population.

Furthermore, he denounced the existence of 962 illegal, illegitimate, and unilateral U.S. sanctions, which have cost these lives and affected social programs, such as the one that used dividends from the CITGO company to pay for expensive treatments for children.

The head of the Venezuelan Parliament detailed the workings of the Simón Bolívar program, created by Commander Chávez and maintained by President Maduro, which used resources from a Venezuelan company located in the United States to finance complex surgeries for children. However, when the United States illegally appropriated these funds, instead of being used for children’s treatments, they were used by Juan Guaidó’s “Narnia government” to acquire mansions.

Rodríguez stated that, despite constant imperialist attacks and those from the internal far right, Venezuela has managed to move forward, although he acknowledged that “it sounds easy, but it hasn’t been easy at all.”

Faced with these aggressions, Rodríguez issued a clear warning: “Should any aggression dare to enter the sacred territory of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela, rest assured that we must defend it with our lives; we will give our lives.” He also emphasized the national unity surrounding President Maduro, including those who do not subscribe to the Revolution, in a unified rejection of imperialist interference and in defense of peace.

Finally, the Speaker of the Venezuelan Parliament reaffirmed that Venezuela is a nation of peace, promoting a National Council for Peace at the initiative of President Nicolás Maduro. However, he clarified that this is not the peace of the subservient, the submissive, or the enslaved, but the peace of free men and women and sovereign peoples.

The People’s Assembly for Peace and Sovereignty of Our America inaugurated its session in Caracas, Venezuela, this Tuesday, December 9. The international meeting, which will continue until Thursday, December 11, is taking place in the Venezuela Hall of the Military Circle and brings together national and international guests from all continents, fostering dialogue and unity in the Global South.


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The President of Honduras, Xiomara Castro, announced on Tuesday a diplomatic offensive before international organizations to denounce the interference of the United States in the Honduran elections.

In this regard, the president stated from the town of Catacamas: “We are going to denounce the electoral coup at the United Nations, the European Union, the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States (CELAC), and the Organization of American States (OAS).”

RELATED:

Electoral Coup in Honduras: “The Most Manipulated Election in Our History,” Denounces Ochoa

While emphasizing that sovereignty is not negotiable and democracy is not surrendered, the Honduran politician added that the people “must never accept elections with interference and blackmail.”

“We are living through a process marked by threats; these actions constitute an ongoing electoral coup. My duty as president is to defend democracy, national dignity, and the sovereign will of the people. That is an unbreakable mandate of our Constitution,” she declared.

Stating that “democracy does not exist without justice,” Castro expressed her conviction that “the refounding of Honduras does not accept submission.”

She also accused President Trump of interference for releasing former drug kingpin Juan Orlando Hernández and pressuring Hondurans to vote for Nasry Asfura.

#ENVIDEO📹 | La presidenta de #Honduras 🇭🇳, Xiomara Castro, denuncia un golpe electoral en curso en el país y anunció que realizará una ofensiva diplomática ante los organismos internacionales pic.twitter.com/zR45spjLXj

— teleSUR TV (@teleSURtv) December 9, 2025

Given this situation, the Honduran president denounced the “irregularities that led to a colossal fraud.”

“The people went to the polls and participated bravely and decisively, but we experienced a process marked by threats, coercion, manipulation of the TREP (preliminary results system), and the adulteration of the popular will,” she added.

On Sunday, November 30, Honduras held elections to choose its president. In this context, Rixi Moncada, the Libre Party candidate, denounced the electoral fraud being orchestrated by the Honduran right wing, with the support of President Donald Trump.

The US president had disparagingly labeled the presidential candidate a communist for defending the interests of the Honduran people. He had also promised the release of former president Juan Orlando Hernández, sentenced by the US justice system to 45 years in prison for his ties to drug trafficking.

#Honduras | Rixi Moncada, the candidate of the Libre Party and a member of the progressive project led by President Xiomara Castro, described the technical irregularities, media manipulation, and external interference in the presidential elections.https://t.co/GLmRcG02GO

— teleSUR English (@telesurenglish) December 4, 2025

Meanwhile, numerous irregularities in the rapid vote-counting system have been reported from various quarters, leading the ruling party to reject the recent elections.


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By Misión Verdad – Dec 9, 2025

The United Stats’ 2025 National Security Strategy (NSS), published on December 4, 2025, outlines a US foreign policy centered on the reaffirmation of US sovereignty and on restructuring the Western Hemisphere as a space of exclusive influence for US national interests. The document thus prioritizes concrete goals: border control, reindustrialization, economic security, and selective regional stability.

Its approach is realist—in terms of international relations—functional, and markedly unilateral: the US will act wherever its interests are at stake, including through interventions, when it deems that a concrete threat warrants them.

Key elements of the new strategy:

‘National interest’ as the sole compassThe NSS states clearly that “the affairs of other countries concern us only if their activities directly threaten our interests.” (p. 2)

This premise eliminates generic moral justifications and reorients foreign policy toward measurable and defensible objectives.

Border security as the foundational pillarControl of migratory flows rises to the level of a strategic priority: “Border security is the primary element of national security.” (p. 11)

The stability of the Western Hemisphere is measured, in large part, by its capacity to contain migration toward the United States.

Reindustrialization as an imperative of powerThe document links national production with sovereignty: “Cultivating American industrial strength must become the highest priority of national economic policy” (p. 4), consolidating the end of decades favouring so-called “free” trade.

It promotes reshoring supply chains, investment in critical minerals, and revitalizing the defense industrial base.

Burden-sharing alliances: the Hague commitmentUS partners must assume their share of responsibility for protecting US interests: “NATO countries committed to allocating 5% of GDP to defense.” (p. 12)

The US shifts from absolute guarantor to organizer of a shared security and defense network, with commercial and technological incentives for those who comply.

‘Peace’ as a tool of influenceThe document highlights peace agreements achieved in eight conflicts in eight months as proof of diplomatic effectiveness. Peace is now a means to stabilize regions, open markets, and reorient alliances.

Economic security equals national securityThe document binds the strategic and the productive strata: “Economic security is fundamental to national security.” (p. 13)

Balanced trade, protection of intellectual property, energy dominance, and financial leadership form an indivisible bloc—one clearly weakened by decades of economic policies geared toward the accumulation of fictitious capital rather than value creation.

The hemispheric turn: the Trump corollary
The section on the Western Hemisphere marks a turning point. There, the “Trump Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine” is formally introduced:

• “We will deny non-hemispheric competitors the ability to position forces or other threatening capabilities, or to own or control strategically vital assets, in our hemisphere” (p. 15).

This formulation establishes a functional exclusion: no country in the hemisphere may align with extra-hemispheric actors without facing consequences. But the document goes further regarding contracting and development:

• “The terms of our agreements—especially with those countries that depend on us the most, and over which we therefore have the greatest influence—must be single-source contracts for our companies.”

• “At the same time, we must do everything possible to expel foreign companies that build infrastructure in the region.” (p. 19)

These directives define a new form of functional sovereignty measured by a country’s capacity to align with US value chains.

Legitimacy, in turn, is built through US offerings in superior technology, open standards, and the absence of “debt traps,” whereas foreign assistance—though seemingly low-cost—comes with “hidden costs.” (p. 18)

All of this refers, obviously, to the principal international actor that rivals the US in economic strength and dynamism.

The expulsion of China
According to the NSS, the US vision of hemispheric competition with China is articulated with strategic clarity, functional realism, and a strong normative charge. It is not an abstract rejection of Chinese influence but a structural response to a concrete fact: China has managed to deeply penetrate the region through investments in infrastructure, energy, mining, and telecommunications, especially in countries where the US had reduced its economic presence or imposed coercive measures.

The document describes this dynamic without euphemisms: “Non-hemispheric competitors have made significant inroads in our hemisphere, both to harm us economically in the present and in ways that may harm us strategically in the future.” (p. 17)

This explicitly recognizes that China is not acting as a “hostile foreign power” in the traditional militarized sense but as a functional competitor: China offers rapid financing, low-apparent-cost infrastructure, and agreements without explicit political conditionality—a decisive advantage over the slow procedures, strict regulations, and demands for structural reform that are presented by Western institutions.

In response, the US proposes a hybrid strategy of selective regional expulsion and active economic substitution:

• The US promotes a campaign to discredit China’s offerings, reframing economic projects as strategic threats: a mine, a port, or a 5G network are not merely commercial ventures but risk nodes if under ‘non-hemispheric’—i.e., non-US—control, with “hidden costs in espionage, cybersecurity, debt traps, and other ways.” (p. 18)

• The NSS orders the acceleration of approval processes in US financing mechanisms to offer competitive timelines: “We will reform our own system to streamline authorizations and licenses, again to become the partner of choice.” (p. 18)

• The NSS breaks with the rhetoric of “free markets”: the US is no longer competing in the market; it is redefining the rules of the market itself to exclude China.

• The NSS reinforces the narrative that the US offers transparency, superior technology, and protection against “subordination,” whereas China offers not cooperation but hidden dependence. The US, by contrast, offers authentic sovereignty—defined as sovereignty aligned with its value chain.

Thus, the NSS shows that the US does not underestimate China’s advance in Latin America. On the contrary: it interprets Chinese engagement in the region as evidence of a historic error—hemispheric neglect—and turns it into the foundation of an active reversal policy.

What is now at stake is control of the means of producing sovereignty: infrastructure, energy, logistics, data, technical standards.

Venezuela, because of its explicit alliance with China in oil, gold, coltan, satellites, and ports, emerges as the critical case—not because it is the largest recipient of Chinese investment (it is not) but because its persistence as a multipolar node legitimizes the viability of that alternative.

For this reason, the US strategy wagers that by expelling China from the region, it not only recovers influence but restores the very conditions that make US hegemony possible: a world where others’ sovereignty is measured by their capacity not to interfere with US interests.

Venezuela as the practical limit of the corollary
Venezuela embodies the maximum challenge to this doctrine:

• It maintains strategic alliances with China, Russia, and Iran.

• Venezuela controls critical resources without ceding their management to foreign or aligned capital.

• It has developed currency exchange mechanisms that bypass the US dollar and hegemonic value chains.

The NSS acknowledges as much: “Some influences will be difficult to reverse given the political alignment between certain Latin American governments and certain foreign actors.” (p. 17)

From the document’s perspective, Venezuela is a functional precedent: it demonstrates that it is possible to sustain an autonomous foreign policy, even under prolonged coercive pressure.

The encirclement seeks regime change but it also seeks to invalidate the model itself: to prove that no country can survive outside the order of selective sovereignty.

As long as Venezuela remains a non-functional—yet persistent—actor, the Trump corollary will retain a blind spot, and as long as that blind spot exists, the hemisphere will not be fully “stable” in the terms defined by the NSS.

The US strategy wagers that the future is built with the United States—or that there is simply no future. Venezuela, conversely, counts ont he future being built with full sovereignty. In this sense, the new NSS formalizes the measures that the US has already been taking in recent months through the militarization of the Caribbean.

First International Day Against Unilateral Coercive Measures

Featured image: US President Donald Trump. Photo: Julia Demaree Nikhinson/AP Photo

(Misión Verdad)

Translation: Orinoco Tribune

OT/CB/SL


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Speaking at the opening of the People’s Assembly for Peace and Sovereignty of Our America, the Cuban intellectual expressed his pride in the presence of a large delegation from the island at this meeting.

He stated that the Cuban delegation includes representatives from all sectors of revolutionary civil society, including the Network of Intellectuals and Artists in Defense of Humanity, women, farmers, workers, and the National Assembly (parliament).

Prieto declared that the Cuban people have followed this entire criminal escalation in detail, the lies upon lies, which are used as a permanent weapon of war to confuse and try to divide the people of Cuba and Venezuela.

The writer highlighted as admirable the fact that millions of Venezuelans responded to President Nicolas Maduro’s call to enlist in the Bolivarian People’s Militias, which reminded him of Fidel and Raul Castro’s military doctrine of the War of the Entire People, adopted by President Miguel Duaz-Canel.

“In the Bolivarian Republic, I have not seen anyone afraid or insecure, and the people have responded with great bravery, firmness, courage, and dignity to the call to battle issued by the Head of State and the leadership of the United Socialist Party of Venezuela,” he emphasized.

The Cuban researcher commented that what is at stake here is not only the Caribbean, Venezuela, and Cuba, but also the balance of the world, and called for a halt to this “monstrous and grotesque offensive that violates all norms of civilized coexistence and international law, which is being pulverized.”

jdt/jha/jcd

The post Cuba considers Venezuela’s response to imperial infamy admirable first appeared on Prensa Latina.


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Her nomination reflects the political use of an anti-war symbol.

The 2025 Nobel Peace Prize was awarded to Venezuelan opposition leader María Corina Machado. Rather than honoring peacebuilding, this choice appears to serve as a geopolitical instrument that legitimizes a maximalist regime-change strategy in Venezuela.

RELATED:
Intellectuals and Artists Urge Nobel Committee to Revoke Prize for Machado

Instead of supporting dialogue or de-escalation, the prize reinforces a hardline approach. It reframes the Venezuelan crisis as a global security issue, aligns the opposition more closely with U.S. interventionist interests, and raises the likelihood of militarization in Latin America.

This article examines how the award normalizes a strategy of maximum pressure, traces Machado’s political profile and regional ambitions, analyzes her narrative of criminalization of the Venezuelan state, unpacks her “all-or-nothing” roadmap for transition, and reflects on the broader implications for regional sovereignty and peace.​

A peace prize turned geopolitical weapon

The Nobel Committee justified its decision by presenting Machado as a non-violent defender of democracy and as a symbol of resistance against an authoritarian regime that has driven millions of people into exile.

Yet, in political practice, the award amplifies a leader whose strategy rejects negotiated power‑sharing and insists on the total displacement of Chavismo from Venezuelan institutions, validating a confrontational, zero-sum approach.​

Supporters within the Venezuelan opposition and among allied governments have celebrated the prize as a diplomatic “lethal blow” to the administration of President Maduro and as confirmation that the “international community” backs their call to recognize Edmundo González as president-elect.

At the same time, critical voices from Latin America and beyond argue that the decision “goes in the opposite direction to peace” because it rewards a figure aligned with some of the most militaristic sectors of the U.S. establishment, thereby reinforcing the government’s narrative that the opposition answers to Washington rather than to Venezuelan popular sovereignty.​

The controversy around the prize is also fed by Machado’s own gestures. She has framed the Nobel as proof that the world has finally heard Venezuela’s “cry for freedom,” while dedicating the award not only to the Venezuelan people but also to the U.S. president Donald Trump for his “decisive support of our cause.”

This dedication openly inserts the prize into the architecture of U.S. “law‑enforcement” strategies against the President Maduro government, fusing humanitarian rhetoric with the language of sanctions, extraterritorial prosecutions, and possible military moves in the Caribbean.​

#NOBELDESANGRE

🇳🇴| El rechazo por María Corina Machado sigue creciendo. Miles de personas protestan en las calles de Oslo.

Ni el frío los detiene 👇🏻👇🏻 pic.twitter.com/aFQIVtnH2n

— Indira Urbaneja (@INDIURBANEJA) December 9, 2025

The text reads, “The backlash against María Corina Machado continues to grow. Thousands of people are protesting in the streets of Oslo. Not even the cold can stop them.”

Political profile: liberal elitism and a history of confrontation

María Corina Machado is the paramount leader of Venezuela’s radical right, combining an elite social origin with a hardline ideological project that positions her as the spearhead of an explicitly anti‑left, pro‑market restoration.

Trained as an industrial engineer and coming from an affluent business family, she has long advocated sweeping privatizations, deep deregulation, and the dismantling of the redistributive architecture built under Hugo Chávez, denouncing socialism as the source of Venezuela’s collapse.​

Her history in national politics is inseparable from high-intensity confrontation with Chavismo. Machado was with sectors that supported the 2002 coup attempt against Chávez, and with violent demonstrations against the government of President Maduro. A past that calls into question her democratic credentials and portrays her as the civilian face of destabilization.

Even as she speaks of a “peaceful and orderly transition,” critics inside and outside Venezuela argue that her record and discourse are compatible with a strategy that keeps the threat of extra-institutional outcomes on the table to force administration change.​

In recent years, Machado has succeeded where other opposition leaders failed: she unified a fragmented anti-Chavista field around a single, non-negotiable objective, the exit of the current government.

After the banned from running in the 2024 presidential election, she transferred her political capital to Edmundo González while insisting that the July vote produced a clear opposition victory and that this result is “not negotiable,” a line that leaves no room for transitional arrangements that include Chavista participation in power.​

For Machado, the Venezuelan struggle is the first domino in a regional counter‑offensive: she has declared that the fall of the President Maduro government will bring “the fall of the Cuban regime, the fall of the tyranny in Nicaragua,” projecting the conflict as a crusade to eradicate what she calls “communist dictatorships” from the continent.

This continental ambition links with the agenda of allied right‑wing governments in the region, such as those of Argentina, Ecuador, Paraguay, and Panama, whose presidents have publicly embraced her in Oslo, and situates the Nobel Prize within a broader operation to reconfigure the political balance of Latin America.​

🇳🇴 Desde Noruega, manifestantes salen a las calles en rechazo a la entrega del Premio Nobel de la Paz a Maria Corina Machado por promover en reiteradas veces invasiones militares contra su país. pic.twitter.com/MHjr5lcYyB

— Agencia Venezuela News (@AgenciaVNews) December 9, 2025

The text reads, “From Norway, protesters take to the streets to reject the awarding of the Nobel Peace Prize to Maria Corina Machado for repeatedly promoting military invasions against her country.”

Criminalization narrative: from political conflict to “narco‑terrorist” threat

The Nobel Prize also magnifies Machado’s most controversial narrative move: the systematic criminalization of the Venezuelan state as a way to justify escalating external pressure.

In her post‑Nobel interviews, she insists that Venezuela is not facing “just another dictatorship” but a “criminal tyranny” and a “narco‑terrorist” cartel that has penetrated all branches of public power.

She has gone as far as asserting that the President “Nicolás Maduro is the head of the Cartel of the Suns,” turning the government into the command center of a transnational criminal structure.​

By framing the conflict in these terms, Machado shifts the terrain from political dispute to security enforcement.

Sanctions, criminal indictments, financial blockades, and even military maneuvers are no longer framed as acts of foreign intervention but as legitimate “law‑enforcement” operations to dismantle a mafia‑state.

She justifies this framing by pointing to links between the Venezuelan state and non‑state armed and criminal actors, from Colombian guerrillas and ELN units to organizations such as Hezbollah, and by highlighting the transnational reach of gangs like the Tren de Aragua.​

This narrative culminates in a striking inversion: when asked about the risk of a U.S. invasion, Machado has replied that the “real invasion” already exists, executed by Cuban, Russian, and Iranian actors as well as criminal organizations operating inside Venezuelan territory.

In this logic, any U.S.-led action in or around Venezuela is recast as a defensive response to an ongoing aggression, rather than as an imperial intervention, an argument that finds a powerful amplifier in the visibility of the Nobel Peace Prize.

#Venezuela’s traitor, María Corina Machado, has been groomed by the US empire for decades.

She probably has a mansion in Miami and $10 million in a savings account with Bank of America. pic.twitter.com/LVjQGo9uZI

— S.L. Kanthan (@Kanthan2030) July 30, 2024

The maximalist roadmap: no negotiation

The post-Nobel moment has strengthened Machado’s maximalist line: President Maduro departure is non-negotiable, and the only acceptable outcome is recognition of the opposition’s claim that Edmundo González is “president‑elect.”

Her message, “he leaves with negotiation, or he leaves without negotiation, but he leaves,” closes the space for transitional formulas that include Chavista sectors or power‑sharing arrangements.​

Machado dismisses international mediation and “soft diplomacy” as complicity with tyranny, rejecting figures like former Spanish prime minister José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero and pushing to replace dialogue frameworks with coordinated external pressure. Even the Nobel itself is turned into leverage: she has conditioned her attendance in Oslo on “Venezuela being free”.

Diaspora, regional domino, and militarization risk

The Nobel Peace Prize for María Corina Machado crystallizes a dangerous paradox: a prize nominally dedicated to peace now reinforces a maximalist, regime‑change agenda that rejects negotiation and legitimizes external pressure against Venezuela.

The award amplifies a leader whose discourse criminalizes the Venezuelan state as a “narco‑terrorist” cartel, recasts U.S. sanctions and potential military moves as “law enforcement,” and connects the fall of President Maduro to a broader right‑wing crusade against progressive governments in Cuba and Nicaragua.

At the same time, the prize has energized a transnational movement: it has boosted the morale of Venezuelan opposition sectors, activated the diaspora as a global pressure force, and put Venezuela at the center of international debate about democracy, sovereignty, and intervention.

By dedicating the award to both the Venezuelan people and Donald Trump, Machado turns the Nobel into a lever for harder confrontation and a symbol of a continental reordering project whose outcome remains uncertain.

Sources: teleSUR – Democracy Now – ABC Diary – Nobel Prize – El Mundo


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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.

President’s approval rating above 70%, underpinned by government consistency

President Claudia Sheinbaum said that, despite what some commentators claim, polls show her approval rating is above 70%. She attributed that support to not betraying the Transformation project, to consistency, and to daily work. The morning presidential press conference, she said, serves to inform the population and give context to political debate, but people’s trust comes from actions.

Homicides down: 37% fewer in 14 months

Between September 2024 and November 2025, intentional homicides dropped 37%, from 86.9 to 54.7 daily cases, the lowest level for the month of November since 2015. This translates into 32 fewer homicides per day and 14 consecutive months of declines.

The sharpest reductions were in Zacatecas (–70%), Chiapas (–58%), and Quintana Roo (–56.7%), along with significant decreases in Guanajuato, Baja California, the State of Mexico, Tabasco, and Sinaloa.

Operational results: strong blows against organized crime

Between October 2024 and November 2025, authorities made 38,700 arrests, seized 311 tons of drugs and more than 4 million fentanyl pills, and confiscated 20,169 weapons.

Addressing root causes: over 3 million people reached

The territorial strategy continues to advance: in 15 states, millions of services, fairs, and peace events have been held, and community committees have been installed. The Well-Being Open Air Market benefited 61,000 families, and the turn-in-your-weapons program enabled the exchange of 8,700 firearms.

1944 Water Treaty: Mexico is complying, but drought sets limits

The President responded that although Donald Trump threatens tariffs, Mexico is complying with the Water Treaty, but deliveries depend on drought conditions, and the country will not jeopardize the water needed by peasant farmers and communities.

The Treaty requires delivering 2,158 million m³ per cycle, and Article 4 allows for postponing deliveries during extreme drought, as in 2022–2023. Sheinbaum reiterated that Mexico can comply and that negotiations must acknowledge these constraints.

Explosion in Michoacán: not a car bomb or a terrorist act

It was clarified that the explosion in Michoacán did not involve a car bomb but a vehicle occupied by members of a criminal group who entered the area.

The case is now in the hands of the Federal Attorney General’s Office (FGR) and is linked to the dispute between the New Generation Jalisco Cartel (CJNG) and United Cartels. It was not an attack on self-defense groups nor a terrorist act, but organized crime activity related to arms trafficking and weapons’ stockpiling.

Duarte’s illegal dam and review of water concessions

In Chihuahua, unauthorized water-retention activity was detected, as well as officials who granted close to 150 concessions, hoarding around 47 million m³ of the vital liquid. These cases—including those from the Fox and Peña Nieto administrations—are being subject to detailed review under the new law.

The legal proceedings also continue regarding the illegal dam built by former Chihuahua governor César Duarte, which stored 700,000 m³ of water and affected communities; a judge ordered its demolition and the case remains open.

Follow-up meeting on the U.S.–Mexico Security Understanding

On Thursday, December 11, security teams from both countries will meet in Mexico, These include the U.S. Departments of State, Homeland Security and National Security, Justice, the Treasury, and the Pentagon, together with their Mexican counterparts, as part of the Security Implementation Group.


  • People’s Mañanera December 9

    Mañanera

    People’s Mañanera December 9

    December 9, 2025

    President Sheinbaum’s daily press conference, with comments on approval ratings, homicide reduction, crime strategy, 1944 water treaty, Michoacán explosion, and former Chihuahua governor César Duarte.

  • Bean Imports from US Worsen Mexico’s Farm Crisis

    News Briefs

    Bean Imports from US Worsen Mexico’s Farm Crisis

    December 9, 2025December 9, 2025

    Subsidized US beans are flooding Mexico, above the amount required to meet national demand, while the government fails to meet commitments it made to producers only a month ago.

  • Mexico’s PT: 35 Years of Struggle

    Historical | News Briefs

    Mexico’s PT: 35 Years of Struggle

    December 9, 2025December 9, 2025

    The Workers Party, originating in Mexico’s Maoist movement and a long-time ally of AMLO since his 2006 Presidential campaign, was founded on December 8, 1990.

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959
 
 

Demonstrations after the elections caused more than 700 deaths.

On Tuesday, Dar es Salaam and other cities in Tanzania remained deserted after the deployment of police and military forces to prevent protests against the crackdown that followed the October 29 presidential and legislative elections.

RELATED:

Tanzania: Demand Investigation into Post-Election

President Samia Suluhu Hassan maintains checkpoints and identity checks on main avenues and has banned all demonstrations. Official celebrations for the 64th anniversary of independence from the United Kingdom were canceled, with funds allocated to repairing infrastructure damaged during the election unrest.

International human rights organizations denounced the arbitrary arrests of at least ten opposition figures, including members of the Democracy and Progress Party (Chadema). They demanded respect for the right to peaceful assembly and freedom of expression.

The U.S. Embassy in Tanzania maintained a security alert for its citizens, warning of possible curfews, internet outages, road blockades, and movement restrictions. The Tanzanian government urged the population to remain in their homes, except for essential workers.

Neo-colonial powers are propping up governments that brutalize their own people, from Tanzania to Rwanda to the DRC, while Washington looks the other way. Neo-colonialism is alive in Africa, in Latin America, everywhere. We’re here because every struggle against imperialism is… pic.twitter.com/novykQpdmR

— Medea Benjamin (@medeabenjamin) December 8, 2025

As is customary on Independence Day, President Hassan granted pardons to 1,036 prisoners and reduced the sentences of 1,014 immates. On social media, she called for the preservation of national values ​​of “peace, unity, and solidarity.”

The protests in Tanzania began on October 29 and continued until the 31st, fueled by allegations of fraud and repression in the elections. Hassan was declared the winner on November 1 with 97.66% of the vote, after her main rivals were excluded from the electoral process.

Police forces used tear gas and ammunition against protesters, while the government imposed curfews and internet outages. United Nations (UN) experts estimated 700 deaths, although Chadema raised the figure to 1,000.

#FromTheSouth News Bits | Venezuela: The National Bolivarian Armed Forces (FANB) detected and intercepted an aircraft without an identification code heading. pic.twitter.com/icqcNNsLHq

— teleSUR English (@telesurenglish) December 9, 2025

teleSUR: JP

Source: EFE


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960
 
 

Union sources report more than 30 road blockades as part of the mobilizations called by the Association of State Workers (ATE), which were joined by social organizations.

The unions are marching in cities of Buenos Aires Metropolitan Area, which includes the capital and some twenty municipalities in the province of Buenos Aires, as well as in Cordoba, Rosario, La Plata, and other cities throughout the country. At this moment, lines of workers are heading towards the National Congress, where the executive branch has sent several bills it intends to impose starting in January, including the controversial amendment to the Labor Law, which the executive branch wants Congress to approve before the 30th.

The unions oppose this proposal because, they warn, it will lead to layoffs, reductions in already diminished wages, longer workdays, and obstacles to union activity.

Social organizations have joined the protests with their demands against hunger, given the extremely serious social situation affecting millions of low-income families.

In addition to rejecting the labor reform, the strike called by ATE (Association of State Workers) is for the reopening of negotiations for a new collective bargaining agreement that includes an emergency wage increase and in rejection of the attempted 10 percent cut for state workers.

jdt/jha/mh.

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961
 
 

Presidents Maduro and Pezeshkian reaffirmed their nations’ mutual and unconditional support.

On Tuesday, Venezuela’s Foreign Affairs Ministry confirmed that President Nicolas Maduro and Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian held a phone conversation to reaffirm their strategic cooperation in the face of what they described as growing U.S. military threats in Latin America and the Caribbean.

RELATED:

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Pezeshkian first reiterated the support of the Iranian government and people for the Bolivarian nation at a time when threats to peace are looming in Latin America and the Caribbean.

He pointed out that all these provocations violate international law principles and constitute a dangerous precedent for the world. For that reason, Pezeshkian reaffirmed Iran’s willingness to stand by Venezuela and expressed his full solidarity and unconditional support.

The Iranian leader also conveyed to the Venezuelan government and people his best wishes for the new year, emphasizing his belief that 2026 will be a favorable year to continue working on the successful development of cooperation and the strategic alliance between both countries, always with the goal of advancing development and peace for the two nations.

During the phone call, Pezeshkian expressed his admiration for the coherence, strength and determination with which Venezuela is currently developing, and said he is fully confident that the Bolivarian nation will prevail over any foreign challenge.

For his part, President Maduro thanked him for the call, conveyed a message of solidarity and affection to the Iranian people, and reaffirmed that cooperation between the two nations is currently at its best level.

The Bolivarian leader reiterated his commitment to continue working in all areas previously agreed upon in various bilateral settings. He specifically highlighted the validity of the 20-year strategic cooperation agreement signed with Iran as a central pillar of their joint efforts.

#FromTheSouth News Bits | The Belgian network of intellectuals and artists in defense of humanity rejected the military threats carried out by the United States government against the Caribbean region, especially Venezuela. pic.twitter.com/gd8Vq2GEbD

— teleSUR English (@telesurenglish) December 9, 2025

teleSUR/ JF

Source: FAM


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962
 
 

In a telephone interview with Venezolana de Television, the head of state said that they received the best unthinkable news, which he described as “a true award and worldwide recognition of our identity, our people, and Venezuelan spirit.”

The president hailed this designation of the Venezuelan joropo as a great triumph for Venezuela, calling it “an energetic and beautiful dance” that is now an Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity, officially and unanimously declared today by UNESCO in India, he affirmed.

“I want to express my deep joy at this great achievement of spirituality, of national identity; it is truly impressive,” he declared, visibly moved.

He commented that they had been expecting it, “but it’s another thing entirely to confirm and see it,” and congratulated the entire Culture team, Minister Ernesto Villegas, researcher Benito Irady, and the entire Venezuelan diplomatic team at UNESCO.

The dignitary noted that this is great Christmas news amidst the brutal psychological warfare waged by the United States government over these past months.

He emphasized that the joropo emerged from the humility and depth of the Venezuelan plains and that “this tremendous achievement is impressive,” attained at a bright dawn for a nation advancing in a comprehensive offensive with Culture, its identity, and the pride of being Venezuelan always at the forefront.

jdt/jha/jcd

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963
 
 

This international gathering promotes Global South unity against imperialism and neofascism.

From Tuesday to Thursday, Caracas will host the “Assembly of the Peoples for Peace and the Sovereignty of Our America,” an event organized by the Simon Bolivar Institute for Peace and Solidarity Among Peoples and the United Socialist Party of Venezuela (PSUV).

RELATED:

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The opening day includes the screening of a short documentary on the creation of the “National Council for Sovereignty and Peace,” the reading of the Assembly’s foundational political document, and keynote addresses by international experts.

Venezuelan Foreign Minister Yvan Gil thanked the more than 500 participants from around the world for gathering in his country despite the threats emanating from Washington.

“The Empire has unleashed its full media power on Venezuela to generate an unprecedented psychological war. However, we never doubted it: the peoples of the world have reacted decisively to support the path toward consolidating peace in Venezuela,” he said.

Over the three days, participants will set up discussion panels to analyze topics such as: Bolivarianism vs. Monroeism; peace in the face of the militarization of Latin America and the Caribbean; economic war and political extortion through unilateral coercive sanctions; voices opposing cognitive warfare and defending truth as a contested global arena.

Other panels will focus on human dignity, ecological sovereignty, migration, environmental justice, resistance to global supremacism, and unity among the Global South peoples. During the event, participants seek to promote the idea of the “Brilliant Generation,” presented as an alternative to the so-called “Generation Z.”

En Caracas arrancó la Asamblea de los Pueblos! epicentro de la dignidad mundial. Alzamos la voz contra el imperialismo yanqui que amenaza la paz en nuestra región. ¡Venezuela se respeta! #PueblosPorlaPaz#CHCh @NicolasMaduro@dcabellor pic.twitter.com/LXaFHhdm9U

— ❤️Karola Moreno❤️ (@Anneryta) December 9, 2025

The text reads, “The People’s Assembly has begun in Caracas! The epicenter of global dignity. We raise our voices against Yankee imperialism, which threatens peace in our region. Venezuela must be respected!

On Wednesday, the Assembly will hold a closing plenary session to present the agreements and resolutions reached by the participants. It will also culminate with the proclamation of the “Caracas Manifesto for the Peace, Sovereignty and Truth of the Peoples.”

On Thursday, a large “Concert for Peace and the Sovereignty of Our America” will take place in La Guaira state, featuring invited musical groups from across the Caribbean.

This international gathering was convened by Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro on Oct. 31 during the closing of the Greater Caribbean Parliamentary Meeting, held in Caracas with representatives from 14 countries and delegates from five continents.

Currently, the Assembly of the Peoples is consolidating itself as a key platform for raising objections and adding voices against the dangerous U.S. military deployment in the Caribbean Sea.

Under the pretext of fighting drug trafficking, that deployment threatens the stability and security of the entire region, which the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States (CELAC) declared a “Zone of Peace” in 2014.

#FromTheSouth News Bits | Venezuela: The National Bolivarian Armed Forces (FANB) detected and intercepted an aircraft without an identification code heading. pic.twitter.com/icqcNNsLHq

— teleSUR English (@telesurenglish) December 9, 2025

teleSUR/ JF

Source: teleSUR


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964
 
 

These two articles by Braulio Carbajal, Alfredo Valadez, Jesús Estrada and Saúl Maldonado originally appeared in the December 9, 2025 edition of La Jornada (article one, article two), Mexico’s premier left wing daily newspaper. They have been combined into one article without to provide a more complete view of one of the facets of Mexico’s current agricultural crisis, which began with neoliberalism but carries on today, as the Mexican government is financially unable to subsidize agriculture enough to compete with gigantic US agribusiness subsidies, and unwilling to do what would be required to protect Mexican agriculture and food sovereignty.

Bean producers are facing a new crisis. While the 2025 spring-summer bean harvest is progressing, according to official data, with a higher volume than last year, generating a greater supply, this is happening in a context of low prices for them, further pressured by the constant import of this staple food from the United States.

In the fields, according to reports, farmers receive between nine and twelve pesos per kilogram of beans (depending on the variety), an amount insufficient to cover the high production costs resulting from the increase in freight, fertilizer, and wage prices. Adding to this is the preference for beans harvested on the other side of the border, which arrive at the Central de Abasto (wholesale market) at a final price of between fifteen and sixteen pesos per kilogram.

These low prices don’t reach the end consumer, who pays up to 400 percent more than what producers receive. According to data from the Agricultural Markets Consulting Group (GCMA), while the price paid to black bean producers is 10 pesos, it sells for almost 48 pesos per kilo in supermarkets, a difference that goes to the intermediaries.

All varieties follow this trend; for example, the producer is paid 12.2 pesos per kilogram of pinto beans, while the consumer pays 39.9 pesos; meanwhile, the clear variety is paid 15 pesos per kilogram, while families must acquire it at 55.8 pesos per kilogram; meanwhile, the producer is paid 21.5 pesos per kilogram of sulfur beans, while it is offered to the consumer at 57.3 pesos.

In Zacatecas, Durango, and Chihuahua, the harvest is being paid for as little as 10 pesos per kilogram, which has sparked discontent and protests.

While the 10 pesos per kilo is paid to black bean producers is 10 pesos, it sells for almost 48 pesos per kilo in supermarkets, a difference that goes to the monopolies.

In the case of beans, explained Juan Carlos Anaya, general director of the GCMA, the federal government has set a guaranteed price of 27 pesos per kilogram, which is well above market levels, so there is no way for the entire harvest to be included in the program.

Furthermore, the specialist said, absorbing 70 percent of national production, at current international prices, would imply a fiscal cost exceeding 7.7 billion pesos.

“There is not enough funding to operate the program; an extraordinary funding mechanism (loans or pledging) would be required, given the risk of buying at high prices, storing at high prices, and not being able to market it in a timely manner, generating financial losses,” he explained.

According to data from the Agri-Food and Fisheries Information Service, Mexico’s bean production between January and October reached 1.2 million tons, 15 percent higher than the 1.016 million tons produced during the same period in 2024.

So far this year, GCMA reports, Mexico has imported around 233,000 tons of beans, an amount that is not needed to meet national demand, but is purchased from producers in the United States, because it is considered to have an attractive price.

Although the harvest shows a larger volume than in 2024, producers are facing low prices that don’t cover costs. In Zacatecas, Chihuahua, Durango, and Sinaloa, they are demanding that the government put the collection centers into operation. Photo: La Jornada

Discontent is spreading among bean producers in several states

Bean producers in Zacatecas, Chihuahua, and Durango are exasperated with the federal government, which has not put into operation most of the collection centers to store the legume obtained in the recently ended agricultural cycle, despite the fact that there are commitments and agreements to accumulate the grain signed a month ago.

Currently, the more than 60,000 bean farmers in Zacatecas are facing a serious crisis, in an extraordinarily good harvest year: more than 350,000 tons of the legume were produced, confirming the state’s national leadership in grain production, a dilemma they share with their counterparts in Durango and Chihuahua, which are number two and three in bean plantations.

María Luisa Albores, Food for Well-being (formerly SEGALMEX)

The most serious issue is that the problem has been accumulating since last year, as most of the authorized warehouses, at least 52 collection centers, cannot open to receive new shipments of the legume, because they still have more than 20,000 tons stored from 2024. For technical and sanitary reasons, they should not be “combined”.

The farmers again point to the federal government as responsible.

Leaders and officials warn that the problem is the bureaucratic centralism of María Luisa Albores, head of Food for Well-being (formerly SEGALMEX), a federal agency that in the case of Zacatecas alone requires more than 1.8 billion pesos to begin acquiring approximately 30 percent of the total harvest of the current agricultural cycle.

Critical Problem

The problem is critical because federal authorities, in coordination with the state government, are more than a month behind schedule in starting the bean collection.

The harvest takes place in October. Two agencies in particular, the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development (SADER) and the state Ministry of Agriculture, had committed to delivering tens of thousands of new sacks for collecting beans on November 3rd, and the collection of some 120,000 tons of the 350,000 tons harvested was scheduled to begin on December 10th, as announced at a public event by the Morena party governor, David Monreal Ávila. But the sacks were never delivered, nor were the collection centers opened.

In Chihuahua, SADER’s Food for Well-being program will buy less than 10 percent of the state’s bean harvest, which, along with surpluses and imports allowed by free trade with the United States, has caused the price of the grain to fall to 14 pesos or less per kilogram (1,400 pesos per ton).

Hernán Hernández Alderete, president of the State Committee of the Bean Production System, warned that thousands of rainfed and small-scale farmers are at risk of bankruptcy after planting 75,000 hectares of beans in Chihuahua municipalities such as Namiquipa, Riva Palacio, Cuauhtémoc, Guerrero, and Cusihuiriachi. He believes that the farmers “will be forced to sell their harvest at low prices and will not recoup their investment in seeds and fertilizers.”

Meanwhile, in Durango, 4,000 tons of beans from a harvest exceeding 160,000 tons, produced by 386 growers, have been stored under the federal scheme; therefore, due to a lack of income and government purchases, farmers have begun selling their legume to intermediaries, called coyotes, at a price of 10 pesos per kilogram, even though the official program price would be 27 pesos.

In this context, seasonal farmers of the Yurimuni bean variety, born in Ahome, Sinaloa, warned that if a meeting with state authorities is not held by Tuesday at the latest and there is no favorable solution for them, they will indefinitely occupy the San Miguel Zapotitlán toll booth on Wednesday, as it is urgent to “have a clear destination” for their grain production.

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965
 
 

“As for preparing an attack against NATO, this is utter nonsense. Once again, I urge everyone to listen to the primary source: our President Putin,” Peskov told reporters, commenting on the recent statement by German Chancellor Friedrich Merz on the matter.

The day before, Merz stated on the ARD-Arena television program, responding to questions from German citizens, that Russia is supposedly seeking to impose its influence in the post-Soviet space through military force.

The Chancellor made it clear that it is unclear whether this definition would also include the Baltic states, which are already part of NATO.

Russia has denounced unprecedented activity by the Atlantic alliance near its western borders in recent years, while the bloc justifies these actions as measures to “contain Russian aggression.”

Moscow has repeatedly expressed its concern about the increase in NATO forces in Europe. The Kremlin made it clear that, while Russia does not pose a threat to anyone, it will not ignore this potentially dangerous activity.

jdt/arm/mem/gfa

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966
 
 

This is a declaration of political war against the EU. The United States wants to see a white Europe, divided into separate states, that submits to its demands, the Spanish politician wrote on the social network X, accusing President Donald Trump of turning “contempt” into official doctrine.

Borrell urged European leaders to stop denying that Trump is an “adversary” and to decisively defend the technological, military, and political sovereignty of the bloc, in a call to strengthen strategic autonomy in the face of an increasingly unpredictable ally.

The document, published on December 5, marks a formal departure from the doctrine of sole US responsibility in the global order, while expressing an intention to seek strategic stability with Russia and openly acknowledging differences with Europe.

Local analysts see the declaration as a reflection of the profound deterioration in transatlantic relations, while the strategy confirms a changing of the guard in relation to the old continent.

jdt/arm/mem/ehl/amp

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967
 
 

“Our Prime Minister confirmed both in Washington and here (in Moscow) that our goal is to make energy relations with Russia seamless,” the Foreign Minister stated during a meeting of the bilateral intergovernmental commission in the Russian capital.

Szijjarto openly contrasted this position with the prevailing one in the EU capital, noting that sentiments “directly opposed” to Budapest’s proactive approach toward Moscow are dominant within the European Union (EU).

Local analysts interpret the statement as a reaffirmation of Budapest’s sovereign foreign policy, while energy geopolitics specialists emphasize the strategic value of Hungary’s stance.

This differentiated approach occurs in a context where the EU seeks to reduce its dependence on Russian hydrocarbons, while Hungary defends its long-term agreements, considering them vital to its economy and stability.

The reiteration of the commitment to Russian energy cooperation reinforces Hungary’s profile as a maverick actor within the EU, willing to challenge EU consensus in defense of what it defines as its fundamental national interests.

jdt/arm/mem/ehl/amp

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968
 
 

The Political Bureau of the FA rejected the National Security Strategy “launched by the administration of US President Donald Trump, which violates international law and respect for the sovereignty and self-determination of our nations.”

It states that the offensive against Venezuela has reached an unprecedented level of severity.

It considers that “it is the most evident expression of the operational reactivation of the Monroe Doctrine, a historical mechanism, dating back to the 19th century, of domination and intervention against the countries of Latin America and the Caribbean.”

The statement affirms that Washington’s military deployment “not only directly threatens the sovereignty of Venezuela, the explicit focus of the current offensive, but also compromises Colombia critically.”

The text also claims “dialogue for conflict solution and multilateralism as fundamental tools for building peace and global governance.”

jdt/iff/ft/ool

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969
 
 

The UN humanitarian coordinator in the DRC, Bruno Lemarquis, denounced the alarming increase in violence due to confrontations between rebels of the Alliance of the Congo River-March 23 Movement (AFC/M23) and the Congolese Armed Forces and their allies.

He specifically referred to the attacks carried out between December 2 and 7 with heavy weaponry and bombings in populated areas, primarily in the territories of Uvira, Walungu, Mwenga, Shabunda, Kabare, Fizi, and Kalehe. While the ongoing fighting is preventing the evacuation of the wounded.

He pointed out that attacks on civilian infrastructure, including schools, have also been reported in recent days, which constitutes a serious violation of international humanitarian law.

“I am deeply dismayed by the devastating impact of this fighting on the civilian population. It is imperative to prevent further casualties from being added to the already tragic death toll,” Lemarquis said in a statement.

He added that the use of explosive weapons in populated areas and attacks on civilian infrastructure are causing an unacceptable loss of life and must cease immediately. “Civilians and civilian infrastructure are not targets,” he declared.

According to the humanitarian coordinator, this wave of violence has caused further displacement of people, with an initial estimate of more than 200,000 moving within the same province since December 2, while thousands more have crossed the border into neighboring countries, such as Burundi and Rwanda.

jdt/arm/mem/kmg

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970
 
 

The message explains that Habanos S.A. presented Princesas, a commemorative vitola marking the 185th anniversary of Punch.

It is one of Habanos’ most historic and recognized premium cigar brands. Reviving a distinguished format from the 1960s, this Limited Edition underscores the heritage and craftsmanship that have shaped the brand for generations.

The world premiere took place on December 6 in Limassol, Cyprus, a prestigious venue known for its vibrant community of Habanos aficionados.

Organized by Phoenicia TAA Cyprus, Habanos distributor for Africa and the Middle East, the event welcomed over 550 Habano aficionados from around the world for the presentation of this global launch, which will reach other markets in the coming months.

Founded in 1840 to supply the growing British market, Punch forged an unmistakable reputation.

Princesas (princess), with its name, pays homage to all the women who are part of the Habano world, who, from the fields and factories to the points of sale and even the aficionados, are an indispensable pillar in making the Habano something unique.

jdt/arm/mem/rfc

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971
 
 

According to this source, it was conservatively believed that the Rwandan Defense Forces (RDF) maintained at least two brigades and two special forces battalions in the Congolese provinces of North Kivu and South Kivu, in support of the March 23 Movement (AFC/M23) rebellion.

The report, referenced by Actualite.CD, added that these men and equipment are positioned on the front lines and are directly involved in combat, particularly leading operations against the Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda in the Nyiragongo and Rutshuru territories.

They added that these are units created specifically for cross-border operations in the DRC, including elements of special forces and a significant number of reservists.

jdt/arm/mem/kmg

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972
 
 

Socheata stated that this preliminary information was provided by provincial authorities regarding the airstrikes on civilian areas by the Thai army from Monday to 06:00 hours (local time) this Tuesday.

The spokesperson reiterated at a press briefing that “the National Defense Ministry strongly condemned these inhumane and brutal acts,” which clearly shows that Thai forces have violated the ceasefire and the Joint Declaration signed by the prime ministers of both countries on October 26.

The Cambodian Interior Ministry, meanwhile, issued a statement detailing that the seven citizens killed due to the Thai bombings were from the provinces of Preah Vihear (one), Oddar Meanchey (three), and Banteay Meanchey (three).

United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres expressed his concern about the resumption of armed clashes between Cambodia and Thailand, “particularly the alleged airstrikes and the mobilization of heavy equipment in the border area.”

jdt/iff/lam/mpm

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973
 
 

Gaza’s Director General of Hospitals, Dr. Mohammed Zaqout, warned that the territory is suffering an unprecedented crisis, which has brought the healthcare system to the brink of a collapse.

In statements to the Shehab news agency, Zaqout accused the neighboring country of deliberately preventing the entry of supplies, which threatens the lives of thousands of sick and wounded people.

Munir al-Barash, director-general of Gaza’s Health Ministry, renewed last week his accusations against Israel for causing a crisis in the sector due to its aggression and the blockade imposed on the territory.

Al-Barash told Al-Araby Television Network that hospitals lack even the most basic medical equipment, such as wound disinfectants and medical solutions.

jdt/iff/lam/rob

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974
 
 

A report presented by the Observatory of Occupational Safety and the Environment specifies that this total represents an increase of six fatal accidents compared to the same period in 2024, showing that this problem is worsening, despite union demands for increased preventative measures.

The age group most affected by workplace deaths during the period under review was 55 to 64 years old, accounting for 240 of the 657 fatalities in that age group.

On the other hand, 145 foreign workers lost their lives at their jobs and 60 during their commutes, while the workplace fatality rate among them was 57,7 per million employees, more than double the 23,9 observed among Italians.

A total of 74 female workers died in the first ten months of 2025, just one leas equal to the same period last year.

Of these, 36 died at their workplaces, 11 fewer than in 2024, but the number of those who lost their lives during commutes was 38, representing a year-on-year increase of ten deaths.

The most affected sector was construction, with 119 workplace fatalities, followed by manufacturing, with 98. Transportation and storage accounted for 84 incidents, and commerce for 57. The days with the highest number of fatal incidents of this type were Mondays, at 22,8%, followed by Fridays and Tuesdays at 20,2 and 16,4%, respectively.

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Italia reportó 896 muertes laborales en los primeros 10 meses de 2025 Roma, 9 dic (Prensa Latina) Entre enero y octubre de 2025 se registraron en Italia 896 muertes laborales, de ellas 657 en los puestos de trabajo, a las que se sumaron 239 ocurridas en los trayectos de ida y regreso, señala hoy un reporte.

Un informe presentado por el Observatorio de Seguridad Laboral y Medio Ambiente, precisa que esa cifra total representa un incremento de seis accidentes mortales respecto a los ocurridos en igual período de 2024, lo que evidencia que este problema se agrava, a pesar de las demandas sindicales sobre la necesidad de incrementar las medidas preventivas.

El grupo de edad más afectado por las muertes en los puestos de trabajo, durante el período evaluado, fue el de 55 a 64 años, con 240 de los 657 fallecidos en esos lugares.

Por otra parte, 145 trabajadores extranjeros perdieron la vida en sus trabajos y 60 durante los desplazamientos, mientras que la tasa de muertes laborales entre los mismos fue de 57,7 por cada millón de empleados, más del doble que la de 23,9 observada entre los italianos.

Un total de 74 trabajadoras murieron en los primeros diez meses de 2025, solo una menos que en la misma etapa del pasado año, y de ellas 36 fenecieron en sus puestos laborales, con 11 menos que en 2024, pero la cifra de las que perdieron la vida en los trayectos fue de 38, para un incremento interanual de diez fallecidas.

El sector más afectado fue la construcción, con 119 muertes laborales, seguido de la manufactura, con 98; el transporte y almacenamiento, con 84 y el comercio, con 57, mientras que los días con más hechos fatales de este tipo fueron los lunes, con el 22,8 por ciento, seguido de los viernes y martes con 20,2 y 16,4 puntos porcentuales, respectivamente.

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The H200 AI chips will remain reserved for customers in the United States.

On Tuesday, the British outlet Financial Times reported that Chinese authorities are considering restrictions on access to Nvidia’s H200 chips, despite U.S. President Donald Trump’s decision to allow their export.

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China Denounces U.S. Protectionism and Unilateral Tech Repression Amid AI Chip Dispute

Chinese buyers would have to “undergo an approval process” and justify why domestic suppliers cannot meet their needs. The information comes after Trump’s authorization of sales conditioned on a 25% payment to the U.S., and a final decision has not yet been made.

Trump stated that he informed Chinese President Xi Jinping about the authorization to export H200 chips to approved customers in China and other countries, under conditions that protect national security, to which Xi responded “positively.”

The Republican President clarified that the payment agreement does not include other Artificial Intelligence (AI) chips such as Blackwell and Rubin. In August, the U.S. government signed a similar agreement with Nvidia and Advanced Micro Devices (AMD), and imposed a 15% tariff on exports.

Trump is allowing Nvidia to sell H200 to China.

They're worried that Huawei will take over Nvidia's AI chip market share in China.

Nvidia's most advanced Blackwell chips are still banned from selling to China.

The idea is to keep the Chinese 1 generation behind while denying… pic.twitter.com/u67BFd7ejN

— Carl Zha (@CarlZha) December 8, 2025

Nvidia also holds a license to export the H20 chip to China, a chip less powerful than the H200 and designed specifically for the Chinese market, also with a 15% tariff. The U.S. Department of Commerce is “preparing details” to apply the same scheme to AMD and Intel.

The H200 chip, launched two years ago, surpasses the H100 thanks to its larger, high-bandwidth memory, which allows for faster data processing. According to the Institute for Progress, the chip is almost six times more powerful than the H20.

Exporting the H200 would allow Chinese AI labs to build supercomputers comparable to those in the United States, although at higher costs. Trump remarked that Nvidia’s new Blackwell and Rubin chips will remain reserved for U.S. customers and are not part of the agreement with China.

#FromTheSouth News Bits | In the far northwest of China lies the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, in the heart of Central Asia, home to the Uyghur people. Kashgar combines its rich historical heritage with a millennia-old cultural identity that remains vibrant to this day. pic.twitter.com/WfxBVsejrm

— teleSUR English (@telesurenglish) November 14, 2025

teleSUR: JP

Source: EFE – El Mundo


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