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Monthly Review and MR Online contributor Chris Gilbert recorded this video near the Miraflores Palace in Caracas, Venezuela, on January 3, 2026. We post it here with his permission. —The Editors


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The Kremlin’s call adds geopolitical dimension to ongoing events.

On Saturday, the Russian Foreign Affairs Ministry urged the United States to release Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro and First Lady Cilia Flores, who were seized by U.S. forces during an attack on the South American country in the early morning hours.

RELATED:

The World Condemns Imperialist Assault Against Caracas

“In view of the confirmed reports about Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro and his spouse being in the United States, we strongly urge the U.S. leadership to reconsider their position and release the legitimately elected president of a sovereign country and his spouse. We highlight the need to create conditions for resolving any existing issues between the United States and Venezuela through dialogue,” the Russian diplomacy said.

This statement constitutes the first official confirmation by a foreign government regarding the whereabouts of the Venezuelan president, whose location had remained unknown since Venezuelan Vice President Delcy Rodriguez denounced the U.S. military aggression against Caracas and the states of Aragua, Miranda and La Guaira.

On Jan. 3, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov also held a telephone conversation with Rodriguez in which he expressed Moscow’s “firm solidarity” with the Venezuelan people in the face of the aggression.

He affirmed that Russia would continue to support the course of the Bolivarian government, aimed at protecting national interests and sovereignty. Both officials agreed on the imperative need to avoid further military escalation and to find a solution to the crisis through political dialogue.

They also expressed their mutual willingness to continue strengthening the comprehensive strategic partnership between Russia and Venezuela, a link that encompasses military, energy, economic and diplomatic cooperation. Over the last decade, these multidimensional ties have allowed Venezuela to have a counterweight to Western sanctions and the isolation imposed by Washington.

The Kremlin’s diplomatic intervention adds a larger geopolitical dimension to the hemispheric crisis. Russia maintains close strategic relations with Venezuela, including arms sales, cooperation in the oil sector and financial support, making Moscow a relevant actor in any escalation involving the Bolivarian government.

The Russian emphasis on Maduro’s electoral legitimacy represents a direct challenge to the narrative of the U.S. government, which has systematically attempted to minimize the validity of Venezuelan electoral processes and accuses Bolivarian officials of links to international criminal organizations.

Moscow’s stance consolidates its role as a counterweight to U.S. influence in Latin America, a region Washington has historically considered within its sphere of influence according to the Monroe Doctrine.

Currently, the Kremlin’s call for dialogue openly contrasts with the military path taken by the administration of U.S. President Donald Trump.

Madelein Garcia, teleSUR correspondent, reports from La Carlota military base, one of the places that was hit by U.S. missiles in the attack they carried out against the nation in the early hours of January 3. pic.twitter.com/bwagA4PaTe

— teleSUR English (@telesurenglish) January 3, 2026

teleSUR/ JF

Sources: RT – teleSUR


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In the event held at the Anti-Imperialist Tribune in Havana, the Cuban leader stressed that the operation, carried out treacherously in the early hours of Saturday morning, is part of a neo-fascist strategy aimed at imposing regime change and seizing Venezuelan natural resources, particularly its oil. “This is not about fighting narco-terrorism, as they falsely claim, but about destroying a project of integration and resistance that was born with Commander Hugo Chavez,” he asserted.

The head of state categorically rejected the Monroe Doctrine and any extraterritorial claims over Latin American territory, while demanding that the United States provide immediate proof of life for Nicolas Maduro and his wife.

He also compared the action to the crimes against humanity committed by Israeli Zionism in Gaza, highlighting its illegal, immoral, and international law violations.

“This is not just an attack against Venezuela, it is a threat against all of humanity,” he warned, calling on the international community to mobilize unequivocally against the advance of modern fascism disguised as foreign policy.

Cuba, he reaffirmed, is prepared to defend, “with its own blood if necessary, the independence of Our America.”

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“The first thing President Maduro told the people of Venezuela was, ‘People to the streets, and all plans are activated,’” the Vice President stated during a phone call to the Venezuelan Television channel, according to a report by La Iguana TV.

Earlier today, international media outlets attempted to promote the narrative that Rodriguez was in Russia, where she supposedly “had a visit planned before the attack.”

This Saturday, Delcy Rodriguez denounced the aggression perpetrated by U.S. military forces against Venezuela and the kidnapping of President Nicolas Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores, demanding proof of life for the Bolivarian leader and the First Lady.

jdt/npg/abp

The post Vicepresidenta Delcy Rodriguez remains in Venezuela first appeared on Prensa Latina.


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Personalities from around the world warn of a dangerous precedent for peace.

Caracas woke up on January 3, 2026 to the sound of explosions and the reality of a new U.S. war in Latin America: a surprise military operation that ended with the capture and removal of President Nicolás Maduro and First Lady Cilia Flores from Venezuelan territory.

RELATED:
Colombia Condemns U.S. Strikes on Venezuela

Under the name “Operation Southern Spear,” Washington has crossed the line from sanctions and covert pressure to open aggression, triggering a wave of international condemnation and fears of a return to old-style gunboat diplomacy in the Caribbean.​

Nicolas Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores, have been indicted in the Southern District of New York. Nicolas Maduro has been charged with Narco-Terrorism Conspiracy, Cocaine Importation Conspiracy, Possession of Machineguns and Destructive Devices, and Conspiracy to Possess…

— Attorney General Pamela Bondi (@AGPamBondi) January 3, 2026

A New Phase of US Aggression

In the early hours of January 3, U.S. special operations forces struck multiple civilian and military targets in and around Caracas before seizing President Maduro and First Lady Cilia Flores and flying them out of the country.

President Donald Trump later boasted that the United States had “successfully carried out a large-scale strike against Venezuela and its leader” and that the captured Venezuelan president would face charges on U.S. soil.​

Far from a neutral “law enforcement action,” the assault violates core principles of the UN Charter, which prohibits the use of force against the territorial integrity or political independence of any state.

The operation deepens a long-running regime-change strategy that previously relied on unilateral sanctions, attempts at covert destabilization, and economic blockade to try to force the Bolivarian government from power.​

Venezuelan Attorney General Tarek William Saab:

“As Attorney General I demand not only proof of life of our Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces and Head of State, Nicolás Maduro Moros, and of his wife, our sister and first combatant, Cilia Flores, but beyond that proof, I… pic.twitter.com/bqXVPi40ma

— Camila (@camilapress) January 3, 2026

Oil, Extraction, and a “Stolen Wealth” Doctrine

Trump’s own public comments leave little doubt about the material stakes of the attack. In remarks after the strikes, he signaled that the United States would be “very strongly involved” in Venezuela’s oil sector and that “we have the greatest oil companies in the world” ready to step in.​

For years, Venezuelan officials and many in the Global South have warned that Washington’s real objective is to regain control over the world’s largest proven oil reserves and roll back decades of resource sovereignty.

The emerging U.S. narrative frames Venezuelan crude as “stolen” from American consumers and corporations, flipping reality on its head to present Latin American resources as U.S. property by right.​

Key elements of this extractive offensive include:

  • Reversing sovereignty: U.S. officials and aligned voices have floated plans to hand back strategic assets and contracts to multinationals like ExxonMobil and Chevron, effectively erasing Venezuela’s 1976 oil nationalization and the sovereign reforms deepened under Chávez in 2007.​
  • Economic siege: The escalation of U.S. sanctions and tanker blockades through 2024–2025 acted as a de facto siege, strangling public revenues and creating the “crisis” later cited as justification for direct military action.​
  • Colonial continuity: The kidnapping of a sitting head of state marks a return to open colonial extraction, where force replaces negotiation and international law is bent to protect corporate access to strategic minerals, gas, and crude.​

#Breaking: The United States just launched a full scale attack on Venezuela from Air and Sea, report of hundreds of Toma Hawk Cruise Missiles striking dozens of targets in downtown Caracas. pic.twitter.com/IM0FYiCUVb

— ICOF (@ICOF__) January 3, 2026

Venezuelan Government: “State-Sponsored Kidnapping”

Inside Venezuela, authorities describe the events of January 3 as a “state-sponsored kidnapping” and a terrorist attack against a sovereign nation. Official statements place the defense of national sovereignty, territorial integrity, and popular participation at the center of the response.​

  • Vice President Delcy Rodríguez has become the most visible official voice, demanding transparency about the fate of the presidential couple. “We do not know the whereabouts of President Nicolás Maduro and First Lady Cilia Flores. We demand that the government of President Donald Trump provide an immediate proof of life for the President and the First Lady.”​
  • Rodríguez has emphasized that, despite the scale of the attack, the population remains organized: “Venezuela is in a state of calm, digesting what it means to face a military invasion that has violated our peace and murdered humble inhabitants.”

Minister of Interior, Justice, and Peace Diosdado Cabello has focused on internal security and the need for unity across social sectors.​

  • “The country was the object of a terrorist attack directed against its people, the motherland, and the electrical infrastructure… What they attempted with bombs and missiles, they achieved only partially. They expected a cowardly response; but the cowards are in the past.”
  • Calling for a “civic-military-police” front, he warned: “I call for a perfect national union. No external government should think they can come here and appoint our leaders.”

Foreign Minister Yván Gil has taken the fight to international forums, filing complaints at the United Nations and denouncing the assault as a clear breach of the Charter. He described the operation as the work of “a rogue state, fueling unmasked hostility in the Global South to impose its devious schemes,” and an act of terrorism that threatens Latin America’s stability.​

From the National Assembly, Nicolás Maduro Guerra has placed the crisis in a longer anti-colonial tradition, invoking the legacy of Simón Bolívar. “No one will violate the historical legacy of our father the Liberator [Simón Bolívar]. The people must activate themselves to defend our natural resources.”​

🇻🇪 Venezuela’s Interior Minister Diosdado Cabello spoke from the streets of Caracas hours after the US attacks, calling upon international organizations to reject the US attacks on Venezuela or “finally public reveal their complicity in the face of the invasion and attack, in the… pic.twitter.com/gUy75nUm32

— Peoples Dispatch (@peoplesdispatch) January 3, 2026

BRICS+ and the Multipolar Front

The attack has drawn a sharp line in global politics. While Washington courts a familiar “coalition of the willing,” core BRICS+ members have condemned the strikes as criminal and destabilizing.​

Russia: “Cowboy Behavior” and Armed Aggression

Moscow has issued some of the strongest statements. The Russian Foreign Ministry has formally labeled the strikes “an act of armed aggression” and rejected U.S. legal justifications as “unfounded.” At the UN, Ambassador Vassily Nebenzia described the operation as “cowboy behavior and the greatest extortion known in modern history,” warning that it reflects a push to impose U.S. order on the world and plunder Venezuela’s riches.​

China: “Hegemonic Behavior” and Violated Sovereignty

Beijing, usually cautious in tone, has expressed “deep shock” at the use of force against a sitting president and a sovereign nation. Through its Foreign Ministry, China declared: “China firmly opposes such hegemonic behavior by the U.S., which seriously violates international law, violates Venezuela’s sovereignty, and threatens peace and security in Latin America.” Chinese authorities emphasized their support for Venezuela’s “sovereignty and national dignity” and signaled they will not recognize any government installed through external force.​

🚨🇻🇪🌎 Global reaction builds after the U.S. operation in Venezuela:

🇧🇷 Lula: Bombings on Venezuelan territory + capture of its president cross an “unacceptable line.”

🇷🇺 Russia: Condemns the strikes as “armed aggression,” calling the justifications groundless.

🇨🇳 China:… pic.twitter.com/LEiJIlQOFV

— Defence Chronicle India ™ (@TheDCIndia) January 3, 2026

Latin America: Defending the “Zone of Peace”

Across Latin America, leaders have framed the kidnapping and bombardment as a “dangerous precedent” that tears at the foundations of regional order. Many invoke the notion of Latin America and the Caribbean as a “Zone of Peace” and warn that the assault risks turning the continent into another permanent war theatre.​

  • Brazil – President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva called the bombings and capture “an unacceptable line” crossed, describing them as a grave affront to Venezuelan sovereignty and “an extremely dangerous precedent for the entire international community.”​
  • Colombia – President Gustavo Petro rejected the aggression “against the sovereignty of Venezuela and of Latin America,” reiterating previous warnings that such an intervention could turn the region into “another Syria.”​
  • Mexico – President Claudia Sheinbaum reaffirmed Mexico’s doctrine of non-intervention with a clear “No to interventionism,” demanding an immediate halt to military actions.​
  • Cuba – President Miguel Díaz‑Canel denounced the operation as “State terrorism” and “unmasked hostility,” urging the international community “to react against this criminal attack and the brutal assault on a zone of peace.”​

Other allied governments, including Iran and Belarus, have framed the attack as extortion designed to restore a unipolar order through force.

Tehran’s Foreign Ministry argued that “the United States has turned into the biggest threat to international peace and security,” while Minsk denounced the strikes as “armed aggression” and a direct threat to global stability.​

Colombia’s president issues the first international response to the strikes in Venezuela:

“Caracas is under attack right now. The world must be alerted. Venezuela is being hit by missile strikes. The OAS and the UN must convene immediately.” pic.twitter.com/6VICCSTZ7p

— ConsciousInk (@ink_conscious) January 3, 2026

Europe and the Global Left

In Europe, official reactions have been mixed, oscillating between cautious language and explicit criticism, while left-wing parties and movements speak in far more direct terms.​

  • Spain’s Foreign Ministry called for “de-escalation and moderation,” insisting that all actions must respect international law and the UN Charter.​
  • UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer distanced London from the operation, stating: “I want to be absolutely clear: we did not participate. Everyone must respect international law.”​
  • Prominent figures of the European left, including Jeremy Corbyn and Irene Montero, warned through Progressive International that “this is a prelude to invasion” and “condemn[ed] in the strongest terms the military escalation against Venezuela.”​

Grassroots organizations, trade unions, and internationalist networks across the Global North have joined protests, casting the events as part of a broader pattern of U.S. militarism, from the Middle East to Latin America.​

Social Movements: “Venezuela Is a Hope”

Outside government halls, social movements and popular platforms have rapidly mobilized, describing the assault as a “colonial war” and calling for global solidarity with Venezuela.​

  • ALBA Movimientos, a continental network of movements, denounced the attack as a “criminal act of war” aimed at “the plundering of Venezuela’s strategic resources, especially oil and gold, through a colonial policy of military intervention and regime change,” stressing its direct violation of the UN Charter.​
  • La Vía Campesina, which represents over 200 million peasants worldwide, declared that “Venezuela is not a threat; it is a hope,” and condemned systematic threats of U.S. intervention while defending the Venezuelan people’s right to determine their own destiny.​
  • The Cabinet of the Progressive International described the kidnapping of a head of state as “an act of imperial lawlessness with few precedents in history,” warning that the emerging “Trump corollary” to the Monroe Doctrine is “the single greatest threat to peace and prosperity that the Americas confront today.”​

Venezuelans denounce aggression and warn of military escalation, took to streets of Caracas to express outrage at attack perpetrated against them describing as a direct aggression with geopolitical and economic aims. "They’re not just coming for us, they’re coming for our oil". https://t.co/YUmnEW0hv0 pic.twitter.com/O49ScwfGeI

— Gohonzon protected self radicalised non conformist (@UIconoclas52199) January 3, 2026

Legal and Human Rights Alarm

Legal organizations and human rights groups are framing the crisis as a test case for the future of international law. The central issues include the extraterritorial seizure of a sitting president, the bombardment of civilian areas, and the open rejection of UN procedures by a permanent Security Council member.​

  • The International Association of Democratic Lawyers (IADL) “unreservedly condemns the United States’ completely illegal and illegitimate aggression” and urges “all relevant legal and popular action to hold U.S. officials and military responsible for this blatant violation of the U.N. Charter.”​
  • From inside the U.S., CODEPINK demanded an immediate end to hostilities and the safe return of Maduro: “Last night, the United States government bombed civilian and military sites across Venezuela and illegally kidnapped Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro. These are blatant and illegal acts of war by the Trump Administration.”​

Anti-war coalitions like ANSWER connect the new war to domestic inequality, pointing out that “working-class young people… will be sent to kill and die, not the children of executives at ExxonMobil.” Networks such as Samidoun and currents of the Fourth International stress that “regardless of one’s opinion on the regime, imperialist intervention is not a solution” and can only bring “death, repression, and injustice,” demanding a full withdrawal of U.S. forces from the Caribbean.​

#Venezuela🇻🇪 IHRF Condemns US Military Aggression Against Venezuela as International Terrorism; Calls for Immediate Relocation of UN Headquarters. #PressRelease #UnitedStates #venezuelainvasion pic.twitter.com/O52j5VTzkw

— International Human Rights Foundation (@IHRF_English) January 3, 2026

The United Nations: “A Dangerous Precedent”

The United Nations has responded with clear alarm at both the bombing and the removal of Venezuela’s head of state. While Trump officials present the operation as a lawful extension of anti‑narcotics policy, the UN’s concern centers on the precedent it sets for global order.​

Through his spokesperson Stéphane Dujarric, Secretary‑General António Guterres said he is “deeply alarmed” by the escalation and warned that the events carry “worrying implications for the region.”

Crucially, the statement underlined that, “independently of the situation in Venezuela, these developments constitute a dangerous precedent,” stressing that the “rules of international law have not been respected” and calling for inclusive dialogue and full respect for human rights.​

Venezuela’s Permanent Mission, led by Ambassador Samuel Moncada, has requested an emergency Security Council session to address what it calls “brutal, unjustified, and unilateral” armed aggression.​

  • The mission has formally invoked Article 51 of the UN Charter, reserving Venezuela’s right to legitimate self‑defense to protect its population and territorial integrity.​
  • Diplomatic letters to the Council describe the removal of Maduro as an “international crime of kidnapping” and a violation of the protections normally afforded to heads of state.​

At stake is whether the international community will tolerate the use of raw military power to remove elected governments and seize strategic resources—or whether this moment becomes the catalyst for a strengthened, multipolar defense of sovereignty, law, and peace in Latin America and beyond.

Sources: teleSUR – Al Jazeera – Al Mayadeen – RT – Con el Mazo Dando – VTV – TRT – Xinhua – BBC – France 24 – Alba Movimiento – Democracy Now


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   “We strongly condemn the military intervention by the United States in Venezuela,” she stated in a message on her social media account, emphasizing that the self-determination of peoples must prevail in Latin America and throughout the world.

  Rangel also urged international organizations, such as the United Nations (UN), not to remain silent. “Civilians are at risk, as well as the freedom and peace of an entire continent,” she asserted.

   This morning, Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum shared the statement issued by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, in which her administration strongly condemned and rejected the military actions carried out by U.S. armed forces against targets in Venezuelan territory.

  The Ministry of Foreign Affairs described the action as “a clear violation of Article 2 of the Charter of the United Nations.”

  The Ministry emphasized that Latin America and the Caribbean is a zone of peace, built on the foundation of mutual respect, the peaceful settlement of disputes, and the prohibition of the use and threat of force, and that any military action seriously jeopardizes regional stability.

  Mexico reiterated that dialogue and negotiation are the only legitimate and effective ways to resolve differences and reaffirmed its willingness to support any effort to facilitate dialogue, mediate, or provide accompaniment that contributes to preserving regional peace and preventing confrontation.

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The airstrike against Venezuela is Washington’s 6th military intervention in Latin America in the last 75 years.

On Jan. 3, President Donald Trump confirmed that U.S. forces entered the residence of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro and extracted him and First Lady Cilia Flores from the country by air.

RELATED:

2 Vital Reasons China Condemns US Attack on Venezuela as Illegal and Dangerous

Venezuela denounced the missile attack from U.S. helicopters on Caracas and other cities, which caused civilian and military deaths and injuries.

The following is a summary of the main U.S. interventions in Latin America in the last 75 years:

Bay of Pigs – Cuba

On April 15, 1961, U.S. B-26 planes bombed Cuban bases to destroy the Revolutionary Air Force and facilitate the landing at Playa Giron of the so-called Brigade 2506, composed of exiles and mercenaries trained by the CIA in Guatemala and Nicaragua.

The following day, Commander Fidel Castro declared the socialist character of the Cuban revolution that had brought him to power in January 1959. On April 17, some 1,500 men supported by U.S. naval aircraft and ships attempted to land in the Bay of Pigs, about 112 miles southeast of Havana.

The attack sought to overthrow Castro and install a government formed in Miami, but it was suppressed by the Cuban people. The Bay of Pigs invasion occurred in the context of Cuba’s rapprochement with the Soviet Union. The failure of the invasion was a severe setback for U.S. President John F. Kennedy and irreparably damaged relations between the two countries.

everything Chavez said has proven to be right: "The president of the US talks as if he owns the world. What type of "democracy" do you impose with marines, invasions and bombs? If the world could speak with one voice, it would say: Imperialist yankee, go home!" pic.twitter.com/2GuLmqfFN9

☀👀 (@zei_squirrel) January 3, 2026

Dominican Republic

On April 28, 1965, President Lyndon B. Johnson sent 20,000 Marines to the Dominican Republic to suppress a civil conflict that erupted after Juan Bosch, who came to power following the death of dictator Leonidas Trujillo in 1961, was deposed by the military.

The U.S. aim was to prevent the country from falling into communist hands and creating “a second Cuba” in the Caribbean. The U.S. placed General Antonio Imbert Barrera at the head of the government.

In September 1966, U.S. troops left the country, shortly before presidential elections were held in which Bosch was defeated by Joaquin Balaguer, who had been part of the administration of Trujillo dictatorship. Backed by the U.S, Balaguer remained in power until 1996.

Grenada

On Oct. 25, 1983, nearly 2,000 U.S. Marines, along with a symbolic force of 300 soldiers from other small Caribbean countries – Jamaica, Antigua, Barbados, Dominica, Saint Lucia and Saint Vincent – invaded the Caribbean island of Grenada to overthrow the military regime that came to power on Oct. 19, after executing head of government Maurice Bishop, three of his ministers and numerous civilians.

President Ronald Reagan justified the ‘Operation Urgent Fury’ on the need to protect the lives of the approximately 1,000 U.S. residents on the island and to restore democratic institutions. Most U.S. troops left the country on Nov. 1, 1983.

Last night's attack on Venezuela fits into a long history of brazen US interventions in Latin America and the world. pic.twitter.com/bgU5fX2Oqu

— Alan MacLeod (@AlanRMacLeod) January 3, 2026

Panama

On the night of Dec. 20, 1989, President George H.W. Bush ordered the invasion of Panama with 26,000 soldiers. The objective of Operation ‘Just Cause’ was to dismantle the local army and capture Panamanian leader Manuel Antonio Noriega, accused of drug trafficking.

According to data declassified by the Pentagon in 2019, over 500 people died, 314 of them military personnel and the majority Panamanian. However, humanitarian institutions have stated that U.S. occupying forces killed as many as 4,000 Panamanian civilians.

Noriega, who governed the country between 1983 and 1989 and had been a CIA collaborator, surrendered 13 days later to U.S. troops who had surrounded the Apostolic Nunciature in Panama City where he had taken refuge after the invasion.

Haiti

On Sept. 19, 1994, over 23,000 U.S. military personnel occupied Haiti to facilitate a transition to democracy and the return of Jean-Bertrand Aristide, Haiti’s first president elected in a democratic election (1990), who had been overthrown on Sept. 30, 1991, in a military coup led by General Raoul Cedras.

The arrival of the troops came hours after a U.S. delegation, led by former President Jimmy Carter, reached an agreement with Cedras for the entry of U.S. troops into Haiti, the departure of the coup government from the country, the return of Aristide, and the calling of future elections.

Aristide returned to Haiti on Oct. 15 and resumed his mandate. By the end of March 1995, U.S. forces handed over command of the peacekeeping operation to the United Nations, and legislative and municipal elections were held in June.

Almost a decade later, in February 2004, the United States would again deploy Marines to Haiti, this time as part of a U.N.-authorized international coalition, following an armed revolt that led to Aristide’s departure.

#FromTheSouth News Bits | Honduras' former President Manuel Zelaya condemned the attack by the United States on Venezuela, showing the regional unity, which is also a target of the imperialist actions in the region. pic.twitter.com/eY8C2EkDSd

— teleSUR English (@telesurenglish) January 3, 2026

teleSUR/ JF

Source: EFE


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In a statement released on its social media, Accra rejected all forms of intervention that threaten the sovereignty, peace, and self-determination of peoples.

“These recent acts are a serious violation of international law and a direct threat to regional stability,” the statement continued, adding that the international community is called upon to respect the independence of states and to promote peaceful and diplomatic solutions based on dialogue and mutual respect.

Accra affirmed that it will continue working for a united, sovereign continent free from aggression that violates the dignity of nations.

In Angola, the Angolan Committee of Solidarity with Bolivarian Venezuela (CASOVEB) also strongly condemned the US aggression, calling it a serious violation of the principles of the UN Charter.

The organization rejected these acts, which are contrary to international law, the sovereign equality of states, and non-interference in the internal affairs of other nations, and called for dialogue, solidarity and cooperation, and respect for the self-determination of peoples.

“We urge the member states of the African Union, the ALBA countries, the BRICS partners, the nations of the Non-Aligned Movement, and the movements “Social organizations around the world must speak out clearly and responsibly,” the Angolan organization said in its statement.

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Join BreakThrough News at 3pm ET for special live coverage of the US bombing of Venezuela and the capture and kidnapping of President Nicolas Maduro, hosted by Rania Khalek, Eugene Puryear and Zoe Alexandra, joined by special guests Vijay Prashad, José Luis Granados Ceja, Andreína Chávez Alava, and Manolo De Los Santos. Trump’s “large-scale attack” on Caracas overnight Saturday targeted multiple sites in the capital city and followed months of administration officials openly stating their goal: US control of Venezuela’s vast oil and natural resources reserves. This even as Maduro and his wife are expected to face trumped-up drug charges in New York. #breakthroughnews


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Speaking a few meters from the U.S. Embassy in Havana, the intellectual rejected the actions of imperialism, “which knows it is condemned to dissolve, which does not accept the emerging multipolar world, which allows itself to violate all international law and all civilized norms of coexistence.”

He stated that Washington wants the world to believe its lies and accept barbarity as inevitable.

He also remembered that lies have been one of its constant weapons against Venezuela, Cuba, and their people.

Prieto warned that from Cuba, early this morning, President Miguel Diaz-Canel made an urgent appeal to the international community to halt the military aggression.

“There cannot be a single decent person in this world who does not denounce this infamy by every means at their disposal.

We must knock on every door to ensure the truth about this sinister plan to seize Venezuela’s wealth is known,” he stated.

He also urged people to stop the forces of hatred, the forces of war, of fascism, and to defend the right to peace, solidarity, life, sovereignty, and justice.

The president of Casa de las Americas remembered the leader of the Cuban Revolution, Fidel Castro, who said that for Vietnam, we are willing to give even our own blood. “Today, Fidel would say that for Venezuela, we are willing to give even our own blood,” he emphasized. jdt/arc/mml

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Lavrov, who spoke by telephone on Saturday, January 3, with the Executive Vice President of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela, Delcy Rodriguez, expressed his government’s support for Venezuela in the face of Washington’s armed aggression, according to a statement from the Russian Foreign Ministry.

During the conversation, the head of Russian diplomacy assured his counterpart that Moscow will continue to support the Venezuelan government’s strategy to protect national interests and sovereignty.

Both stressed the importance of preventing further escalation of the situation and expressed their willingness to find solutions through dialogue.

The parties also expressed their intention to further strengthen the strategic partnership between the two countries in the future.

Russia will continue to support Venezuela’s course, the Foreign Ministry announced, following a telephone conversation between Lavrov and the South American nation’s executive vice president.

“Russia will continue to support the Bolivarian government’s course, aimed at defending national interests and the country’s sovereignty,” the diplomatic mission stated.

jdt/npg/gfa

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The open forum will take place this Saturday at 3:30 p.m. in Camaguey’s emblematic Plaza de la Libertad, precisely where tomorrow the triumphant passage of the Caravan of Liberty, led by Fidel Castro after the revolutionary triumph of 1959, will be commemorated.

The call is being made jointly by the leadership of the Communist Party, the Young Communist League, and mass organizations in the province.

The gathering will reaffirm the unwavering support and solidarity of the Cuban people with the Bolivarian Revolution and its legitimate government.

With the slogan “Venezuela is not alone,” Camaguey will raise its voice to denounce foreign interference and reaffirm the unity between the two nations.

jdt/arc/fam

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