Tag: Nicolas Maduro

  • UN Security Council splits over US raid that captured Venezuela’s Maduro

    UN Security Council splits over US raid that captured Venezuela’s Maduro

    According to Premium Times, the UN Security Council session on the US operation that captured Venezuela’s President Nicolás Maduro exposed sharp divisions, with some delegations questioning legality and others framing it as a response to alleged criminal conduct.

    The dispute is about precedent: whether a powerful state can use force across borders for an arrest operation without multilateral authorization—and what that does to the post-1945 rules-based order.

    The backlash is already geopolitical, shaping alliance politics, regional responses in Latin America, and Venezuela’s internal transition dynamics.

    Even for states far from the theatre, the episode raises practical questions about sovereignty, reciprocity, and the credibility of international law when major powers act unilaterally.

    Reuters quoted UN concerns that the intervention “violates international law” and “sets a dangerous precedent.” AP reported the US envoy defended it as a “surgical law enforcement operation” at the UN.

    Echotitbits take: Watch three things: war-powers pressure inside the US, regional responses in Latin America, and any sanctions/asset moves tied to Venezuela’s oil and leadership transition. The bigger story is how “law enforcement” narratives collide with sovereignty norms at the UN.

    Source: Timesofisrael – https://www.timesofisrael.com/splits-emerge-over-venezuelas-future-as-un-security-council-meets-to-discuss-us-raid/ January 6, 2026
    Premium Times January 6, 2026

    Photo Credit: Timesofisrael

  • Trump Claims Maduro Was Seized After U.S. Strikes in Venezuela, as Legal Questions Mount

    Trump Claims Maduro Was Seized After U.S. Strikes in Venezuela, as Legal Questions Mount

    In a Truth Social post early Saturday, U.S. President Donald Trump said American forces carried out a “large-scale” strike in Venezuela and that Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro and First Lady Cilia Flores were captured and flown out of the country. The claim has not been independently verified, and Venezuelan authorities have disputed Washington’s account while demanding clarity on the couple’s status.

    Maduro and wife

    Witnesses and local reports described explosions and low-flying aircraft over Caracas during the overnight operation, as Venezuelan officials condemned what they called an attack on national sovereignty and urged citizens to mobilize. U.S. officials have not publicly released operational details that would confirm where Maduro is being held or the legal basis for the action.

    A screenshot of President Donald Trump post on Truth Social
    A screenshot of President Donald Trump post on Truth Social

    The U.S. has, for years, accused Maduro’s inner circle of running a “narco-state.” Washington’s Justice Department previously announced federal charges in 2020 accusing Maduro of narco-terrorism and cocaine-trafficking conspiracies, allegations the Venezuelan government has repeatedly rejected.

    International-law scrutiny is expected to intensify. Legal experts typically assess cross-border capture operations under the UN Charter’s rules on sovereignty and the use of force, and under customary rules on the immunity of sitting heads of state. Without clear Security Council authorization or a recognized self-defense justification, critics argue such operations risk violating international law, even where domestic criminal charges exist.

    Reuters|Associated Press|CBS News 2026-01-03

    Photo Credit: Valter Campanato/ABr (Agência Brasil), CC BY 3.0 BR, via Wikimedia Commons

  • Russia Reaffirms Backing for Maduro as US Pressure Squeezes Venezuelan Oil Flows

    Russia Reaffirms Backing for Maduro as US Pressure Squeezes Venezuelan Oil Flows

    Photo Credit: NDTV (AFP)
    2025-12-23

    As reported by NDTV (AFP) Venezuela says Russia reaffirmed full support as the US increases pressure around sanctioned oil shipments.

    The episode is unfolding amid tougher enforcement against sanctioned movements, raising the risk of rerouting, discounts, and higher logistics costs.

    For markets, the main risk is disruption: fewer willing buyers, elevated compliance costs, and more volatile shipping behaviour.

    NDTV (AFP) quoted Venezuela’s account that Lavrov “reaffirmed its full support…”. Associated Press reported escalating US warnings, quoting Trump’s language about Maduro who “plays tough”.

    Echotitbits take: When sanctions enforcement tightens, shipping risk premiums rise and crude flows get noisier. Watch for shifts in buyer behaviour, insurance constraints, and whether alternative routing expands.

    Source: NDTV (AFP) — December 23, 2025 (https://www.ndtv.com/world-news/venezuela-says-russia-expressed-full-support-against-us-hostilities-9882362)
    NDTV (AFP) 2025-12-23