Venezuela

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Re: Venezuela

Post by blindpig » Wed Dec 17, 2025 2:49 pm

Venezuela: Casting off Illusions, Preparing for Struggle
December 13, 2025

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A massive protest in Venezuela. Photo: Black Agenda Report.

By Afro-Venezuelan Organizations Network – Dec 10, 2025

Drawing on a history of resistance, Afro-Venezuelan organizations are mobilizing their communities to meet the threat of military action by the Trump administration and calling on the people of the U.S. to act on behalf of human rights.

The Afro-Venezuelan Organizations Network (ROA) and the Regional Articulation of Afrodescendants of Latin America and the Caribbean (ARAAC), Afrodescendant organizations born from anti-imperialist social change processes and anti-neocolonial struggles at the dawn of the twenty-first century, carry the dignity and sovereignty that our African Ancestors entrusted to us as a living imprint of the self-determination of peoples.

Latin America and the Caribbean have suffered, throughout the nineteenth, twentieth, and twenty-first centuries, invasions, territorial dispossession, and targeted assassinations of Latin American and Afrodescendant leaders. The historical record confirms this across nearly all the countries of Our America (Abya Yala), from the seizure of Puerto Rico, Panama, and several Caribbean islands, to the tragic invasions of Nicaragua, El Salvador, Honduras, the Dominican Republic, and Grenada, among many others.

The current president of the United States, Donald Trump, attempted through multiple avenues to invade Venezuela. He relied on internal civilian and military enemies through Operation Gedeón, as well as mercenaries neutralized by the heroic Afrodescendant community of Chuao (Aragua State). With military and paramilitary support from Colombian-Venezuelan sectors and the backing of former presidents Duque and Uribe, he attempted to provoke an invasion. Trump sought to undermine the legitimacy of our government by imposing an illegitimate president, a puppet named Juan Guaidó. He attempted to delegitimize Venezuela internationally by creating in 2017 a group of countries led by delinquent presidents, known as the Lima Group (Argentina, Brazil, Canada, Chile, Costa Rica, Guatemala, Honduras, Colombia, Paraguay, Peru). They appointed parallel ambassadors, imposed more than a thousand coercive measures that remain in effect nearly a decade later, and even stole our embassies, including the one in Washington, D.C.

In the face of these covert, open, and shameless aggressions, our sovereign people have responded with dignity, just as our cimarrón ancestors did during the colonial period, the war of independence, and the contemporary struggles that followed. The majority of the Venezuelan population lives along the Caribbean coast, from Zulia State to our border with Trinidad and Tobago, whose president Kamla Persad-Bissessar openly defends pro-imperialist positions.

THE INVASION ATTEMPT BY MR. TRUMP AND HIS ALLIES
The resident of the White House, Mr. Trump, has launched a second campaign aimed at invading our country, obsessed with seizing our oil reserves, the largest in the world, along with our gas, gold, and rare earth minerals. His motivation stems from the imminent depletion of U.S. reserves within five years and the decline of rare earth minerals necessary to sustain emerging technologies, including artificial intelligence.

The deployment of United States military forces only a few kilometers from our coastline, the killing of eighty fishermen under the pretext of drug trafficking, the violation of our airspace with threats against commercial flights, the illegal sale of the oil company CITGO, and more than 1,100 coercive measures reveal a multifaceted attack. This aggression could lead to the outbreak of a third world war, with the Caribbean and Latin America as its stage. At the center of this racist and white supremacist hatred stands Secretary of State Marco Rubio, an ultraright Cuban-American figure who has made it his mission to destroy the region’s progressive governments and act as a mercenary for ExxonMobil.

In light of this situation, we call upon the noble people of the United States to halt these aggressions. We also call on sovereign governments in the Caribbean and Latin America to stop the attacks led by Donald Trump and his mafia. We call on Afrodescendant peoples, communities, and social movements to mobilize in solidarity with our people, to denounce the false U.S. narrative of a war on drug trafficking, and to stop the march toward war.

We also call upon our Afro-Venezuelan people to defend our sovereignty and independence, and to uphold our right to self-determination as a nation. We urge our people to prepare for resistance and participate actively in a prolonged popular struggle for the defense of our homeland.

Caracas, December 4, 2025
Leadership of the Afro-Venezuelan Organizations Network
Coordination of the Regional Articulation of Afrodescendants of the Americas and the Caribbean


https://orinocotribune.com/venezuela-ca ... -struggle/

Venezuela Condemns US Piracy Before UN as Killings Resume; US Debate Heats Up, and Trinidad Lends Airports to US Military Operations
December 17, 2025

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USS Gravely, a US Navy warship, docked in Trinidad and Tobago for four days in October, within striking distance of Venezuela. Photo: Martin Bernetti/AFP/file photo.

Caracas (OrinocoTribune.com)—Venezuelan Foreign Minister Yván Gil reported Tuesday that his nation delivered a letter to the United Nations Security Council repudiating the “serious use of force, abduction, and piracy” by the United States.

The letter, presented by Venezuela’s ambassador to the UN, Samuel Moncada, to Security Council President Samuel Z’bogar of Slovenia, concerns the Dec. 10, 2025, incident in international waters of the Caribbean wherein US forces targeted a private oil tanker engaged in legitimate trade while it transported Venezuelan oil. The Venezuelan crew members were abducted and remain missing.

“Venezuela will continue to exercise its sovereign and inalienable right to legitimately trade its resources and demand that no legal operation be subjected to theft, seizure, or acts of piracy, regardless of its origin,” Minister Gil stated.

Venezuela claims the US action deserves the Security Council’s attention, as it involves the use of force in international waters and the disappearance of civilians and sets a dangerous precedent for regional security.

More US executions
A few hours earlier, on Monday night, the US Southern Command (SOUTHCOM) reported new extrajudicial killings and strikes against three small boats allegedly operated by “designated terrorist organizations in international waters.” As usual, the US did not deign to provide any evidence of its accusations or any detailed information. The announcement was made via a social media post by the US military.

The post stated that the strikes killed eight people—three on the first boat, two on the second and three on the third—in the Eastern Pacific. Media reports claim that the extrajudicial executions occurred off the coast of Ecuador.

According to a detailed count by Orinoco Tribune, the US has now assassinated 95 civilians in this murderous campaign. Public records show that 48 (51%) were killed in Caribbean waters and 47 (49%) in Eastern Pacific waters. The US has murdered—at the very least—civilians of Venezuela, Trinidad, and Colombia, and one Ecuadorian survivor has been reported. Analysts claim that nationals of other countries are certainly among the victims.

On Tuesday, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Secretary of War Pete Hegseth appeared before the US Senate to answer questions about SOUTHCOM’s controversial operation, reflecting a heated internal debate over its nature and legality and about the opacity of information provided to legislators.

In statements after the briefing, Rubio remained defiant, claiming that the operation would “remain ongoing.” Mainstream media reported that top US officials did not provide an unedited video of the September 2 strike as demanded by many legislators and the public.

US Democratic Senator Chris Murphy told press after the briefing that “there is no legal or national security justification for what they are doing. Not even close.” He added that Rubio and Hegseth acknowledged that no fentanyl comes to the US from Venezuela and that the relatively small amounts of cocaine that may be trafficked through Venezuela are destined for Europe and not the US.

US Senator Joaquin Castro, commenting on the briefing, reiterated that despite White House attempts to avoid seeking approval for a land operation against Venezuela, US Congress will demand it. He noted that a War Powers Resolution will be discussed next week to block President Donald Trump’s hostilities against Venezuela.

Despite the US claims of a “war on drugs,” most analysts agree that Washington’s true intention is to overthrow the democratically elected president of Venezuela, Nicolás Maduro, and install a government that is compliant with US demands.

Trinidad reaffirms subservient role
Also on Monday, the government of Trinidad and Tobago announced that it will allow US military aircraft to transit through its Piarco and Arthur NR Robinson airports in the coming weeks, referring to the actions as bilateral security cooperation of a “logistical nature.”

According to Trinidad and Tobago’s Foreign Ministry, the transits will facilitate resupply and routine personnel rotations and do not change the country’s defense policy.

However, last week, revelations about Trinidad and Tobago’s role in aiding the US to seize a Venezuelan oil tanker led to a public outcry. Domestic analysts and politicians noted that newly installed US radars were used in Washington’s seizure of the oil tanker Skipper, which was carrying 1.9 million barrels of Venezuelan oil.

The government of Trinidad and Tobago reiterated that the cooperation with the US fulfills the commitment by Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar to strengthen national security. However, since taking office, she has launched anti-Venezuelan tirades against Venezuelan authorities and migrants.

Trinidad and Tobago’s authorities have lent diplomatic and operational support to the US killing spree in the region despite the fact that innocent Trinidadian fishers were among the victims of the US strikes. In a controversial “double-tap” strike of September 2, apparent survivors of a first strike were then subsequently killed by a second round of US strikes. The victims were nationals of Trinidad and Tobago.

The Trinidadian government issued a rather hollow statement in an attempt to garner support for what have been referred to as actions that are submissive to the US crimes and warmongering in the region. In an attempt to justify its actions, the government claimed that “the United States Embassy in Trinidad and Tobago has also supported national development through educational initiatives, including school equipment donations and infrastructure enhancement projects.”

Internal political tension in the small Caribbean country has reached unprecedented levels as a result of these actions. Meanwhile, Venezuela has retaliated by suspending the multi-million-dollar Dragon Field project a few weeks ago and, on Monday, halting all natural gas supply to the Trinidad and Tobago.

https://orinocotribune.com/venezuela-co ... perations/
"There is great chaos under heaven; the situation is excellent."

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Re: Venezuela

Post by blindpig » Thu Dec 18, 2025 6:55 pm

Trump Announces Full Naval Blockade of Venezuela's "Sanctioned" Oil Exports
Simplicius
Dec 18, 2025

It appears the Trump administration is finally preparing to escalate the Venezuelan conflict once and for all, after Trump himself had told reporters that ‘ground strikes’ would begin ‘soon’ on Venezuelan soil. Trump then jumped the shark with his announcement of a full-scale naval blockade of Venezuela’s oil tankers in the most pompous way befitting his usual deportment:

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This was after US Special Forces had already seized an oil tanker off the coast of Venezuela just last week, allegedly for carrying “sanctioned” Venezuelan oil for export. A convoluted backstory was concocted about how the tanker was tied to Venezuela’s “shadow fleet” with links to Hezbollah and Iran—if you can believe the absurdity: (Video at link.)

On 10 December 2025, the United States seized the oil tanker Skipper in the Caribbean Sea off the coast of Venezuela. Skipper had been sanctioned by the United States Department of the Treasury in 2022 for alleged involvement in an oil trafficking shadow fleet of vessels involving the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps and Hezbollah.

Recently, reporters even asked Trump whether the blockade was more about “drug trafficking” or actually “oil”, with Trump implying that it’s about all of those things combined and more, essentially giving up the imperialist plot in one fell swoop. (Video at link.)

Now, as seen in the earlier written screed, Trump has doubled down on his latest narrative motif, accusing Venezuela of “stealing” US’s oil: (Video at link.)

Top Trump advisor and WH Deputy Chief of Staff for Policy Stephen Miller piggybacked the escalatory rhetoric:

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Here a Russian analytical channel provided the real scoop on this so-called stolen oil:

What “stolen” oil is Trump talking about?

On February 28, 2007, Hugo Chavez, the then-president of Venezuela, signed a law on the nationalization of oil fields.

All foreign companies operating in the country were offered to join joint ventures, in which at least 60% of the shares would belong to the state-owned company PDVSA.

The presidential decree affected American companies Chevron Corp., ConocoPhillips, Exxon Mobil Corp., British BP, French Total SA, and Norwegian Statoil ASA, which lost control over oil fields being developed in the Orinoco River basin.

At that time, foreign investors retained some autonomy only in the oil fields of the Orinoco oil belt, where they had played a leading role before the law was signed. In the 1990s, the Venezuelan government allowed foreign players into Orinoco because the fields there were considered unpromising and required large capital investments.

However, gradually, leading foreign companies increased oil production in Orinoco to 600 thousand barrels per day. From the very beginning, foreign players carried out exploration, production, and costly primary processing of crude oil in the Orinoco fields jointly with PDVSA.

According to some data, the amount of investments of the aforementioned companies in the subsequently nationalized assets amounted to at least 17 billion dollars.

Some of the claims of foreign oil companies were later satisfied by the Venezuelan authorities through direct monetary compensation.

But not all of them, and the issue is still not fully resolved: some firms are still demanding compensation and have cases in foreign arbitration bodies.

#Венесуэла

Military Informant


As an aside, an oil tanker named Hyperion reportedly belonging to Russia’s own so-called “shadow fleet” has been approaching Venezuela, with many tensely awaiting US’s actions as a litmus test of how much of a ballsy ‘hardball’ style of confrontation US will dare against Russia directly:

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It’s interesting that the Russian tanker “Hyperion” has entered the Carribbean waters heading towards Jose Terminal, Venezuela.

The ship is under US ‘OFAC’ sanctions....meaning it’s part of the so called “Shadow Fleet”

Independent maritime tracking sources have reported that sanctioned Russian tankers are continuing to operate to Venezuelan terminals such as Jose Terminal, even while Washington tries to interdict them. -


It has also been reported that Russian tankers transiting the Baltic Sea have now begun sprouting armed sentries, which have spurred ‘whispers’ about the precise ‘nature’ of these security details:

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A strange situation is being reported in the Baltic Sea. The Swedish Navy reports that armed men in military uniforms were spotted on board Russian oil tankers of the “shadow fleet” in the Baltic Sea.

The shadow fleet of the Russian Federation is being protected by military personnel, stated the head of the operational command of the Swedish Navy, Marco Petkovic, on air of the Swedish TV channel SVT Nyheter.

According to him, military personnel in uniform and armed men - presumably employees of private security companies - were spotted on Russian oil tankers operating in circumvention of Western sanctions.


One of the winking whispers, thematically, from a top Wagner-affiliated channel:

The private security guards protecting tankers from pirates are suspiciously young, slim, and adept at handling weapons.

Now, there are new rules for the quest involving the “shadow fleet”, including the use of anti-tank guided missiles and Strela missile systems.


Well, that’ll give the peg-legged Baltic buccaneers something to chew on and shiver their timbers over.

Russia’s Lavrov rightly highlighted the Europeans turning a willfully blind eye to the US’s illegal Caribbean piracy in order to appease Trump—maybe a kind of one-eyed pirate’s code. From RT: (Video at link.)

Europe is silent on US attacks in the Caribbean to gain Trump’s favor over their Ukraine peace plan proposals — Lavrov

Russia is ‘concerned’ with US Navy striking civilian boats and a probable land op

‘Almost all of the countries find it unacceptable apart from the Europeans’


It’s just more of that famous Ruse Based Ordure’s doppelmoral.

And speaking of the West’s moral and ethical standards:

House REJECTS Venezuela war powers resolution by two votes

Democrat-pushed bill would have blocked Trump from taking military action against Maduro

One less obstacle for Trump


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(More, Ukraine)

https://simplicius76.substack.com/p/tru ... l-blockade
"There is great chaos under heaven; the situation is excellent."

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Re: Venezuela

Post by blindpig » Fri Dec 19, 2025 3:39 pm

Trump openly admits his intentions regarding Venezuela
Petromaxima pressure

Franco Vielma

December 17, 2025 , 8:31 pm .

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US President Donald Trump has now focused on speaking openly about US oil interests in Venezuela. (Photo: CNN)

The US regime change operation against Caracas has reached a new peak of tension following President Donald Trump's declaration ordering a "total and complete blockade" on all sanctioned oil tankers entering or leaving Venezuela.

The measure, announced Tuesday on the Truth Social network, intensifies pressure on the Venezuelan economy and has been described by Venezuela as a "reckless and serious threat" that violates international law.

Trump justified the decision by accusing the "illegitimate Maduro regime" of using "stolen" oil to finance "narco-terrorism, human trafficking, murder and kidnapping" on U.S. soil.

Trump asserted that Venezuela is "completely surrounded" by the largest armada ever assembled in South American history, and warned that the military deployment would be incremental, and "will continue to grow," he said, until Caracas "immediately returns" to the United States the oil, land, and other assets that he claims were illegally expropriated.

Trump's declaration of intent and the partial air and naval blockade he has imposed on Venezuela is a turning point in the new "maximum pressure" policy.

Speaking of oil, White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller, one of Trump's closest advisors, backed up these claims by declaring that "American sweat, ingenuity, and labor created the oil industry in Venezuela."

Miller described the nationalization processes of the sector in 1976 and 2007 as "the largest recorded theft of American wealth and property," adding that those expropriated assets have been used to "finance terrorism and flood the streets of the United States with assassins, mercenaries, and drugs."

The Venezuelan government's response was immediate and clear. The Foreign Ministry issued a statement rejecting Trump's "grotesque threat," accusing him of attempting to impose an "irrational naval military blockade" with the aim of stealing the country's wealth.

Caracas announced that it will denounce the measure before the United Nations (UN) as a "serious violation of international law, free trade and free navigation."

President Nicolás Maduro, in conversation with UN Secretary-General António Guterres, described the statements by Trump and Miller as "expressions of an open colonial character" and demanded their rejection by the multilateral system.

Meanwhile, Venezuelan Defense Minister Vladimir Padrino López called Trump's words "delusional" and said they revealed intentions to "force a regime change and grossly seize oil."

This escalation comes amid a massive US military deployment in the Caribbean and the recent seizure of a foreign oil tanker carrying Venezuelan crude.

Although Washington insists that its campaign focuses on the fight against drugs and irregular migration, explicit references to oil by Trump and Miller have fueled Venezuelan arguments that the real objective is control of the world's largest proven crude oil reserves and the largest natural gas reserve in the Western Hemisphere.

CHANGE OF FOCUS
The change in focus in Washington's strategy—from the fallacious argument of drugs to the clear objective issue of the amount of oil in Venezuela—suggests that military pressure alone has not achieved the objectives of institutional breakdown within the Venezuelan government.

The intensification of pressure against Venezuela, now on a scale of maximum intimidation, has acquired a physical dimension.

The United States—in the old English imperial style—has given its own armed forces a license to engage in piracy in the Caribbean, as happened with the recent theft of an oil tanker.

With a partial air and naval blockade underway, the Trump administration is outlining its strategy on Venezuelan supply chains, raw materials, and energy, shifting the focus of its pressure and making its intentions clear.

Trump seems to dismiss criticism in his country about the possibility of a new " oil war ." But the president still hasn't focused his rhetoric, at least not openly, on seeking regime change in Venezuela, as he mentioned on several occasions between 2017 and 2019 during his first term.

The current situation suggests a position of strength in which Trump hopes to achieve an absolute repositioning of the United States over Venezuelan resources, through the deposition of Chavismo and the imposition of a puppet government for Washington.

But the demand for an "immediate return" of alleged US lands and oil resources in Venezuela clashes with reality for objective reasons.

Firstly, there has been no regime change in Venezuela and, secondly, any immediate resizing of the oil relationship between the two countries would have to go through the current Venezuelan government.

Its immense military maneuver against Venezuela has barely resulted in the execution of boatmen, the suspension of commercial flights, and the acquisition of a tanker loaded with 1.9 million barrels of Merey crude.

But in political terms, Trump's benefit has been nil.

Trump's strategy has been, in theory, "anti-drug" and "anti-immigrant".

On both issues, he proclaimed his "achievements," stating that drug trafficking by sea had been reduced by an unprecedented, if not unbelievable, 94% . He also claimed to have rescued "thousands and thousands" of Venezuelans "released from prisons and mental institutions" from the United States. Essentially, he stated that he had consolidated his objectives.

Now, the justification for their immense military presence in the Caribbean is taking shape as a deterrent mechanism for the "immediate return" of oil assets. Robbery and extortion.

On the afternoon of Wednesday, December 17, Trump told reporters that Venezuela had supposedly taken away the United States' "energy rights": "They took all our oil not that long ago. They took it illegally. We want it back," he said.

In this sense, it is necessary to point out the possibility that Washington is probably looking for a way out of the current momentum of its strategy, giving it a new form, as a fight in favor of American interests, or in favor of American oil companies that withdrew from Venezuela after the nationalization process of 2007, specifically ExxonMobil and Conoco Phillips.

This scenario opens up possibilities – minuscule today, but possibilities nonetheless – for the United States to try to exert pressure in order to achieve the return of certain US operations in Venezuela.

From his position, it would be better to pursue an agreement with the Venezuelan government based on "force", rather than having it be the result of a practical negotiation between two governments that recognize each other.

The other possible explanation for this change in discourse focus could be the search for support in other sectors and spectra of US politics to openly wage a war for oil in Venezuela.

Thus, the picture becomes clearer and the Venezuelan position is reaffirmed. To paraphrase Bill Clinton and James Carville, it's the oil, stupid.

https://misionverdad.com/venezuela/petromaxima-presion

Google Translator

******

Shining a Light on How Exxon Mobil Indirectly Funds Think Tank “Experts” Calling for Regime-Change War in Venezuela
Posted on December 19, 2025 by Nick Corbishley

When Trump talks about Venezuela stealing US oil, he’s almost certainly talking about Exxon Mobil’s oil.

The US’ seizure last Wednesday of an Iranian oil tanker carrying Venezuelan oil was definitive confirmation that the US’ war of aggression in Venezuela has nothing to do with drug cartels and everything to do with oil majors.

Venezuela has the largest proven reserves of heavy crude in the world, with an estimated 303 billion barrels, as well as the largest reserves of light crude oil in the Western Hemisphere. But it’s not just that Venezuela is home to the largest oil reserves on the planet, it’s that those reserves are sitting “right next door” to the US, as Trump himself said in 2023:

Donald Trump admitted in 2023 that, in his first term as US president, he tried to overthrow Venezuela's government and pillage its oil:

"We would have taken [Venezuela] over. We would have gotten all that oil. It would have been right next door".pic.twitter.com/hrygJQQU7B

— Ben Norton (@BenjaminNorton) October 11, 2025


President Trump’s obsession with seizing other countries’ oil goes back a ways, to even before he entered politics. Here he is explaining in 2011 why the US should seize half or more of Libya’s oil after murdering its leader, Muammar Muhammad Abu Minyar al-Gaddafi, and plunging what was arguably the richest country in Africa (on a per-capita basis) into total chaos.

For those who believe the US-backed coup in Venezuela is about helping the people, here's Trump in 2011 explaining how regime change should be used to steal natural resources.

NOTE: 🇻🇪Venezuela has the biggest oil reserves in the world pic.twitter.com/3lyfd979Jd

— The Resonance (@Partisan_12) December 1, 2025


The money quote: “you know the old days, when you had a war, it was ‘to the victor the spoils.'”

As has been patently clear since the very beginning, and was just reaffirmed by Democrat Senator Chris Murphy, Trump’s military strikes against boats in the Caribbean and Eastern Pacific are entirely devoid of legal or national security justifications. Yet they continue.

I just came out of the briefing with Sec. Rubio and Sec. Hegseth on the military strikes in the Caribbean and Eastern Pacific. Here's what I learned.

Bottom line: there is no legal or national security justification for what they're doing. Not even close. pic.twitter.com/8gUU0sHKwu
— Chris Murphy 🟧 (@ChrisMurphyCT) December 16, 2025


Meanwhile, Julian Assange has filed a criminal complaint against the Nobel Foundation for allowing its peace prize to serve as an instrument of war. The Wikileaks founder alleges that giving the 2025 edition award to Maria Corina Machado constitutes misappropriation of funds and facilitation of war crimes.

JULIAN ASSANGE FILES CRIMINAL COMPLAINT AGAINST NOBEL FOUNDATION OVER “INSTRUMENT OF WAR” PEACE PRIZE

WikiLeaks Founder Alleges 2025 Award to María Corina Machado Constitutes Misappropriation, Facilitation of War Crimes Under Swedish Law, Seeks Freeze of 11 million SEK ($1.18…
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— WikiLeaks (@wikileaks) December 17, 2025


Yet even as the holes in the whole war narrative grow larger, mainly because of Trump’s own conflicting statements, the war drums grow louder.

Now, Trump has said the quietest part out loud: his government is imposing a total siege on Venezuelan oil because the US wants “ITS” oil back from under Venezuela’s soil — the same oil that the late Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez dared to take back sovereign control of from foreign companies in 2005 (more on that shortly).

Trump’s blockade of all sanctioned tankers carrying Venezuelan oil does not affect Chevron’s daily shipments, however. From the Wall Street Journal:

President Trump on Tuesday ordered a complete blockade of all sanctioned oil tankers going into and out of Venezuela, escalating his administration’s pressure campaign against strongman Nicolás Maduro.

For Chevron, though, it remains business as usual. The company is still sending oil tankers to the U.S. Gulf Coast, its operations unimpeded thus far by rising tension between Trump and Maduro.

As Sony Thăng points out in the Tweet below, Trump’s candid declaration of US ownership of Venezuela’s is the “most honest colonial confession of the 21st century… you are saying, out loud, what empire has always believed in private: what lies under Venezuelan oil belongs to Washington.

Donald, you just wrote the most honest colonial confession of the 21st century.

When you say Venezuela must "return" its oil, land, and assets to the United States, you are not talking about law.

You are talking about ownership.

You are saying, out loud, what empire has always…
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— Sony Thăng (@nxt888) December 17, 2025


Coming Full Circle

There are, of course, a plethora of other reasons for the US’ aggressive moves against Venezuela that we’ve discussed before, including the country’s large deposits of gold, whose value and role as a monetary metal is growing, bauxite, coltan, which is needed for batteries, and freshwater. As Maria Corina Machado has made clear, a post Maduro-regime will also open up Venezuela’s economy to rampant privatisation and liberalisation.

As we’ve argued from the beginning, this is all part of a wider retrenchment of US imperial policy to its so-called “backyard”, and Venezuela is one of a number of countries in the region led by more sovereign-minded governments (Cuba, Nicaragua, Colombia, Honduras…) that Washington would love to topple.

Caracas’ close ties with Russia, China, Iran and Cuba no doubt play a part as well, as does its long-standing opposition to Israel’s treatment of Palestine. The US doesn’t just covet Latin America’s strategic resources for itself but wants to “box out” its rivals, China and Russia, from acquiring them, as former SOUTHCOM commander Laura Richardson explained during her 2023 interview with the Atlantic Council.

Rare earth elements, lithium, oil, light sweet crude, copper, gold, the Amazon, and fresh water.

This is what the United States wants to plunder from Latin America and the Caribbean. pic.twitter.com/Q9Rh5XP0jB

— Kawsachun News (@KawsachunNews) January 21, 2023


There’s also, of course, the small matter of the Epstein scandal, from which the Trump administration desperately needs to distract its voter base. And what better distraction than a new war, especially given the tens, perhaps even hundreds, of billions of dollars of new business it will create for the MIC?

But the main motive, I believe, is the oil — in part to sustain US refineries, as El País reported (in English) yesterday. In the clip below, the British journalist Ed Conway breaks down why US refineries need Venezuela’s particular brand of heavy crude oil:

Venezuela has the world largest oil reserves, at 20%. It’s oil is heavy thick crude.

The U.S. needs heavy crude.

This detailed video explains why the U.S. is stealing Venezuela crude. It’s not about drugs. It’s about oil pic.twitter.com/amm5s87TTp

— mmatigari (@matigary) December 12, 2025


And we’ve now come full circle, with Trump and members of his inner circle openly admitting that its war of aggression against Venezuela is really about oil.

Note how the US government's propaganda narrative has changed:

First the Trump admin claimed it was waging war on Venezuela because of drugs — a blatant lie (the US supports the worst drug traffickers in Latin America).

Now they admit that this is actually because Venezuela… https://t.co/pSoGQi3Ivk

— Ben Norton (@BenjaminNorton) December 18, 2025


A fitting depiction of what is happening:

Image

— mike luckovich (@mluckovichajc) December 17, 2025


Of course, Trump’s claim that the Maduro government has stolen US-owned oil, land and other assets constitutes an extremely egregious case of projection. It is, after all, the US, mainly during Trump’s two presidencies, that has been stealing all kinds of Venezuelan assets, from the country’s gold reserves to the oil tanker seized in the Caribbean last week, to the president’s official plane, to Venezuelan oil company Citgo.

Trump’s words are even causing blushes among members of the Machado opposition, as Max Blumenthal told Judge Napolitano on Judging Freedom. After all, how can they sell their already deeply unpopular regime change story back home when Trump is telling the world that a Maduro-free Venezuela will essentially belong to the US — lock, stock and, most importantly, barrel?

The US war on Venezuela is as unpopular in Venezuela as it is in the US

An overwhelming majority of Venezuelans oppose US military intervention in their country and US sanctions, according to independent polling firm Datanalysis

More proof the war’s a Florida Gusano project pic.twitter.com/JWsMcYUVFa

— Max Blumenthal (@MaxBlumenthal) December 18, 2025


One company in particular that stands to benefit from the US’ latest regime change operation is Exxon Mobil. An recent article by the Argentine geopolitical analyst Bruno Sgarzini shines a light on how the company is helping to fund influential think tank “experts” who are pushing for a regime-change war against Venezuela (machine translated):

“The Brookings Institute and the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) are the two major think tanks we work with and actively participate in,” said Keith McCoy, a lobbyist for Exxon Mobil in 2019. What McCoy didn’t know is that the conversation was being recorded and that the person he was speaking to, supposedly a representative of an energy investment company, was actually a climate activist. The lobbyist had unwittingly confessed that he relied on the academic reports of both think tanks to influence congressmen, and the media, against any anti-fossil fuel legislation.

The academics, in charge of presenting their reports in Congress, and the board of both institutions, of course, denied any connection to the oil company. But the data speaks for itself; Exxon Mobil has contributed 12 million dollars to the CSIS that have flowed towards its program of “Energy Security and Climate Change” and others related to energy initiatives in the “Americas and Africa”, two regions where the oil company has deep interests.

It also contributed, according to records, $5 million to the construction of the institute’s new headquarters. Its executive board also includes Exxon’s current CEO, Darren W. Woods, who replaced the company’s former boss, Rex Tillerson, Trump’s former secretary of state during his first administration…

The positions of the CSIS are usually conveyed through reports whose message is then reinforced with the appearance of the authors on mainstream media, such as CNN, Fox News, NBC and CBS, or opinion columns in newspapers such as The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, and magazines specializing in international issues such as Foreign Policy.

[They also feature prominently] in congressional hearings, which gives these experts the possibility of influencing specific issues that benefit CSIS donors, such as Exxon Mobil. Brooke Williams, a professor of journalism at Boston University, wrote [in the New York Times]:

“Think tanks, which position themselves as ‘universities without students,’ have power in government policy debates because they are seen as researchers independent of moneyed interests. But in the chase for funds, think tanks are pushing agendas important to corporate donors, at times blurring the line between researchers and lobbyists. And they are doing so while reaping the benefits of their tax-exempt status, sometimes without disclosing their connections to corporate interests.”

According to CSIS, it usually has regular meetings with representatives of its donors to discuss the issues they are dealing with.

A Guerrilla Lobby

The fact that a think tank like CSIS is serving the interests of one of its biggest corporate donors is hardly news to NC readers. Even the New York Times reported in 2016 on how think tanks are “amplifying Corporate America’s influence”. This is, you could argue, their raison d’etre.

What may be news is that since Trump began deploying a large chunk of the US’ naval fleet to the Caribbean in early September, the CSIS has launched a guerrilla lobby of sorts in favour of removing Chavismo from power. That this perfectly aligns with the interests of one of its main donors, Exxon Mobil, is probably no coincidence, writes Sgarzini:

In an article in Foreign Policy, CSIS’ director for Latin America, Ryan C. Berg, has spoken in favor of “overthrowing Maduro without troops on the ground.” He has also questioned the anti-war visions of the MAGA world held by journalist Tucker Carlson and former Trump strategist Steve Bannon.

“Distinct from a boots-on-the-ground invasion of Venezuela aimed at overthrowing Maduro, a regime collapse would entail a more limited campaign of U.S. strikes on targets at the heart of the Maduro regime’s state-crime nexus, implicating the country’s armed forces and its political elites. These strikes would leverage precision-guided munitions and U.S. standoff weapons fired from a safe distance, possibly catalyzing movement internally to force Maduro’s exit—all without putting U.S. personnel at risk as with a “regime change” strategy.”

The promotion of this thesis… was reinforced by technical-military reports by Mark Cancian, a former U.S. colonel who participated in the 2003 invasion of Iraq, who compares the firepower being deployed [in the Caribbean] with other military campaigns such as NATO’s in Libya and Yugoslavia.

“The forces currently compromised are insufficient for an amphibious landing or ground invasion. This would require at least 50,000 soldiers, and war strategists would probably want a much larger number—perhaps 150,000—to achieve the overwhelming force they desire. However, the air and naval resources accumulated over the past three months have provided enough firepower to the Caribbean to launch air and missile strikes against Venezuela…”

These reports, in practice, function as information weapons to maintain the perception of an “imminent attack” and thereby influence decision-making.

CSIS has been at this a long time. During the first year of Juan Guaidó’s clown “presidency”, in 2019, it organised a meeting to evaluate the use of military force in Venezuela. Guest speakers included the former head of Southern Command, Kurt Tidd; Roger Noriega, former US undersecretary for Latin America and one of the architects of the Iran-Contra scandal; and William Brownfield, former US ambassador to Caracas.

During the Biden administration, Berg was a vociferous critic of the oil licenses granted to Chevron, Exxon Mobil’s biggest rival. On Trump’s return in January, Berg co-wrote a report with Juan Ignacio Hernández, Juan Guaido’s former special prosecutor, titled “Ending Maduro’s Oil Lifeline”. The report argued for the reapplication of sanctions as a tool of pressure, and the revocation of the current oil licenses that allow Western companies to partner with PDVSA.

The report’s presentation event even featured the participation of María Corina Machado. From 2023 to 2025, the opposition leader has participated in different CSIS events moderated by Berg, at which she reiterated her refusal to negotiate with Maduro and called for Washington to apply tougher measures against Venezuela.

At the beginning of Trump’s second term, it was not clear which way his government would lean on the question of Venezuela. As readers may recall, Trump even dispatched his special mission envoy, Richard Grenell, to Caracas to discuss with Maduro the return of migrants currently in the US. As a gesture of good will, Caracas released half a dozen US citizens held in Venezuelan prisons who were accused of being mercenaries and plotting terrorist attacks on Mexican soil.

As we noted at the time, this was clearly an attempt by the US to reestablish relations with Venezuela after over a decade of escalating sanctions and multiple failed regime change operations against the country:

After Maduro and Grenell closed the deal, the prisoners were taken to the airport, blindfolded, hooded and handcuffed. No financial or other concessions were promised to Maduro, other than the prospect of improving relations with the US, Grenell said.

The only reward for Maduro was my presence: the first senior US official to visit the country in years , Grenell said. It was a great gift for him to receive a visit from an envoy of President Trump.

While these words may ring of imperial hubris and arrogance, the truth is that Maduro seemed the picture of contentment in the meeting. And who could blame him? Just a month [earlier], all the talk was of yet another regime change operation, led this time by Venezuela’s CIA-sponsored “Iron Lady”, Marìa Corrina Machado. Biden had just given the opposition’s official candidate, Edmundo González, the red carpet treatment at the White House, pronouncing him as “president elect” of Venezuela just days before Maduro’s inauguration for a third term.

Richard Grenell’s strategy may have sought to offer Venezuela economic respite by extending the sanctions relief enacted by the Biden administration in 2023, since which time Venezuela has been one of the fastest growing economies in Latin America. However, all of the White House’s decisions since the summer of 2025 point in the opposite direction.

Clearly, the US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, his Miami-based backers, neocons like Elliot Abrams and all the other belligerents, including CSIS, have gained the upper hand.

However, if Trump does declare war against Venezuela, it could be hugely disruptive for US oil companies operating in Venezuela, like Chevron, and the huge refineries that process Venezuela’s heavy crude on the US’ Gulf coast — especially if, as many have warned, the spiral of violence unleashed in Venezuela becomes intractable.

But this wouldn’t be a problem for Exxon Mobil since it hasn’t had operations in Venezuela since 2007.

Exxon’s Long History in Venezuela

Exxon has a long, rich history in Venezuela dating back over a century. Its predecessor, Standard Oil, was one of the first companies to explore for oil in the South American country in the 1910s. Between the 1930s and the first decade of this century, Exxon was a dominant player in Venezuela through its 95% control of the Creole Petroleum Corporation — so much so that the country became known as the “ranchito de los Rockefeller“.

But that all came to a halt in 2005, when Hugo Chávez ordered all existing “operating agreements” with foreign oil companies to be converted into joint ventures in which the state oil company, Petróleos de Venezuela (PDVSA), held a mandatory majority stake (over 50% ownership and operational control). Exxon refused to sign while most other companies, including BP, Total and Chevron, took the deal.

In 2007, Exxon left Venezuela for good and began a long court battle against the Chavista government at the International Center for Settlement of Investment Disputes (CIADI). The US oil giant sought compensation of $18 billion, but after several appeals the courts sided with Venezuela and in 2014 the oil company was awarded only $1.6 billion in damages.

When Trump accuses Venezuela of stealing US oil, he is presumably referring primarily to Exxon’s oil.

But Exxon’s revenge came with the the discovery of oil off the coast of Essequibo, a sparsely populated 160,000 square-kilometre chunk of land in neighbouring Guyana. The ownership of Essequibo has been the subject of an ongoing territorial dispute between Guyana and Venezuela since the mid-19th century — a territorial dispute whose initial antagonist, readers will be shocked to learn, was the British Empire.

Exxon was one of the first companies to begin drilling for oil in the Essequibo’s disputed waters. As the Washington Post reported in 2017, it was the “perfect revenge” for Exxon’s then-CEO Rex Tillerson, whom Donald Trump would later go on to appoint as his secretary of state.

Rex Tillerson hadn’t been CEO of ExxonMobil very long when the late president Hugo Chavez made foreign oil companies in Venezuela an offer they couldn’t refuse. Give the government a bigger cut, or else.

Most of the companies took the deal. Tillerson refused.

Chavez responded in 2007 by nationalizing ExxonMobil’s considerable assets in the country, which the company valued at $10 billion. The losses were a big blow to Tillerson, who reportedly took the seizure as a personal affront.

Only Tillerson didn’t get mad, at least in public. He got even.

Flash forward to May 2015. Just five days after former military general David Granger was elected president of the South American nation of Guyana, unseating the country’s long-ruling leftist party, ExxonMobil made a big announcement.

In the deep blue waters120 miles off Guyana’s coast, the company scored a major oil discovery: as much as 1.4 billion barrels of high-quality crude. Tillerson told company shareholders the well, Liza-1, was the largest oil find anywhere in the world that year.

For tiny Guyana (population 800,000), the continent’s only English-speaking country and one of its poorest, it was a fortune-changing event, certain to mark a “before and after” in a country long isolated by language and geography.

There was just one problem with this undersea bonanza. Venezuela claimed the waters — and the hydrocarbons beneath them — as its own.

Clearly drilling in the disputed area was potentially a good business decision for ExxonMobil, not some sort of elaborate revenge scheme by its CEO.

But revenge had been served. Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, Chavez’s successor, was livid.

“There is a brutal campaign against Venezuela of lies, funded by ExxonMobil … which has great influence at the Pentagon,” Maduro declared, calling the dispute an attempt to corner Venezuela and precipitate “a high-intensity conflict.”

That high-intensity conflict is now closer than ever. But it needs to be packaged and sold to US lawmakers, media, members of the armed forces, and Trump’s war-weary MAGA base. And that is where CSIS’ “experts” come in. And they appear to be marketing this war on behalf of a company that has much to gain from a military intervention, and which bears the biggest grudge against Venezuela’s Bolivarian movement.

https://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2025/12 ... zuela.html

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Oil tankers anchored in Lake Maracaibo after loading crude oil at the Bajo Grande refinery port in Venezuela. (Photo: José Bula Urrutia/Gettyimages.ru/Orinoco Tribune)

Venezuela mounts full-state rejection to Trump’s blockade threat, gains International backing
Originally published: Orinoco Tribune on December 18, 2025 (more by Orinoco Tribune) | (Posted Dec 19, 2025)

In an escalation of the U.S. empire’s ongoing illegal sanctions on Venezuela, President Donald Trump has announced a “full blockade” of the sovereign nation and its oil tanker fleet. He claimed the measure would remain in place until Venezuela “returns all the oil, land, and other assets” he alleged were previously stolen from the U.S. The announcement ignited an immediate response from the Venezuelan government, followed by all state institutions and international allies.

“Venezuela is completely surrounded by the largest Armada ever assembled in the History of South America,” Trump wrote on social media this Tuesday, December 16, adding that “it will only get bigger, and the shock to them will be like nothing they have ever seen before.”

He did not specify what oil, land, or assets he claims were stolen, nor did he elaborate on the bizarre claims of the so-called “war on drugs” argument that has seemed to take a backseat in recent days; something that Caracas has consistently condemned as an aggression against its sovereignty and an attempt to seize its natural resources.

In his post online, the U.S. president attacked the Venezuelan government, labeling it an “illegitimate regime.” He accused it of using “oil from […] stolen fields to finance narcoterrorism, human trafficking, murder, and kidnapping,” refusing to provide any evidence for his fictitious claims. Venezuela has repeatedly proven that the nation has been robbed of billions of dollars in international bank accounts, two tons of gold seized by the Bank of England, and the CITGO Corporation. The oil retailer and refining corporation is owned by PDVSA and valued at more than $15 billion, with yearly revenue of about $4 billion.



Foreign terrorist organization designation
“For the theft of our assets, and for many other reasons, including terrorism, drug trafficking, and human trafficking,” continued Trump’s statement, “the Venezuelan regime has been designated a foreign terrorist organization. Therefore, today I am ordering a total and complete blockade of all sanctioned oil tankers entering and leaving Venezuela.”

The U.S. president also insisted on repeating other unfounded accusations, such as that Caracas supposedly sent “illegal immigrants and criminals” into the U.S. He stated the White House “will not allow criminals, terrorists or other countries to steal, threaten or harm” his country, nor allow “a hostile regime” to seize oil he claims to somehow be property of the U.S. colonial entity, despite the resources being located in Venezuelan territory and belonging to the Venezuelan people.

“We will not give up”
Earlier on Tuesday, Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro reiterated that, despite prolonged and multifaceted U.S. aggression, Venezuela will defeat “the oligarchy and imperialism under any circumstances.”

“For 25 weeks, Venezuela has been denouncing, confronting, and defeating a multidimensional campaign of aggression that ranges from psychological terrorism to the piracy that has plundered our oil, and which has multiple forms,” he stated in an address to Venezuelan workers. “What has Venezuela demonstrated? […] That Venezuela is a strong country, that it has real power. And we have demonstrated that we are prepared to continue our march. And, what’s more, that we are prepared to accelerate the march of a profound revolution that will give power to the people, completely and definitively.”

Citizens have consistently taken to the streets to display support for Venezuelan authorities and their rejection of U.S. imperialism, demonstrating their readiness to resist by any means, including through the use of force. On December 10, these protests included the mass condemnation of the seizure of a tanker carrying Venezuelan oil in the Caribbean Sea, an act denounced by Caracas that same day at the UN Security Council as an act of piracy.

Government communique
On Wednesday night, the Venezuelan government issued a statement in response to what many analysts consider a declaration of war by the U.S. empire, despite the U.S. president neglecting to request for the congressional approval mandated under U.S. law.

The statement reiterates Venezuela’s full sovereignty over its natural resources, the right to free navigation and free trade, as well as its adherence to the UN Charter. “[The US’s] true intention,” it adds, “which has been denounced by Venezuela and the people of the U.S. in large demonstrations, was always to appropriate the country’s oil, land, and minerals through gigantic campaigns of lies and manipulation.”

Below, you can read the full unofficial translation of the Venezuelan government’s statement:

A united Venezuela rejects Trump’s grotesque threat and will condemn it
On the night of December 16, 2025, the President of the United States, Donald Trump, violating International Law, free trade, and free navigation, has launched a reckless and serious threat against the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela.

On his social media, he assumes that Venezuela’s oil, land, and mineral wealth are his property. Consequently, he claims that Venezuela must hand over all its riches to him immediately. The President of the United States is attempting to impose a supposed naval and military blockade on Venezuela in an utterly irrational manner, with the aim of stealing the wealth that belongs to our nation.

Venezuela, in full exercise of the International Law that protects us, our Constitution, and the laws of the Republic, reaffirms its sovereignty over all its natural resources, as well as its right to free navigation and free trade in the Caribbean Sea and the world’s oceans. Consequently, it will proceed, in strict adherence to the UN Charter, to fully exercise its freedom, jurisdiction, and sovereignty in the face of these warmongering threats.

Our Ambassador to the UN will immediately denounce this serious violation of International Law against Venezuela.

We call upon the people of the United States and the peoples of the world to reject by all means this extravagant threat, which once again reveals Donald Trump’s true intentions to steal the riches of the country that gave birth to the United Liberation Army of South America and to our Liberator, Simón Bolívar. The people of Venezuela, in perfect popular, military, and police unity, will know how to defend their historical rights and triumph through peace.

Mr. Donald Trump explicitly stated the following interventionist and colonialist expression: “until all the oil, land, and other assets that were previously stolen from us are returned to the United States.” His true intention, which has been denounced by Venezuela and the people of the United States in massive demonstrations, has always been to seize the country’s oil, land, and minerals through gigantic campaigns of lies and manipulation.

Venezuela will never again be a colony of any empire or foreign power and will continue to walk, together with its people, the path of building prosperity and the unrestricted defense of our independence and sovereignty.

The Venezuelan people, in perfect popular, military, and police unity, remain steadfast in the unrestricted protection of their territory, their resources, and their freedom. With our Liberator, we say: “Fortunately, a handful of free men have defeated powerful empires.”

Caracas, December 16, 2025.

Comprehensive state response
On Wednesday, the first institution to respond to the threat was the Bolivarian National Armed Force (FANB). Venezuela’s Defense Minister Vladimir Padrino, together with the FANB’s High Command, stated it would preserve at all costs the nation’s territorial integrity, its legitimate rights over airspace and maritime areas, and sovereignty, independence, and peace that the nation holds dear.

“We can say that Venezuela has scored a victory in the face of truth; the truth has been revealed,” the military commander warned.

It is now through force, no longer through sanctions, unilateral coercive measures, political, diplomatic, and media isolation, psychological terrorism; force and violence have been used, and those who resort to them are lost.

He emphasized that Washington’s “war on drugs” narrative “has fallen apart in the eyes of international public opinion,” and that U.S. imperialism is blatant in its desire for Venezuela’s natural resources. Furthermore, he rejected Trump’s accusations that Venezuela stole any assets of the U.S., claiming the true intentions of the empire “are nothing other than to force regime change in our country and grossly seize its oil and other strategic natural resources.”

Almost simultaneously, PDVSA issued a statement reporting that oil export operations are continuing as scheduled. “The export operations of Venezuelan crude oil and derivatives continue despite the attempted illegal and illegitimate blockade, through secure schemes and full guarantees,” reported Delcy Rodríguez, head of PDVSA and the vice president of Venezuela.

“Oil tankers linked to PDVSA operations continue to sail with full assurance, technical support, and operational guarantees, in the legitimate exercise of the rights to free navigation and free trade, widely recognized and protected by international law,” the statement reads, reiterating that PDVSA has remained active despite all of the U.S. attacks it has endured.

Minutes later, the Moral Republican Council—formed by the Prosecutor’s Office, Comptroller’s Office, and Ombudsman’s Office, one of the five branches of the Venezuelan state—made a televised statement expressing its support for President Maduro in all measures he decides to take to safeguard Venezuela’s rights and sovereignty, describing Trump’s action as a brutal escalation.

The Moral Council made a “call to the people of the U.S. and the peoples of the world to reject by all means this aberrant threat that reveals the true intentions of the U.S. government to steal the resources of our country and our continent.”

In the afternoon, the National Assembly unanimously approved a resolution repudiating the U.S. president’s announcement. The parliament agreed to defend “the full and inalienable sovereignty of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela over all its territory,” including its natural resources, emphasizing that they are “inviolable, inalienable, and under the absolute ownership and control of [Venezuela].”

The deputies called “upon the Venezuelan people to remain on alert and permanently mobilized in perfect popular, military, and police unity for the unrestricted defense of the historical rights of the homeland, thus ensuring peace and territorial integrity against any threat that seeks to disturb” Venezuela’s independence.

The peoples and governments of the world were also urged to “reject by all means this extravagant threat that undermines global peace and reveals U.S. true intentions of plunder.”

Venezuela’s judicial branch joined in rejecting the U.S. actions, as confirmed by the president of the Supreme Court of Justice (TSJ), Caryslia Rodríguez. After reading an official statement, Rodríguez added that the imposition of a “naval blockade” constitutes an attack on sovereignty and a new violation of Venezuela’s constitution and international law.

“Today, we condemn [the US] and call for a united effort to restore and maintain ethical and legal values as instruments of peace, sovereignty, and equality among the peoples of the world,” Rodríguez stated. She explained that the TSJ supports the ratification of Venezuela’s sovereignty over its natural resources and its right to free navigation and free trade.

Local and international reaction
Chavista forces and leaders rejected the Trump announcement across social media, accompanied by public statements from far-right politicians who are not sympathizers of President Maduro or Chavismo, such as Bernabe Gutierrez, Enrique Ochoa Antich, and Henry Falcon, among others.

Latin American presidents and international allies have also expressed full support for Venezuela against what many consider to be an act of war that violates the UN Charter.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov expressed deep concern over the belligerent U.S. statements and over Europe’s silence on the matter. Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum reiterated México’s historic position against foreign interventions and demanded the United Nations assume its due role as an international peacekeeping body to “avoid a bloodshed.”

Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel had already expressed Cuba’s strong condemnation of a U.S. naval blockade and its support for Venezuela and the Bolivarian Revolution.

Iran also issued a communiqué strongly rejecting the U.S. threats. “The U.S. interference with, as well as its seizure and obstruction of, the free passage of commercial vessels to or from Venezuela constitutes a clear case of state piracy and armed robbery at sea,” the statement reads.

Invoking U.S. domestic laws and unilateral, illegal sanctions to justify these actions cannot, in any way, serve as a basis to legitimize such criminal acts.

China reported that its minister for foreign affairs, Wang Yi, had a phone conversation with his Venezuelan counterpart Yván Gil, expressing opposition to the U.S. empire’s unilateral bullying.

Even the German government expressed concern over Trump’s threats, warning of risks to regional peace and stability, as stated by spokesman for the German Foreign Ministry, Martin Giese. “The German government has an interest in preventing the situation in the region from deteriorating further,” he said during a press conference.

Therefore, we view the overall situation with concern. Of course, international law must be respected.

The Venezuelan government announced on Wednesday night that President Maduro held a phone conversation with UN Secretary General António Guterres, in order to warn him about the growing escalation of U.S. threats and their possible implications for regional peace. The head of state explained that Trump’s claims were supported by senior U.S. official Stephen Miller, who said the Venezuelan oil industry was also to be owned by the U.S. regime, which marks a direct colonial threat to Venezuela’s sovereignty and international law.

https://mronline.org/2025/12/19/venezue ... l-backing/
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Re: Venezuela

Post by blindpig » Sat Dec 20, 2025 4:17 pm

In Venezuela, we have not been invaded
There is currently no invasion by any foreign force in our country, and there is no basis for thinking that we represent a threat to peace in the region.

December 19, 2025 by Giuliano Salvatore

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Thousands participated in a mass mobilization in the center of Caracas on November 25, 2025. Photo: Francisco Trias
Lee en español aquí

I am writing these words from Caracas, the capital of Venezuela, a few days after María Corina Machado (MCM), the newly named Nobel Peace Prize winner, said at a press conference in Oslo, Norway, on December 11, in response to a journalist’s question about whether she would accept a military invasion of Venezuela, that:

Venezuela has already been invaded. We have the Russian agents, we have the Iranian agents, we have terrorist groups such as Hezbollah, Hamas operating freely, in accordance with the regime. We have the Colombian guerrilla, the drug cartels that have taken control of 60 percent of our population, not only involving drug trafficking but in human trafficking, networks of prostitution. This has turned Venezuela into the criminal hub of the Americas.

In a week or two, my first daughter will be born, like thousands of other Venezuelan babies inside and outside the country who are about to be born or are newborns. It seems like a detail that would not matter to anyone other than the immediate circle of all our families and friends, but the words of María Corina Machado and the actions of the US government in recent months place all Venezuelans in the crosshairs of an apparently imminent military invasion which, given the narrative imposed on us (for MCM we are “the criminal hub of the Americas”) and the current global context, in which genocide in Gaza occurs with total impunity, it is logical and even prudent to think that it will seek to destroy everything in its path, hijack our future, and make us pay for our “freedom” with thousands and thousands of lives.

Venezuelan social and political forces are, and have been all these years, diverse in their positions and in their magnitudes. The problems that Venezuelans face on a daily basis have been exacerbated by the unilateral sanctions imposed on the Venezuelan people which, according to the 2021 report of the Special Rapporteur on the Negative Impact of Unilateral Coercive Measures of the United Nations, constitute a violation of international law seriously impacting the country’s population and preventing the enjoyment of human rights.

Our problems are not few, nor are they without enormous complexity, difficult to grasp in their entirety even for ourselves. We have problems, like any country; problems that have been part of our daily lives for years and have eroded in many ways the legitimacy of all political leadership in the country, whether in the government or the opposition. This diversity of political and social forces in Venezuela even includes clear and well-founded criticism of the Venezuelan government in many respects; clear and well-founded criticism from the left, from popular movements, and from Venezuelan workers of many of the paths we have taken in recent years.

Like any country, we are facing our own dilemma, a dilemma that includes, however, the fact that we are the world’s largest oil reserve and one of the largest reserves of gold, water, and coltan, at a time when the geopolitical map is being redrawn and the US empire is cynically playing its cards, Israel is seriously beginning to turn its attention to Latin America, and the major industrial and commercial powers are dividing up the world. So, while we are dealing with a circumstance common to the entire planet (the US empire in its most psychotic phase) we insist on the principle of self-determination and on our right to life, and on our conviction that we will be the ones to find the necessary channels to sustain ourselves and move forward on our own path.

The dangerous characterization of Venezuela for its possible invasion
No, in Venezuela we are not living under invasion by China, Russia, Hamas, Hezbollah, Iran, or any other foreign force. There is no direct evidence of this. If we had been invaded, as MCM would have us believe, this would imply the direct intervention of specific forces from these countries in our daily lives, and that is not happening in any way. Government advisors, defense or trade agreements between nations – none of these things, which are regular for any country, imply any form of invasion. There is no evidence that any foreign armed, police, parapolice, or paramilitary force is operating in Venezuela with the authorization and/or support of the national government. Furthermore, unlike in other countries in the region, there are no armed conflicts arising from territorial disputes between drug cartels, nor even, at this point, more local or smaller-scale conflicts involving microtrafficking, so it would be impossible to claim that “drug cartels have taken control of 60% of our population”.

The idea that Trump and MCM are trying to construct, that Venezuela is the hub of operations for all the evils that populate the nightmares of the West, is nothing more than a global narrative that seeks to dehumanize Venezuela and the region enough so that, once again (as is currently the case with Gaza and Sudan and so many other conflicts), international public opinion does not know exactly whether the end does not justify the means; in this case, that is (among other possibilities), our extermination.

Let us never forget what happened in Libya or Iraq, to mention two of a long list of countries “liberated” from evil by the United States. And if we believe in the idea that it is impossible to replicate experiences in the Middle East or Africa in Latin America, let us not lose sight of the fact that, since September, the United States has killed at least 87 people in its attacks in the Caribbean under the same premise that Israel kills men, women, and children with impunity in Palestine: they are terrorists, not human beings, and they are terrorists because they say they are.

In the context of what has happened in Gaza (more than 70,000 children have been killed with impunity) and taking into account that MCM is a close ally of the Israeli government and Netanyahu, the words of the current Nobel Peace Prize winner are a direct attack on the lives of Venezuelans and a clear call for the genocide that the United States and Israel are committing in Gaza to be repeated in Venezuela.

Venezuelans both inside and outside the country deserve the opportunity to solve our problems according to our own criteria and our own capabilities. That is sovereignty. There is currently no invasion by any foreign force in our country, and there is no basis for thinking that we represent a threat to peace in the region.

The only and most likely possibility is that we will be invaded by the US government in pursuit of nothing more than the global maintenance of its hegemony at the expense of our resources, our sweat, and our blood, both ours and that of our children.

Footnote on December 17
On Tuesday, December 16, US President Donald Trump declared on the social network Truth Social that:

Venezuela is completely surrounded by the largest Armada ever assembled in the history of South America. It will only get bigger, and the impact on them will be like nothing they have ever seen before —Until such time as they return to the United States of America all of the Oil, Land, and other Assets that they previously stole from us. The illegitimate Maduro Regime is using Oil from these stolen Oil Fields to finance themselves, Drug Terrorism, Human Trafficking, Murder, and Kidnapping. For the theft of our Assets, and many other reasons, including Terrorism, Drug Smuggling, and Human Trafficking, the Venezuelan Regime has been designated a FOREIGN TERRORIST ORGANIZATION. Therefore, today, I am ordering a TOTAL AND COMPLETE BLOCKADE OF ALL SANCTIONED OIL TANKERS going into, and out of, Venezuela.

It doesn’t take much analysis. It seems that between the FIFA Peace Prize and the Nobel Peace Prize, Venezuela (and the region) are about to experience levels of harmony, tranquility, and concord unlike anything we have seen before.

https://peoplesdispatch.org/2025/12/19/ ... n-invaded/

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Venezuela Demands Reparations from the United States for the Theft of CITGO

Vice President Delcy Rodríguez defended the country’s energy sovereignty and rejected imperialist attempts to seize Venezuelan crude oil.

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Vice President Delcy Rodríguez, alongside the oil workers, affirms that Venezuelan energy resources can only be obtained through respect and payment. Photo: Ministry of Hydrocarbons.

December 19, 2025 Hour: 6:02 pm

In a massive rally outside the headquarters of Petróleos de Venezuela (PDVSA) in La Campiña, Caracas, Venezuelan Executive Vice President Delcy Rodríguez demanded over $35 billion in reparations from the United States government for what she described as the theft and plundering of CITGO and the illegal withholding of its dividends since 2019.

“Washington owes the Bolivarian people,” stated Rodríguez, who also serves as Minister of Hydrocarbons. She denounced the dispossession of national assets abroad as a form of “economic piracy” that has had serious consequences for the stability of Venezuelan citizens.

During her speech, the Vice President categorically rejected any negotiations regarding Venezuelan hydrocarbons conducted under pressure or threats. “The nation’s hydrocarbons are not subject to negotiation under threats or foreign extortion schemes,” she said, specifying that any acquisition of oil or gas by international actors must be carried out under legal protocols and with the corresponding payment.

Rodríguez urged the U.S. government to conduct a “realistic assessment” of the impact of the economic blockade and unilateral sanctions imposed on Venezuela. She also demanded a public apology and “reparation for damages” for the effects of these coercive measures, which, she stated, seek to strangle the national economy.


The vice president emphasized that the defense of Venezuelan oil is part of a broader struggle for self-determination, sovereignty, and regional peace. She highlighted the role of workers in the hydrocarbon sector, whom she described as “aware and mobilized,” and reiterated her support for President Nicolás Maduro.

“National unity is the main shield against attempts to seize our energy resources,” Rodríguez stated, while describing Washington’s strategy of encirclement as an “absolute historical error.” She concluded his remarks by assuring that Venezuela will continue its economic recovery without yielding to “imperialist blackmail” and will deliver a nation free from tutelage, with full respect for its energy sovereignty.

According to a recent poll cited at the event, 97% of Venezuelans oppose foreign appropriation of the country’s resources, which reinforces popular support for the government’s stance against external pressures.

https://www.telesurenglish.net/venezuel ... -of-citgo/

Venezuela Launches Ecosocialist Plan to Achieve 10 Million Trees by 2026

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President Nicolás Maduro launches the Ecosocialist Training Plan. Photo: Presidential Press Office


December 19, 2025 Hour: 7:23 pm

The Bolivarian Government of Venezuela launched an ambitious Ecosocialist Training Plan aimed at increasing the capacity of the country’s nursery workers, with the goal of establishing 2,000 community nurseries and producing 10 million trees by 2026, announced the Minister of Popular Power for Ecosocialism, Ricardo Molina, this Friday during an event at Vinicio Adames Park, commemorating the 200th anniversary of the Chuquisaca Decree.


400 nursery workers have already committed to participating in this plan, which seeks to strengthen community involvement in environmental protection and consolidate a national network of environmental defenders.

“The intention is to have environmental defenders who can contribute to the establishment of 2,000 community nurseries,” stated Molina, while presenting the progress report of the Great Mother Earth Mission to President Nicolás Maduro.



Among the key achievements, the minister reported that a scientific update of the status of the 44 national parks was completed, which will allow for the design of a structured, comprehensive, and systemic plan for their conservation and maintenance. Additionally, the Watershed Operations Committee was formed, tasked with identifying priority areas for reforestation and environmental intervention.

Regarding disaster prevention, Molina noted that 428 community risk maps were created, developed directly by the communities themselves.

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“Every community needs to have its own risk map to know how to respond, what the vulnerabilities are in their territory, and what affects downstream areas,” he explained, with the goal of reaching 5,336 maps nationwide.

Another significant milestone is the design of community weather stations, in partnership with the “Humberto Fernández Morán” Science and Technology Mission. “We already have the design, and we will manufacture them in 2026, using local science and technology,” the Minister of Ecosocialism affirmed.

Furthermore, he highlighted the progress made in combating the illegal wildlife trade, with 66 cases reported and resolved, actions aimed at protecting the nation’s biodiversity.

https://www.telesurenglish.net/venezuel ... s-by-2026/
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