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Submitted by ISIDOROS KARDERINIS

The unprecedented kidnapping in the world annals, in the manner in which it took place of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro constitutes not only a military intervention in a sovereign and independent country in violation of the principles of international law, but also constitutes a clear warning to the entire planet. A warning to every insubordinate leader of any country.

Already on January 3, 2026, during a press conference he gave regarding the military operation and arrest of Maduro, US President Donald Trump issued threats against Colombian President Gustavo Petro stating the following: “He would do well to be careful.”

At the same time, the US president hinted that Cuba could be a topic of discussion within the context of broader US policy in the region, highlighting Washington’s ability to expand its focus beyond Venezuela. US Secretary of State Marco Rubio even said that the Cuban government should be worried after Maduro’s arrest. Specifically, he said: “If I lived in Havana and was member of the government, at least I would be worried,” adding that “Cuba is a disaster” and that the country is “run by incompetent and depraved men.”

The history of the United States, moreover, is characterized by extensive imperialist interventions, both territorial and interventionist in other countries. Specifically, there have been approximately 400 interventions since 1776, when the Second Continental Congress adopted the Declaration of Independence on July 4, declaring the independence of the 13 American Colonies from the British Empire, an event that marked the official founding of the United States of America.

Who can forget that from April 15 to 19, 1961, 1,400 anti-Fidel Castro fighters, trained and financed by the CIA, attempted to land at the Bay of Pigs, 250 kilometres from Havana, but failed to overthrow the Cuban communist regime. These battles resulted in the deaths of about a hundred
people on each side.

“With Salvador Allende winning the elections of September 4, 1970 in Chile and already Fidel Castro in Cuba, we will have a Red sandwich in Latin America that will inevitably become all Red,” Richard Nixon feared, and his fear was soon confirmed by the election results. So, in the face of this unpleasant reality for the United States, a solution had to be found. And the solution was found on that morning of September 11, 1973, when a military coup took place under the head of the army, General Augusto Pinochet, with the support of the United States, but also of Brazil, whose military regime was completely friendly and cooperative with the United States. The coup plotters, after first surrounding and bombing the Presidential Palace, then stormed it. Salvador Allende and his close associates were killed, after fierce resistance.

The United States also invaded Panama in mid-December 1989 during the presidency of George W. Bush. The purpose of the military invasion was to oust Panama’s de facto leader, General Manuel Noriega, who was accused by American authorities of extortion and drug trafficking. So, if one is looking for a historical parallel where the US arrested a de facto leader of a country and transferred him to the US for trial, the Noriega case is the most characteristic. And this happened after a regular military invasion, that is, in the context of a coordinated armed intervention, and certainly not a “normal” peace.

Noriega managed to escape and took refuge in the Vatican embassy in Panama City, the country’s capital, where he remained for 11 days. There, he was subjected to relentless psychological warfare in order to surrender. The US military set up a horrible, deafening wall of sound outside the embassy. A fleet of Humvees with loudspeakers constantly played hard rock and occasionally heavy metal music. For example, “Panama” by the heavy metal singers Van Halen was played.

The Holy See rightly complained to President Bush, and the musical war ended after three days. By January 3, 1990, the general had agreed to surrender. But what are the deeper reasons for the US military invasion of Venezuela and the pursuit of overthrowing the insubordinate existing regime?

Venezuela, therefore, has the largest proven oil reserves in the world, amounting to approximately 303.8 billion barrels as of 2021. For comparison, leading oil producing countries have smaller reserves. Specifically, Saudi Arabia has approximately 267 billion barrels and Kuwait has 101.5 billion barrels. At the same time, the country’s proven natural gas reserves exceeded 5.6 trillion cubic meters in 2021. It should be noted, at the same time, that in the Western Hemisphere, only the United States had more reserves.

Also, Venezuela’s total iron ore reserves are estimated at 4.5 billion tons. And here it should be emphasized regarding iron reserves that the country is second in the region after Brazil. Venezuela finally has some of the largest reserves of bauxite in the world, a mineral used to produce aluminum. The country’s total bauxite reserves amount to 950 million tons.

It is, therefore, clear to any objective observer that the US covets Venezuela’s wealth-producing resources. Resources that they cannot get their hands on with the existing regime, which is a political and military partner and ally of Moscow, Beijing and Tehran, but also the main supplier of oil to China, whose control is drying up the flow.

The solution therefore for them, for the US, in order to secure primacy in the relentless international competition is the overthrow of the existing Venezuelan regime and the emergence of a president and a government that is absolutely friendly and serviceable. The rest, that is whether such a thing is legal and democratic does not concern them at all.

In closing, I would like to emphasize that the leaders of any country are overthrown only by their people, that is, by popular uprisings and revolutions, as has happened in various countries in the past. They are not overthrown by the military intervention of another country, a foreign power. Therefore, the US military invasion of Venezuela and the kidnapping of its president, Nicolas Maduro, are absolutely condemnable for any democratic and free-thinking citizen of the world.


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60 responses to “The unprecedented kidnapping of Maduro”


  1. A

    Again , I agree with most of what you said like muduro need removing , good and bad dictators etc.

    If explaining how the sanctions affected the ordinary Venezuelan too heavy for you to explain the try explaining how they are effecting the ordinary people of Cuba , a place that you admire


  2. @ John 2

    Yes I do admire the people of Cuba and their ability to exist among the sanctions. The fact that they have been able to keep cars rolling that are over 50 years old without access to an easy supply of parts for example is amazing.

    So Cuba and the USA hit heads from the time Russia placed missiles on their land. From then on it has been sanctions as they have continued to be close to Putin. Their ties with Venezuela and Maduro and his ties to Russia and China have not helped the Cuban situation either. Its a case with the USA of you either with us or you against us and I personally do not support such a position. Neither do I support the growth of communism and dictatorship either, so as you can see my path is a rather narrow one.


  3. The unpresidented kidnapping of maduro is par for the PNAC War x Project 2025 Course, when Israel was destroying Jesus p.o.b., the Wicked West were MIA missing in action silent about Gaza Genocide and Israeli Attacks in West Bank, but run their hypocritical insincere dirty big fat mouths off reeling official scripts about the October 7 attacks in every news articles preamble every day.

    Trump and Israel are planning to to convert Palestine into a White Man’s Paradise Holiday Resort like Caribbean and send Palestinian survivors to Somalia.
    This is the same Forkhead who listened to Musk’s nonsense lies about South Africa and Kirk’s nonsense lies about Christians in Nigeria, and exiled university student protestors against Israels War, but a White Man’s Heaven is a Black Man’s Hell.

    Blackman’s Paradise
    Where is the blackman’s paradise?
    That Marcus Garvey fought for yesterday
    And we’re still fighting for today

    Where is the blackman’s paradise?
    That Bob Marley fought for today
    And we’re still fighting for today

    Where is the blackman’s paradise?
    Martin Luther King fought for yesterday
    And we’re still fighting for today

    This maybe harsh to say
    But we live in a white world
    It’s a statement that many of us say
    But Jah is our protector
    And we not fear to say

    It’s a prejudice world
    In a prejudice world
    Is there unity and the philosophy
    That gives them superiority, calling us minority
    And in their hearts they know we are the majority
    It’s a prejudice world, in a prejudice world

    Take a moment to sit down and meditate
    History will recall everything we convey
    I hope the message in this song
    Will provide the strengths

    We’ll need to shout it loud
    It’s a prejudice world

    Where is the blackman’s paradise?
    Nelson Mandela fought for yesterday
    Louis Farrakhan fights for today

    Where is the blackman’s paradise
    That the rastaman fights for today?
    That the ghetto youths cried for today

    Where is the blackman’s paradise
    That the singers sing about today
    That the musicians played for today

    Where is the blackman’s paradise?
    What will we tell the ghetto youths say?
    What will we tell the children’s?
    We cry, we cry
    (Yeah, yeah)
    — Morgan Heritage

    [Bridge]
    God is here and there and everywhere
    And He knows when you play the game unfair
    So people beware
    Or else you fade away!
    You gotta fade, gotta fade, gotta fade now

    [Chorus]
    The rich is getting richer every day
    And the little that the poor man got
    It shall be taken away
    Do you hear what I say, hey?
    Hear what I say

    [Verse 6]
    One who’s always acting smart
    And forgetting to carry love in his heart
    Shall fade away

    [Outro]
    God is here and there and everywhere
    And His eyes, His eyes are watching you
    You gon’ fade away, yeah, yeah
    You gon’ fade, fade, fade
    Fade away
    Yeah, yeah
    –Fade Away, Junior Byles

  4. I forgot to say.. Avatar
    I forgot to say..

    I forgot to say ..
    Trump wants UK and Europe to be as racist as his face cock blocking immigration and will use social media misinformation for regime changes in white nation’s Governments with liberal left wing multi-culti leanings

    ..and Germany and UK are egging on the Trump Nut to force regime change in Iran by C.o.b. this week..

    p.s. There is a song in your bucket Dear Liza Dear Liza


  5. You can mention the word sanctions many times but you absolutely avoiding /. Refusing to state the effect on the average person 🤔

    Compare the relationship between Cuba and Venezuela and who profit most from it to the sanctions and you coming up on the side of those that imposing the sanctions and then complaining about one can get their favorite tooth paste

    A Grenada / Panama type operation , put in the elected leader ( who will probably be favorably to USA anyhow) , lift sanctions, let Venezuela rule itself and sell its oil to whoever it want to. Tariff Venezuela oil imports if u wanta recover losses

    Trump love dictators = only if they possessed a nuke that is 🤣🤣


  6. People need to realise that the more enemies one makes, the more one isolates, in times of trouble, who you gonna call?

    Ghostbusters?

    Ironic that while the effort is to break the Euro and break BRICS, they are isolating other countries away from themselves, thus actually strengthening the likelihood that BRICS will be a success.

    Two or three countries economically against the rest of the world, is not good odds.

    And there are other implications too. Cutting off potential sources of intelligence is not a good idea.

    But, I guess they know best. Or think that they do anyway.


  7. Caricom faces unity-defining moment

    This article was written and submitted by Nand C. Bardouille, PhD, manager of The Diplomatic Academy of the Caribbean in the Institute of International Relations at the University of the West Indies St Augustine Campus, Trinidad and Tobago. The Caribbean Community (CARICOM) is experiencing a difficult foreign policy-related moment, which variously impacts its 14 sovereign member states. America’s use of military force in the Caribbean since September 2025 drew two disparate strands of reaction from these states, testing the bloc’s unity.

    At this juncture, CARICOM’s leadership is taking steps to address this concern. In doing so, it is mindful inter alia of the seemingly implacable goals of the so-called “Donroe Doctrine” and pressure from concomitant United States policy toward the regional grouping’s sovereign members.

    The powers that be in CARICOM will have their work cut out to move the needle on what ostensibly amounts to a cohesive foreign policy response to Trump 2.0’s take on American power, which leans into spheres of influence and strategic rivalry-related thinking.

    The signals, so far, are that the associated interests of two sets of CARICOM member states diverge, having been framed in stark contrast to each other.

    For that reason, public messagingrelated restraint qua threading the needle has informed the bloc’s collective reaction to date to the United States’ recent targeted military strikes in Venezuela.

    Instructively, several Latin American countries – such as Brazil – have not held back in condemning this US-orchestrated development.

    US intervention

    Characterised by President Donald Trump as “a large-scale strike against Venezuela and its leader”, this US intervention resulted in the ouster of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro, with plans afoot for the United States to “run the country.”

    Of note, there is a stark difference in the respective responses of two leading CARICOM member states to this highprofile, consequential development. Those countries are Barbados and Trinidad and Tobago, respectively.

    Barbados is emblematic of the set of member states that embraces the bloc’s traditional foreign policyrelated ethos. Trinidad and Tobago has pursued a radical break with many of its sister CARICOM member states’ foreign policy-related dispositions.

    Consider that with an eye to the associated risks both for small states and the international rules-based order, Barbados Prime Minister Mia Amor Mottley did not pull any punches in her assessment of the implications of the January 3 US military action in Venezuela.

    Mottley’s statement was not far removed from that of United Nations Secretary General António Guterres in respect of the US’ action.

    Guterres is said to view that military action as “a dangerous precedent”. He also cautioned that, stemming from this turn of events, there is a “risk of deepening instability, regional repercussions and a dangerous precedent for relations among states”.

    Guterres’ viewpoint on these matters comports with Mottley’s foreign policy ideals, which also resonate with those of virtually all CARICOM member states’ leaders.

    Yet Trinidad and Tobago sees the matter at hand differently, underscoring (yet again) “that the concept of real regional peace has been elusive within the Southern Caribbean”. Moreover, in recent days, Port of Spain also reaffirmed its commitment to Washington’s logic of intervention.

    Quick to distance

    That said, Trinidad and Tobago’s Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar was quick to distance her country from the recent US military operation against Venezuela.

    Nonetheless, Trinidad and Tobago has come under the spotlight due to its prominent role in US pressure brought to bear on Venezuela under Operation Southern Spear.

    This role has raised concerns within CARICOM, not least because US interventionism in Latin America and the Caribbean is seemingly making a comeback.

    Much to the concern of CARICOM member states, too, the United States – which stands as the world’s preeminent superpower – is withdrawing from several international organisations, conventions and treaties. (Having largely brought about the liberal international order over 80 years ago, the US is now seemingly turning its back on it and attendant international regimes.)

    In the conduct of their international relations, these post-colonial small states rely on the UN, associated international organisations and norms and principles – all of which undergird processes of international cooperation and multilateralism.

    These processes help to amplify their voices and safeguard their interests in the anarchic international system, which the discipline of international relations frames (for the most part) as hinging on “a lack of a common superior in an interaction domain”, Under such systemic conditions, and as the historical record shows, large states may well resort to the power of war as a go-to agent for change and means of securing their interests qua security in international relations. Depending on the circumstances, such action may end up subordinating international law and, by extension, smaller states.

    This is why CARICOM member states characteristically frame their interests in terms of the paramountcy of international law, which dovetails with their robust support for UN-anchored multilateralism.

    For example, in a statement published on January 4 on the “present situation in Venezuela”, The Bahamas emphasised the following sentiment: “Of particular importance to The Bahamas is that all parties involved act in accordance with international law.”

    Indeed, this view echoes Guterres’ standpoint on the recent US military action in Venezuela that affirms “respect for international law must remain the guiding principle”.

    Among CARICOM member states, as far as the Trump administration’s roll-out of aspects of ‘America First’ foreign policy is concerned, there is a serious rift that adds urgency to the Fiftieth Regular Meeting of the Conference of CARICOM Heads of Government – slated for next month.

    Accordingly, and having regard to the disparate regional thinking on issues in the mix, the following question arises: Will this summit live up to such an expectation?

    Only time will tell. As CARICOM’s leadership weighs how to see the way forward for the summit vis-à-vis the central insight of the foregoing analysis, it has likely already come to the realisation that this high-level meeting is a test that the bloc cannot afford to fail.

    This likely means that at this summit, given that the stakes are high, CARICOM faces a unitydefining moment.

    Source: Nation


  8. @David

    Live debate from Grenada

    “Grenada’s Third Country Dilemma in the Face of American Pessure”

    https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=9hPLno0aV6Q

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