What Venezuelans Should Know About Colombia's Pick-Your-Poison Election
Whoever takes office in Bogotá could become one of the most consequential foreign actors in Venezuela's future
Right-wing outsider Abelardo de la Espriella claimed victory by the narrowest margin in Colombian electoral history. He will inherit a high-stakes relationship with Venezuela deeply conditioned by a White House that, for the the first time in ages, endorses both leaders in Caracas and Bogota.
The crucial split of the Colombian Right suggests that populist theatrics can override the institutional anti-chavismo we are used to
Whoever takes office in Bogotá could become one of the most consequential foreign actors in Venezuela’s future
A National Liberation Army massacre in Colombia produces a wave of refugees to Venezuela. Yeah, you read that right
Luis Peche and Yendri Velasquez survived after being shot by hitmen. The message is clear: Colombia is not safe for Venezuelan dissidents
Lula and Petro pitch a “repeat election” and a “transition government” for chavismo and the opposition
Behind the smiles in the photo gallery with the Colombian ambassador and the Chavista barons lies the need to handle the ELN and a more pragmatic approach toward Colombian exports
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After two decades of a hyper-ideological anti-West agenda, can Caracas start pursuing a more pragmatic foreign policy?
It might look like the hunting of Pablo Escobar, but this has more to do with business interests around Trump and chavismo’s will to remain in power
Where exactly did the Tren de Aragua leader die? When did the kinetic attack occur? How were his remains identified after the blast?
A visit to this former butcher shop reveals the whole dimension of the great artist’s quest to recreate the light of Caracas by engineering a new ambient
The Terror and the fall of Maximilien Robespierre offer lessons to Delcy Rodríguez