Maduro calls out a supposedly imminent U.S. invasion to gain domestic control and foreign support. But the fact is that Venezuelans have been living for decades under a force that treats them like the enemy
Beyond the groups of milicianos and party members shown by the Maduro propaganda, the population is focused on surviving and rather skeptical about an American attack
“We still see invasion as unlikely, but we do expect escalation. According to sources, the choke-hold that Marco Rubio currently has on the U.S. policy towards Venezuela—to the detriment of Special Envoy Richard Grenell and the oil lobby—has an expiration date, as he has been granted by Trump a few months to try things his way.”
“In these conditions, we believe the State and War Departments will keep increasing pressure on Maduro to either convince him to negotiate his exit safely, or prompt defections that implode the chavista regime from within.”
🫓 TPS para el pueblo: U.S. District Judge Edward Chen of San Francisco blocked T2 from ending the temporary protected status that granted more than 1 million people from Haiti and Venezuela the right to live and work in the United States.
Trump tells U.S. generals they can shoot down Venezuelan jets:
“If they [Venezuelan military pilots] fly in dangerous positions, you and your captains can make a decision as to what you wanna do.”
Reuters- Venezuela's oil exports climbed to some 966,500 bpd in August, the highest level since November, after Chevron received a license that has allowed the OPEC country's crude to return to the US market after a four-month pause https://t.co/gL7P6ZMGFl
Rendered deportable during Trump’s second term, hundreds of thousands of TPS recipients—who fled dire conditions at home—seek legal paths to remain in the U.S.
Recent events are again putting the fate of Venezuelans in the hands of Trump and the U.S. military. It’s time to abandon this futile faith and seriously consider what may come next—and how that can go wrong
Washington hasn’t officially confirmed the move, but leaks suggest a naval build-up against drug routes linked to Venezuela. Results so far: endless speculation, regional reactions and chavista paranoia