The explosions came before dawn. By sunrise, Venezuela’s president had vanished. Within hours, Donald Trump was boasting of a secret U.S. mission, and America’s Attorney General was unveiling narco-terror charges that recast Nicolás Maduro as a hunted criminal, not a head of state. Caracas is on edge, the army is mobilized, and the world is asking whe… Continues…
What began as distant booms over Caracas has become a geopolitical earthquake. A sitting president, reportedly seized in a foreign capital, now faces U.S. narco-terror and weapons charges in a New York court. Pam Bondi’s declaration that Maduro will confront “the full force of American justice” rips through the usual language of diplomacy, replacing it with the vocabulary of manhunts and criminal trials.
Inside Venezuela, power hangs in the balance. The vice president’s plea for proof of life and the defense minister’s call to arms reveal a state unsure of its leader yet determined to project control. To Maduro’s loyalists, this is a brutal attack on sovereignty; to his opponents, a long-awaited reckoning. Between those two narratives lies a dangerous unknown: whether this operation ends with a courtroom verdict—or ignites a wider, uncontrollable conflict.