Early in the morning of Jan. 3, President Trump gave orders for the U.S to enter Venezuela and capture Nicolas Maduro.
America and the world are safer today thanks to the bold actions of President Trump and his team in Venezuela.
Source: Why questioning how a dictator is removed does not mean defending him Can two wrongs ever make a right? Tendai Ruben ...
In a recorded speech played at a rally marking three years since the judicial reform was announced, retired Supreme Court ...
Venezuelans living across Canada echoed the complicated feelings of Ms. Fombona and Ms. Arriaga as they kept an eye on ...
In the impoverished, violent slum of La Dolorita in Caracas, I met an emaciated 5-year-old girl, Alaska. Her mother told me ...
Protesters in Ottawa marched around the U.S. Embassy in the freezing cold, chanting “hands off Venezuela” and “down, down ...
The ministry condemned the U.S. attack on Venezuela "as a blatant violation of its national sovereignty and territorial ...
Both women are permanent residents and say they plan to remain in the United States. Still, each describes the same quiet ...
For many expatriates of the South American nation, the president’s capture marks a path towards democracy, but the future remains uncertain.
Their much talked about brief alliance, despite differences, helped end nearly a decade of dictatorship under General Hussain ...
The Trump administration’s Jan. 3 capture of President Nicolás Maduro bore some familiar echoes to the 1989 U.S. invasion of ...