US Attacks Venezuela, Captures President Maduro, Destroys Mausoleum with Hugo Chávez's Remains

Originally published at: US Attacks Venezuela, Captures President Maduro, Destroys Mausoleum with Hugo Chávez’s Remains – Peak Prosperity

Geopolitics

U.S. military operations reportedly targeted infrastructure in Caracas, Venezuela, leading to power outages, damage to military installations, and the destruction of the mausoleum containing the remains of former leader Hugo Chávez at the Cuartel de la Montaña, according to reports. President Donald Trump announced the capture of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro and his wife, who were reportedly transported out of the country after airstrikes and ground operations involving U.S. Army helicopters. The strikes reportedly included sites such as La Carlota airbase and Fuerte Tiuna, coinciding with the U.S. Air Force disabling its public flight-tracking transponders, as per accounts. Venezuelan Defense Minister Vladimir Padrino López stated that missiles and rockets from U.S. combat helicopters impacted urban areas, with authorities assessing casualties. Venezuelan Vice President Delcy Rodríguez reportedly demanded proof of life for Maduro following the strikes, describing his seizure as a disappearance.

According to reports, the operations took place as a Chinese delegation, including special envoy Qiu Xiaoqi and Ambassador Lan Hu, met with Maduro to review more than 600 bilateral agreements. This timing underscores China’s deep economic stake in Venezuela, particularly in its energy sector: U.S. sanctions have redirected Venezuelan oil exports, making China the largest buyer of its crude from a country holding 17-18% of global proven reserves. These exports, often routed through direct shipments and intermediaries, have bolstered sanction-evasion networks, deepened Venezuela’s trade alignment with Beijing, and diminished U.S. influence in the region. Recent U.S. measures, such as tanker seizures and quarantines, have reportedly halved Venezuela’s oil exports and contributed to an 83% devaluation of the bolívar in 2025. Beijing had previously condemned U.S. sanctions on Venezuela as lacking international legal basis, according to official statements.

Russia’s Foreign Ministry described the strikes as an act of armed aggression, and Colombian President Gustavo Petro called for an immediate emergency meeting of the United Nations and Organization of American States in response to the attacks. Non-U.S. sources, including Al Jazeera, highlighted concerns over the strikes’ potential violation of sovereignty and risks to regional stability.

Health

Section 453 of a congressional spending bill would reportedly block updated health warnings on pesticides and provide manufacturers with immunity from lawsuits, including cases involving harm linked to conditions such as cancer, Parkinson’s disease, and infertility. The provision has attracted scrutiny amid more than 57,000 reported cases. Environmental groups have called for its removal to preserve consumer protections and lawsuit rights for affected individuals.

US Politics

Minnesota State Representative Kristin Robbins has accused Governor Tim Walz’s administration of using claims of racism and Islamophobia to silence whistleblowers who exposed alleged fraud in social services programs, including daycares and adult care facilities linked to Somali-owned businesses that received over $110 million in questionable payments. Federal investigations by the FBI and HHS, which have frozen Minnesota’s childcare payments, describe the schemes as potentially diverting funds overseas via shell companies and inactive facilities. In response to citizen journalists documenting similar issues in Washington state—where Somali-owned daycares reportedly received hundreds of thousands in taxpayer funds despite appearing non-operational—Attorney General Nick Brown warned that unverified investigations could result in hate crime charges and urged reports through official channels like the Department of Children, Youth, and Families. Critics, including Assistant Attorney General Harmeet Dhillon, have raised concerns about potential First Amendment violations. Walz has defended his administration’s efforts to address fraud through audits and referrals to law enforcement, while community advocates have raised concerns about potential stigmatization of Somali providers amid the probes.

Energy

Small modular reactors (SMRs) are being developed as a potential solution to rising electricity demands from AI data centers and industrial electrification, with factory-built units offering capacities up to 300 MWe and construction timelines of three to five years, in contrast to traditional projects like the Vogtle plant, which have faced reported cost overruns and delays. Tech companies are reportedly advancing adoption via long-term power purchase agreements, including Microsoft’s reactivation of Three Mile Island’s Unit 1, Google’s order for reactors from Kairos Power, and Amazon’s investment in X-energy. Private equity firm Brookfield has launched Radiant, a cloud computing venture powered by Westinghouse’s AP1000 and AP300 designs, targeting AI infrastructure in locations such as France, Qatar, and Sweden, amid a reported $80 billion U.S. government commitment for new reactors. Challenges include uranium supply concentration, with Russia reportedly controlling 40% of global enrichment capacity, and the need for mass production to reduce costs, with potential annual investments reaching $25 billion by 2030. Analysts have noted risks from unproven scalability and regulatory hurdles that could delay profitability for SMR developers.

Canadian Politics

Elections Alberta has approved a citizen initiative petition from the Alberta Prosperity Project for a potential independence referendum, with signature collection set for January 3 to May 2, 2026, requiring 177,732 valid signatures. A counter-petition, “Alberta Forever Canada,” has also launched to oppose separation and promote unity.

Sources

US Strikes Venezuela: Trump Announces Maduro’s Capture Amid Caracas Chaos

US Forces Strike Venezuela, Trump Reveals Maduro Has Been “Captured”

Source

SMRs: Nuclear’s Modular Makeover Amid AI Power Surge and Fuel Perils

Baseload power is no longer a luxury; it’s the price of admission for the modern economy.

Source

Brookfield’s Nuclear Gambit: Launching AI Data Centers Powered by Westinghouse

As the 51% owner of Westinghouse, Brookfield is uniquely positioned to start the long-lead work of preparing nuclear energy to power its data centers in the 2030s.

Source

US Airstrikes Destroy Hugo Chávez’s Mausoleum in Caracas

Reports suggest the US has bombed the mausoleum of late Venezuelan dictator Hugo Chavez, as military strikes rock the capital Caracas.

Source

Chinese Diplomats in Caracas Amid US Airstrikes on Venezuelan Capital

Chinese diplomatic officials may still be in Caracas as the US military strikes the Venezuelan capital

Source

Alberta Independence Petition Issued: Signature Collection Starts January 2026

Elections Alberta has officially issued the citizen initiative petition to the Alberta Prosperity Project for the Alberta independence referendum.

Source

China Becomes Venezuela’s Top Oil Buyer as US Sanctions Backfire

As China became Venezuela’s dominant buyer of crude, U.S. leverage in Latin America weakened.

Source

Congress Poised to Shield Pesticide Giants from Lawsuits in Sneaky Spending Bill

Congress is about to wipe out your right to sue pesticide companies, quietly, tucked in a new spending bill.

Source

US Air Force Disables Flight Trackers Amid Venezuela Airstrikes and Maduro Capture

JUST IN – The entire U.S. air force has disabled virtually all flight tracking transponders — FlightRadar24

Source

Colombian President Petro Calls for Emergency UN Meeting as Caracas Faces Missile Attacks

“The OAS and the UN must meet immediately.”

Source

Russia Condemns U.S. Strikes on Venezuela After Maduro’s Capture

Russia’s Foreign Ministry on Saturday condemned what it called a U.S. act of “armed aggression” against Venezuela, urging restraint and warning against further escalation after a series of explosions rocked the capital Caracas early in the morning.

Source

Minnesota Lawmaker Accuses Walz Administration of Silencing Fraud Whistleblowers with Racism and Islamophobia Smears

People were told not to say anything because they’d be called racist or Islamophobic

Source

Washington AG Warns Citizen Journalists: Stop Investigating Somali Daycares or Face Hate Crime Charges

The Washington state attorney general released a statement on X Tuesday evening warning independent journalists to stop investigating fraudulent Somali daycare centers or they could be charged with a hate crime.

Source | Submitted by wotthecurtains

In addition to sources submitted by community members, the following were also used in the creation of this report: CBS News, The New York Times, Al Jazeera, OilPrice.com, Seeking Alpha, Reuters, Global News, The Guardian, CNN, and PBS News.

1 Like

So now trying to find childcare for your preschooler could be a hate crime.

6 Likes

Holy mother of God!!! We’re not only invading a sovereign country but doing so when a Chinese delegation is visiting??? What the fuck?!

17 Likes

Because we can?

5 Likes

Don’t worry. We’ll be hailed as liberators by the Venezuelans and this will be over in a week!

9 Likes

I’m interested to see what, if anything, Russia and China will do. I expect Russia will condemn it but otherwise show restraint.

10 Likes

So much chaff in the air on the Venezuela strike that it’s hard to say much. Just to add to the metalized confetti fun:

The Wire - January 3, 2026 Money quote:

Analyst Comments: Based on statements made by Maduro’s political opposition, he cut a deal. The raid was part of the egress plan to get him out of the country, and he did so willingly. The kinetic nature of the operation was to enable Marudo to escape without his own people killing him, and so far the operation seems to be a success. Whether or not any of this is true is anyone’s guess at the moment, but that’s the story.

Then there’s this pic of Maduro being escorted off a plane:


Source: The first footage of Venezuelan President Maduro detained by the US authorities - Pravda EN (remember the old Soviet saying “There is no news in the Truth and no truth in the News” and take it with a grain of salt.) The only thing interesting in the pic is the DEA patch on the guy on the right –– “Delta Extraction Airways”? Whatever, you can get velcro patches at any gun show.

Anyway, Trump supposedly will address the nation at 11 EST. Meanwhile, I’m going to go for a run.

8 Likes

I have known military folks who wore DEA at times.

So now that the dictator is gone can we send all the Venezuelan illegals and “refugees” home?

5 Likes

“Hey we got a lift, do you need one?”
Maduro: YES

(Looking what has been happening in NYC 2025 they are reportedly now held, I cant be serious… I expect 24hour release like other illegal immigrant murderers and drug cartel members there)

5 Likes

Trump seems to be seriously fighting Chinese influence in the Americas. Ok guys, stay away from 24 Sussex, just in case okay?

1 Like

5 Likes

Not a lawyer, but curious how it’s legal to indict the head of a sovereign nation for crimes he allegedly committed while in his own country and not in the United States?

10 Likes

6 Likes

Multiple countries have warrants out for Maduro dating back to 1999, most to 2014. The UN and international human rights orgs also.

4 Likes

Is this how we get $2 gas? Piracy?

5 Likes

Kick their ass and steal their gas. The benefits of attacking Venezuela vs middle eastern countries are 1. Location is close making for easier logistics, 2. Population less likely to blow themselves up to kill us and many people in the military already speak spanish so no special translators needed, 3. We get to send all the Venezuelan “refugees” and illegals home since their country is now no longer controlled by Mudaro, 4. try and counteract Chinese influence in central and south america.

5 Likes

This one stands out as utterly ridiculous:

12 Likes

Duran Podcast:

This was an inside job. It was too easy. Betrayal and bribery probably took place.

Most regime change operations look like a great success at the beginning but then quickly degenerate into chaos.

The new government will quickly call elections and a pro American puppet will be elected.

Maria Machado (who was given the Nobel Peace Prize for calling for American regime change operations against her own country) will probably take over.

There will be massive resistance to her attempts to take power.

China and Russia look bad for being unable to protect an ally. Both Russia and China naively believe in international law.

China will lose access to Venezuelan crude which will push the Chinese into a tighter alliance with Russia.

Greenland will be the next victim. The EU will do nothing in response.

The United States will cut off Venezuelan oil to Cuba. The Russians and the Chinese will have to decide what, if anything, to do about it. Due to the actions of the United States, China may take action against Taiwan.

10 Likes

Looks like I picked the wrong year to stop drinking… :wink: :roll_eyes:

16 Likes