January, 2026

Venezuelan Acting President Delcy Rodríguez at a meeting with communes in Caracas, January 10, 2026. Photo: Venezuelan Presidential Press.
Who leads the Venezuelan people? The people’s power. Who governs Venezuela? The people’s power and its constitutional government,” declared Venezuela’s Acting President Delcy Rodríguez. “So there is no doubt here, no uncertainty here … The Venezuelan people rule here, and there is a government, the government of President Nicolás Maduro, and I have the responsibility to lead it while he is being held captive. That is the message for all of Venezuela.” (more…)
January 11, 2026
In a new delirious escalation of his anti-Cuban rhetoric and measures, the US president said on social media that there will be no more oil or money from Venezuela for Cuba, disregarding the sovereign nature of both Latin American nations. (more…)
January 2026
Grassroots International; linking statements of solidarity in support of Venezuela
On the morning of January 3, 2026, the US government broke with any semblance of adherence to international law when it invaded Venezuela, dropping deadly missiles on the capital that claimed the lives of over 100 people, and kidnapping Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro and First Lady Cicilia Flores. This attack on Venezuela – blatantly in the interest of the US government seizing Venezuela’s oil – is not only unconscionable in and of itself; it threatens efforts for sovereignty, self-determination, peace, and justice across the globe. (more…)
By Isaac Saney on January 10, 202

A local Committee for the Defense of the Revolution (CDR) discusses problems and solutions on the local level. foto: Bill Hackwell
Since the U.S. imperialist invasion of Venezuela and the kidnapping of Nicolás Maduro, the Western media has been awash with the familiar chorus: Cuba is about to fall. Once again, pundits, think tanks, and editorial boards dust off an old script, announcing the imminent demise of the Cuban Revolution. Hardship is paraded as destiny; scarcity is reframed as failure; endurance is mocked as denial. The message is clear and rehearsed: history has run its course, and Cuba must submit. (more…)
Por Bill Hackwell, 7 de enero de 2026, desde Arroyo Naranjo, Cuba

Gerardo Hernández se reúne con los CDR en Arroyo Naranjo, fotos de Bill Hackwell
Gerardo Hernández Nordelo, coordinador nacional de los Comités de Defensa de la Revolución (CDR) de Cuba, tiene una amplia oficina en el último piso de la sede de la organización, en la concurrida Avenida Línea de La Habana. El problema es que nunca lo encontrarán allí. Hernández, uno de los Cinco Héroes Cubanos que pasó 16 años en prisiones federales de Estados Unidos por monitorear las actividades de terroristas anticubanos que operan con impunidad en el sur de Florida, está recuperando el tiempo perdido recorriendo Cuba, escuchando las necesidades y los problemas de la gente a nivel comunitario, mientras aplica métodos locales para resolverlos. (more…)
By Bill Hackwell on January 7, 2026 from Arroyo Naranjo, Cuba

Gerardo Hernandez meeting with the CDR in Arroyo Naranjo, fotos Bill Hackwell
Gerardo Hernandez Nordelo, the national coordinator of Cuba’s Committees for the Defense of Revolution (CDR) has a large office on the top floor of the organization’s headquarters on the busy Linea Avenue in Havana. The problem is you will never find him there. Hernandez, one of the Cuban Five heroes who spent 16 years in US Federal prisons for monitoring the activities of anti Cuban terrorists operating with impunity in Southern Florida, is making up for lost time circulating around Cuba listening to the needs and problems of the people on the community level while engaging in home grown methods of solving them. (more…)
January 8, 2026

Diosdado Cabello
The Venezuelan Minister of the Interior, Justice, and Peace, Diosdado Cabello, confirmed this Wednesday during his program “Con el Mazo Dando” that at least 100 people, mostly young people, were killed during the US military aggression against Venezuela, which culminated in the kidnapping of President Nicolás Maduro and First Lady Cilia Flores. (more…)
By Alejandra Garcia and Bill Hackwell on January 7, 2026 from Havana
On January 3 Latin America awoke shaken by one of the most serious and dramatic episodes in international relations in recent decades. The bombing of military facilities and residential neighborhoods in Caracas and three other states of the country by the United States, followed by the kidnapping—rather than the “extraction,” as the corporate media presents it—of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro Moros and his wife, Cilia Flores, marks a breaking point in an already weakened regional system. For broad political, social, and religious sectors of the region, the operation represents a flagrant violation of a state’s sovereignty and a definitive blow to what for years had been called the “rules-based world order.” (more…)