International
“It’s Not Freedom — It’s the First Step Toward Freedom”
I spoke today with a well-known Venezuelan source and a dear friend, someone with deep personal ties to the country and a real understanding of how power actually functions there, both politically and on the ground. For obvious reasons, they’re remaining anonymous.
What they said was simple and heart breaking. No drama, no theatrics. No victory speech, just a reality check for the world.
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“This isn’t freedom,” they told me. “It’s a first step toward freedom. And after that… we’ll see. The reality is nobody knows.”
That’s the most honest assessment I’ve heard all day.
From inside Venezuela, today doesn’t feel like liberation. It feels like the moment right before things either stabilize — or turn very dangerous. People are relieved Maduro is gone. That part is real. Families cried. People felt something lift, a sense of relief. For many, this is deeply deeply personal.
“It’s a good day that he’s gone,” my source said. “For my family. For people who were imprisoned. For people who had their country destroyed.”
But that relief hasn’t turned into celebration.
“And where this goes,” they added, “nobody really knows.” That uncertainty isn’t theoretical. It’s lived and felt by those in the country and those who have since left.
One thing my source was very clear about: without Chávez, Venezuela wouldn’t have this mess. Chávez was the glue. When he died, he personally chose Maduro, and that decision is what kept the regime barely unified.
Now both of the people actually running things are gone.
“There is no successor,” my source said. “There’s a power vacuum in government because the two people in charge are gone.”
And then this — quietly, almost offhand “A lot of people said she was the brains in many ways and in many ways she was far more cruel, far more evil, like barking evil.”
That matters more than most people understand. She wasn’t ornamental. She was deeply involved in enforcement and repression. With both of them gone, there is no center holding the system together.
That’s why people are being careful right now. There are people on the streets but not as many as the mainstream media is telling you, and not for long. This isn’t a country erupting fully into celebration. It’s a country moving cautiously, watching, waiting, measuring risk because they have felt this before.
People aren’t staying home because they don’t care. They’re being careful because they understand exactly what moment they’re in.
What they’re worried about isn’t abstract. They’re worried about the colectivos
The “colectivos” are armed pro-regime militias. They’ve been around for years. Everyone in Venezuela knows what they are capable of. When protests formed in the past, they showed up on motorcycles and in cars and opened fire on civilians. Openly. With impunity.
Those men didn’t disappear with Maduro. So while some people have cautiously stepped outside, many are choosing restraint over celebration. Silence over noise. Right now, quiet isn’t necessarily a bad thing or a form of weakness. It’s survival.
This is what power vacuums actually look like. They don’t fill themselves with democracy. They fill themselves with whoever still has guns, money, and control over food. My source put it plainly: “this is a very dangerous time for Venezuelan people.”
That danger isn’t just internal.
For years, Venezuela functioned as a puppet state. It supplied oil to Cuba. Cuba supplied security, intelligence, and military know-how. Venezuelan oil kept Cuba afloat. Cuban advisors helped keep Venezuelans subjugated. That pipeline is now broken.
And Cuba doesn’t suddenly become less desperate because Maduro is gone. If anything, it becomes more unstable. Any Cuban-linked security or intelligence networks still operating inside Venezuela won’t disappear quietly. They’ll resist, adapt, or try to sabotage whatever comes next.
From the outside, people want a clean story. Dictator gone. Country and it’s people free but from the inside, that’s not how it works.
“The structure is still there,” my source told me. “The people who enforced it didn’t just disappear.”
No one knows how long the U.S. will stay. No one knows what “running Venezuela” actually means. No one knows if the military will unify or fracture. No one knows if the militias will disarm or turn criminal. Anyone pretending they know is lying. The next 48 to 72 hours matter more than anything that’s happened in the last twenty years. That’s when things either settle or spin.
If militias aren’t disarmed, they turn into criminal gangs. If the military fractures, violence follows. If foreign security influence remains embedded, the transition rots from the inside.
That’s why people are being careful. That’s why restraint is everywhere. “It’s a good day that he’s gone,” my source said again.
“And where this goes — nobody really knows.”
That’s not pessimism. That’s reality for anyone who fully understands Venezuela.
Maduro and his cruel wife are are officially gone. That matters most. That’s a first step. But freedom doesn’t just arrive with a helicopter extraction. For Venezuelans, today isn’t the end of the nightmare. It’s the moment where they hold their breath and wait to see what replaces it.
These are very dangerous times for the Venezuelan people.
Pretending otherwise helps no one.
KELSI SHEREN
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International
“History in the making”: Venezuelans in Florida flood streets after Maduro’s capture
Celebrations broke out across South Florida Saturday as news spread that Venezuela’s longtime socialist strongman Nicolás Maduro had been captured and removed from power, a moment many Venezuelan exiles said they had waited their entire lives to see. In Doral, hundreds gathered outside the El Arepazo restaurant before sunrise, waving flags, embracing strangers, and reacting emotionally to what they described as a turning point for their homeland. Local television footage captured chants, tears, and spontaneous celebrations as word filtered through the community that Maduro and his wife had been “captured and flown out of the country” following U.S. military action announced by Donald Trump earlier that morning.
Venezuelans gathered early this morning in Doral to celebrate after news broke that the U.S. had captured Nicolás Maduro🇻🇪| #ONLYinDADE pic.twitter.com/mSNaF3IhR3
— ONLY in DADE (@ONLYinDADE) January 3, 2026
One young man, Edgar, spoke directly to reporters as the crowd surged behind him, calling the moment “history in the making.” He said his family had spent decades telling him stories about a Venezuela that once had real elections and basic freedoms. “My chest feels like it’s going to explode with joy,” he said, explaining that the struggle against the regime began long before he was born. Edgar thanked President Trump for allowing Venezuelans to work and rebuild their lives in the United States, adding that now, for the first time, he believed they could take those skills back home.
Similar scenes played out beyond Florida. Video circulating online showed Venezuelans celebrating in Chile and other parts of Latin America, reflecting the regional impact of Maduro’s fall. The dictator had clung to power through what U.S. officials and international observers have long described as sham elections, while presiding over economic collapse, mass emigration, and deepening ties to transnational criminal networks. U.S. authorities have pursued him for years, placing a $50 million bounty on information leading to his arrest or conviction. Federal prosecutors accused Maduro in 2020 of being a central figure in the so-called Cartel of the Suns, an international cocaine trafficking operation allegedly run by senior members of the Venezuelan regime and aimed, in prosecutors’ words, at flooding the United States with drugs.
After the overnight strikes, Venezuela’s remaining regime figures declared a state of emergency, even as images of celebration dominated social media abroad. In Washington, reaction from Florida lawmakers was swift. Rep. Carlos Gimenez, who represents a district with large Venezuelan, Cuban, and Nicaraguan exile communities, compared Maduro’s capture to one of the defining moments of the 20th century. “President Trump has changed the course of history in our hemisphere,” Gimenez wrote, calling the operation “this hemisphere’s equivalent to the Fall of the Berlin Wall.” He added that South Florida’s exile communities were “overwhelmed with emotion and hope,” and thanked U.S. service members for what he described as a decisive and successful mission.
For many gathered in Doral, the reaction was deeply personal. A CBS Miami reporter relayed comments from attendees who said they now felt safer about the possibility of returning to Venezuela to see family members they had not hugged in years. One man described it as the end of “26 years of waiting” for a free country, saying the moment felt less like politics and more like the closing of a long, painful chapter.
U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi confirmed Saturday that Maduro and his wife have been formally indicted in the Southern District of New York. Bondi said the charges include narco-terrorism conspiracy, cocaine importation conspiracy, and weapons offenses involving machine guns and destructive devices. For Venezuelan Americans packed into South Florida streets, those legal details mattered less than the symbolism. After years of watching their country unravel from afar, many said they finally felt something unfamiliar when they looked south — relief, and the cautious hope that Venezuela’s future might no longer be written by a dictator.
Daily Caller
Scathing Indictment Claims Nicolás Maduro Orchestrated Drug-Fueled ‘Culture Of Corruption’ Which Plagued Entire Region

From the Daily Caller News Foundation
Ousted socialist Venezuelan dictator Nicolás Maduro was the mastermind of a pervasive drug-fueled “culture of corruption” which extended all the way to the U.S.’s backyard, according to the scathing indictment against him, his wife, his son, and others, released Saturday.
Hours after President Donald Trump announced Maduro’s capture and removal from power, Attorney General Pam Bondi confirmed the deposed despot and his wife, Cilia Flores, were indicted in the Southern District of New York on four charges, including narco-terrorism conspiracy, and “will soon face the full wrath of American justice” on U.S. soil. A grand jury found Maduro “and corrupt members of his regime enabled corruption fueled by drug trafficking throughout” the Latin American region, including in Mexico and Central America, and empowered notorious crime syndicates such as Tren de Aragua (TdA), according to the unsealed indictment.
Signed by Trump-appointed U.S. Attorney Jay Clayton, the 25-page indictment names six defendants, including the deposed Maduro, Flores, and Maduro’s 35-year-old son from his first marriage, Nicolás “Nicolasito” Maduro Guerra. It also names as defendants TdA leader Niño Guerrero and two high-profile members of Maduro’s United Socialist Party, Diosdado Cabello Rondón and Ramón Rodríguez Chacín.
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Maduro, “like former President [Hugo] Chávez before him[,] participates in, perpetuates, and protects a culture of corruption in which powerful Venezuelan elites enrich themselves through drug trafficking and the protection of their partner drug traffickers,” the indictment alleges. “The profits of that illegal activity flow to corrupt rank-and-file civilian, military, and intelligence officials, who operate in a patronage system run by those at the top-referred to as the Cartel de Los Soles or Cartel of the Suns, a reference to the sun insignia affixed to the uniforms of high-ranking Venezuelan military officials.”
The Trump administration’s State Department announced it was designating the Cartel de Los Soles as a Foreign Terrorist Organization (FTO) in November 2025. Secretary of State Marco Rubio wrote in a statement at the time the cartel “is headed by Nicolás Maduro and other high-ranking individuals of the illegitimate Maduro regime who have corrupted Venezuela’s military, intelligence, legislature, and judiciary.”
The indictment also notes the South American nation “sits in a geographically valuable location for drug traffickers” and that, around the time Chávez came to power in 1999, “Venezuela became a safe haven” for them.
“In that environment, cocaine trafficking flourished,” the indictment continues, citing State Department estimates from arund 2020, with between 200 and 250 tons of the drug being trafficked through the country each year.
The charging document goes on to allege Maduro, his wife, son, and political allies had “partnered with narcotics traffickers and narco-terrorist groups, who dispatched processed cocaine from Venezuela to the United States via transshipment points in the Caribbean and Central America, such as Honduras, Guatemala, and Mexico.”
“Through this drug trafficking, [Maduro] and corrupt members of his regime enabled corruption fueled by drug trafficking throughout the region,” the indictment continues. “The transshipment points in Honduras, Guatemala, and Mexico similarly relied on a culture of corruption, in which cocaine traffickers operating in those countries paid a portion of their own profits to politicians who protected and aided them. In turn, these politicians used the cocaine-fueled payments to maintain and augment their political power.”
Maduro and his regime also “facilitated the empowerment and growth of violent narco-terrorist groups fueling their organizations with cocaine profits,” according to the indictment.
The charging document notably identifies organizations which collaborated with the Maduro regime: Colombian communist militant groups Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) and National Liberation Army (ELN); Mexican syndicates the Sinaloa Cartel and Los Zetas; and Guerrero’s TdA.
The indictment also alleges Maduro Guerra, the captured dictator’s son, personally “worked to ship hundreds of kilograms of cocaine from Venezuela to Miami, Florida” around the year 2017. Maduro Guerra is a member of his father’s political party and served as a Deputy to the Venezuelan National Assembly since 2021.
“During this time, MADURO GUERRA spoke with his drug trafficking partners about, among other things, shipping low-quality cocaine to New York because it could not be sold in Miami, arranging a 500-kilogram shipment of cocaine to be unloaded from a cargo container near Miami, and using scrap metal containers to smuggle cocaine into the ports of New York,” the document reads.
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