Opening summary
Welcome to our live coverage of the continuing aftermath of the US military’s weekend raid on Venezuela and removal of president Nicolás Maduro from power.
Venezuelan opposition leader and Nobel peace prize winner María Corina Machado has said in her first televised interview since then that she hasn’t spoken to Donald Trump since October 2025.
“Actually, I spoke with president Trump on October 10, the same day the [Noble peace] prize was announced, [but] not since then,” Machado said on Fox News. Machado – widely seen as Maduro’s most credible opponent – left Venezuela last month to travel to Norway to accept the award and hasn’t returned since.
“I’m planning to go as soon as possible back home,” she told Fox when asked about her plans to return to Venezuela.
Trump on Saturday dismissed the idea of working with Machado, saying: “She doesn’t have the support within or the respect within the country.” US media reported on Monday that a classified CIA assessment presented to Trump concluded that senior Maduro loyalists, including interim president Delcy Rodríguez, were best positioned to maintain stability.
Despite this, Machado welcomed the US actions as “a huge step for humanity, for freedom and human dignity”.

In other key developments:
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Mike Johnson, the Republican speaker of the US House, emerged from a classified briefing for congressional leaders insisting that “we are not at war” and “this is not a regime change” but “a demand for a change of behaviour by a regime”.
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Chuck Schumer, the Senate’s Democratic minority leader, expressed discontent with the briefing, calling the Trump administration’s “plan for the US ‘running Venezuela’ … vague, based on wishful thinking and unsatisfying”.
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The reported appearance of unidentified drones over the presidential palace in Venezuela’s capital on Monday night filled the night sky with the sound of heavy gunfire and tracer fire as the regime’s security forces reacted to what they mistook for another raid.
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Trump suggested to NBC News that US taxpayers could fund the rebuilding of Venezuela’s infrastructure for extracting and shipping oil. “A tremendous amount of money will have to be spent and the oil companies will spend it, and then they’ll get reimbursed by us or through revenue.”
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White House adviser Stephen Miller reaffirmed to CNN the Trump administration’s position on Greenland becoming a part of the US.
Key events
The UK’s foreign secretary, Yvette Cooper, made a statement in the House of Commons on Monday about the US raid on Venezuela.
Cooper told the Commons she had stressed the importance of international law in a conversation with the US secretary of state, Marco Rubio, but would not say whether she saw the US attack as illegal, saying it was for Washington to set out its justification.
A large section of her statement focused on the brutality of Nicolás Maduro’s dictatorship. “We have seen Maduro’s regime systematically dismantle democratic institutions, silencing dissent and weaponizing state resources to maintain power through fear and corruption,” she said.
Cooper added:
I discussed with Secretary Rubio what should happen next and our continued commitment to a transition to a peaceful and stable democracy.
Our collective immediate focus must be on avoiding any deterioration in Venezuela into further instability, criminality or violence. That would be deeply damaging for the people of Venezuela, our own overseas territories, our allies in the US and other regional partners.
The UK has long been clear that leadership of Venezuela must reflect the will of the Venezuelan people.
You can read her full statement on Venezuela here.
British PM choosing his ‘words carefully’ over response to US attack on Venezuela, health secretary says
In the UK, the health secretary Wes Streeting has defended Keir Starmer’s cautious response to the US attack in Venezuela despite MPs wanting the prime minister to condemn what is seen as an operation against a sovereign country in violation of international law.
Starmer, always keen to keep on the good side of the US, has declined to criticise the US military operation over the weekend, unlike several Labour MPs including Emily Thornberry, who chairs the Commons foreign affairs committee.
Streeting told BBC Breakfast this morning that he had “enormous respect” for Thornberry, who was “right” to speak “honestly and candidly” about her view (that the lack of western condemnation could embolden China and Russia to take similar action against other countries).
But he added:
The prime minister and the foreign secretary have a different role and responsibility, and their words carry different weight.
And what I can tell you is that at every moment in recent days, since the US action in Venezuela, the prime minister has judged what he says and when he says it with one overriding consideration, which is how to make a challenging situation better, not worse, and how to do so in a way that protects the UK’s national interests, our collective security, particularly in Europe at a difficult time, and also the best interests of the people of Venezuela who have the right to choose their own leaders and who governs them.
That’s what the prime minister has been doing, and I appreciate there are others who have been more strident and have been more critical of the United States.
The prime minister has a different responsibility, and he is choosing his words carefully and wisely to try and influence how events unfold from here on.
My colleague Sibylla Brodzinsky has reported on the relationship between the US and Colombia, home to significant oil reserves. Here is an extract from her story:
Colombia has long been a close partner of the US in the fight against drug trafficking and enjoyed bipartisan support in Washington but relations have soured dramatically since Trump came to office.
Colombia’s narcotics trade is largely controlled by illegal armed groups such as the Gulf Clan, the National Liberation Army (ELN) and dissident factions of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (Farc) guerrilla group, the majority of whose members demobilised after a 2016 peace deal …
Many among Colombia’s right wing opposition have allied themselves with Trump, but voices from across the political spectrum have rejected the threats of a US attack on Colombia.
The US revoked the Petro’s visa in September after he called on American soldiers to disobey any illegal orders. In October, it placed financial sanctions on Petro, his wife and several close collaborators.
At the same time the US was building up its military presence in the Caribbean and bombing suspected drug boats to put pressure on Venezuela’s Maduro, US forces have also conducted strikes on boats in the eastern Pacific region to the west of the Colombian coast.
After the deadly US military operation to capture Nicolás Maduro, and his wife, Cilia Flores, from their Caracas compound on Saturday, tensions between the Trump administration and Colombian President Gustavo Petro are boiling over.
Speaking to reporters on Air Force One on Sunday, Trump said Colombia was “very sick too” and “run by a sick man who likes making cocaine and selling it to the United States.”
“He has cocaine mills and cocaine factories and is not going to be doing it very long,” Trump said.
While Colombia is the world’s largest producer of cocaine there is no evidence that Petro, who condemned the US attack on Venezuela as an “assault on the sovereignty” of Latin America, is in any way involved in the business.
In a lengthy post on X, Petro, who was elected in 2022, wrote yesterday:
If you bomb even one of these groups without sufficient intelligence, you will kill many children. If you bomb peasants, thousands of guerrillas will return in the mountains. And if you arrest the president whom a good part of my people want and respect, you will unleash the popular jaguar.
As well as Colombia, the Trump administration could target Cuba, Mexico, Greenland or Iran next. His recent attack in Venezuela – considered illegal under international law by many observers and experts – reaffirms the extent of American military power and the way the US can act overseas with little repercussions.
What exactly is the US accusing Nicolás Maduro of and what’s in the criminal indictment against him that was unveiled by attorney general Pam Bondi at the weekend?
The US alleges the deposed Venezuelan president has spent the past two decades working with international drug trafficking groups.
He pleaded not guilty – as did his wife, Cilia Flores, who said she was “completely innocent” – at their court appearance in New York.
What are the charges, how comprehensive is the indictment and who might be helping US prosecutors? This explainer has the details.
Returning now to Nicolás Maduro’s court appearance in New York, the deposed Venezuelan president pleaded not guilty to drugs, weapons and narco-terrorism charges on Monday, two days after his capture by US forces.
The brevity and formality of the arraignment hearing in federal court – barely 30 minutes long, during which Maduro was asked to confirm his name and that he understood the four charges against him – belied the far-reaching consequences of the US action, report Victoria Bekiempis and Richard Luscombe.
Maduro, 63, insisted to the judge that he was “still president of my country”, had been illegally “captured” at his Caracas home and was “a prisoner of war”.
“I am innocent. I am not guilty. I am a decent man,” Maduro said in Spanish during repeated attempts to speak over the judge.
The full report is here:
Dara Kerr
Minutes after Donald Trump announced a “large-scale strike” against Venezuela early on Saturday, false and misleading AI-generated images began flooding social media. There were fake photos of Nicolás Maduro being escorted off a plane by US agents, images of jubilant Venezuelans pouring into the streets of Caracas and videos of missiles raining down on the city – all fake.
The fabricated content intermixed with real videos and photos of US aircraft flying over the Venezuelan capital and explosions lighting up the dark sky. A lack of verified information about the raid coupled with AI tools’ rapidly advancing capabilities made discerning fact from fiction about the incursion on Caracas difficult.
By the time Trump posted a verified photo of Maduro blindfolded and handcuffed aboard a US warship, the fake images with the US drug enforcement agents had already gone viral. Across X, Instagram, Facebook and TikTok, the AI photos have been seen and shared millions of times, according to the factchecking site NewsGuard.
See the full story here:
Fresh from his military operation in Venezuela, Donald Trump has said the US needs Greenland “very badly”, renewing fears of a US invasion of the largely autonomous island that remains part of the Danish kingdom.
Greenland prime minister Jens-Frederik Nielsen pushed back on Monday against Trump’s calls to annex the Arctic territory, while Danish prime minister Mette Frederiksen warned that any US attack on a Nato ally would be the end of the military alliance and “post-second world war security”.
Here’s a video taking us through it, including Nielsen starting by saying: “First of all I would say that our country is not really the right one to compare with Venezuela.”
Victoria Bekiempis
At noon on Monday in New York, Nicolás Maduro was escorted into a Manhattan federal courtroom following his capture early on Saturday in Caracas, completing the seized Venezuelan leader’s stunning journey from his capital city to a US courtroom.
It was a surreal display amid the fallout of a brazen US military operation to grab Maduro that has roiled global politics and stunned observers in the US and overseas.
In Manhattan the spectacle played out as Maduro’s larger-than-life persona soon filled Judge Alvin Hellerstein’s courtroom with a mixture of bravado, seriousness, jocularity and defiance.
Maduro, who was not handcuffed but constrained by ankle shackles, looked forward, toward the jury box, as he walked into court. Before sitting down, Maduro told the public gallery “Happy new year!” in English.
His wife, Cilia Flores, followed shortly after, and she had two large Band-Aids on her face.
Proceedings started in earnest with an exchange of greetings that did little to hint at the enormous significance of the events playing out in the room.
You can read the full account here:

David Smith
The United States has faced widespread condemnation for a “crime of aggression” in Venezuela at an emergency meeting of the United Nations security council.
Brazil, China, Colombia, Cuba, Eritrea, Mexico, Russia, South Africa and Spain were among countries that have denounced the weekend US attack in Venezuela.
“The bombings on Venezuelan territory and the capture of its president cross an unacceptable line … and set an extremely dangerous precedent for the entire international community,” Sérgio França Danese, the Brazilian ambassador to the UN, told the meeting on Monday.
Donald Trump’s UN ambassador, Mike Waltz, defended the attack as a legitimate “law enforcement” action to execute longstanding criminal indictments against an “illegitimate” leader, not an act of war.
António Guterres, the UN secretary general, warned that the capture of Maduro risked intensifying instability in Venezuela and across the region. He questioned whether the operation respected the rules of international law.
I am deeply concerned about the possible intensification of instability in the country, the potential impact on the region, and the precedent it may set for how relations between and among states are conducted.
More than a dozen media workers were detained on Monday while covering events in the Venezuelan capital, including a march in support of ousted president Nicolás Maduro and the swearing-in of the country’s new legislature, the Venezuelan press association said.
All 14 of those detained in Caracas were later released, the National Union of Press Workers (SNTP) posted on X, though one was a foreign journalist who was deported.
Reuters quoted the SNTP as saying those detained included 11 people working with international media outlets and one with a national outlet.
Opening summary
Welcome to our live coverage of the continuing aftermath of the US military’s weekend raid on Venezuela and removal of president Nicolás Maduro from power.
Venezuelan opposition leader and Nobel peace prize winner María Corina Machado has said in her first televised interview since then that she hasn’t spoken to Donald Trump since October 2025.
“Actually, I spoke with president Trump on October 10, the same day the [Noble peace] prize was announced, [but] not since then,” Machado said on Fox News. Machado – widely seen as Maduro’s most credible opponent – left Venezuela last month to travel to Norway to accept the award and hasn’t returned since.
“I’m planning to go as soon as possible back home,” she told Fox when asked about her plans to return to Venezuela.
Trump on Saturday dismissed the idea of working with Machado, saying: “She doesn’t have the support within or the respect within the country.” US media reported on Monday that a classified CIA assessment presented to Trump concluded that senior Maduro loyalists, including interim president Delcy Rodríguez, were best positioned to maintain stability.
Despite this, Machado welcomed the US actions as “a huge step for humanity, for freedom and human dignity”.
In other key developments:
-
Mike Johnson, the Republican speaker of the US House, emerged from a classified briefing for congressional leaders insisting that “we are not at war” and “this is not a regime change” but “a demand for a change of behaviour by a regime”.
-
Chuck Schumer, the Senate’s Democratic minority leader, expressed discontent with the briefing, calling the Trump administration’s “plan for the US ‘running Venezuela’ … vague, based on wishful thinking and unsatisfying”.
-
The reported appearance of unidentified drones over the presidential palace in Venezuela’s capital on Monday night filled the night sky with the sound of heavy gunfire and tracer fire as the regime’s security forces reacted to what they mistook for another raid.
-
Trump suggested to NBC News that US taxpayers could fund the rebuilding of Venezuela’s infrastructure for extracting and shipping oil. “A tremendous amount of money will have to be spent and the oil companies will spend it, and then they’ll get reimbursed by us or through revenue.”
-
White House adviser Stephen Miller reaffirmed to CNN the Trump administration’s position on Greenland becoming a part of the US.
Source: https://www.theguardian.com/world/live/2026/jan/06/venezuela-live-updates-maduro-trump-us-attack-opposition-machado-return