How a contested presidency in Caracas became Washington’s pretext for a doctrine of dominance—and why William Blum’s history warns this “transition” may be an occupation in disguise
By Malik Washington
Destination Freedom Media Group and the Davis Vanguard

Photo credits:
https://www.newsweek.com/cilia-flores-maduro-venezuela-trump-strikes-11301757
https://www.wsj.com/livecoverage/venezuela-strikes/card/who-is-maduro-s-wife-cilia-flores–zAn6wDhDEtYsnZ2y4hBm
America woke up this weekend to a sentence that should not exist in a constitutional republic.
According to multiple independent outlets, including The Guardian and Democracy Now!, President Donald Trump announced that U.S. forces had captured Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro and that the United States would “run the country” until a transition could be installed. That phrase—run the country—landed like a shockwave not only in Caracas, but across American living rooms, veterans’ halls, and communities still haunted by Iraq and Afghanistan.
The shock is visceral because the language is naked. It strips away decades of euphemism and reveals what U.S. power too often prefers to whisper: that sovereignty, for some nations, is conditional.
But if journalism is to retain credibility—especially at a moment this volatile—it must hold two truths at once. Nicolás Maduro is not an innocent bystander swept away by history. His claim to the presidency has been deeply contested, and credible reporting raises serious doubts about the legitimacy of his mandate. Yet even a flawed or illegitimate presidency does not grant the United States the right to bomb a capital, seize a head of state, and announce itself as the country’s temporary ruler.
Empire does not become lawful because the target is compromised.
WHAT IS BEING REPORTED—AND WHY AMERICANS ARE STUNNED
In a January 4, 2026 explainer, The Guardian reports that the U.S. carried out airstrikes across Venezuela, with explosions rocking Caracas before dawn, followed by President Trump’s announcement that U.S. forces had captured Nicolás Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores, and flown them out of the country to face trial in New York on narco-terrorism charges. A fresh indictment was reportedly issued Saturday. Trump later posted an image on Truth Social showing Maduro aboard the USS Iwo Jima, and the White House released video that appeared to show Maduro handcuffed and escorted at U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration offices. Trump said the United States would “run the country” until a leadership transition could take place and openly stated that U.S. oil companies would move into Venezuela.
Why has the US captured Venezuela’s president and what happens next? – January 4, 2026
Democracy Now!’s January 3, 2026 special report similarly states that Trump described the operation as a “large-scale attack,” declared “We are going to run the country,” and told Fox News the U.S. would be “very strongly involved” in Venezuela’s oil industry, explicitly referencing the country’s vast reserves. The broadcast also reported international condemnation, including Mexico’s assertion that the attack violated Article 2 of the UN Charter and Brazil’s warning that the seizure crossed an unacceptable line.
Special Report on Venezuela: U.S. Kidnaps Maduro, Trump Says “We Are Going to Run” Oil-Rich Nation
https://www.democracynow.org/2026/1/3/special_report_on_venezuela_us_kidnaps
People’s World dispensed with diplomatic hedging altogether, calling the removal of Maduro “kidnapping” and “an act of war,” arguing the operation had nothing to do with drug enforcement and everything to do with oil and imperial power.
U.S. attack on Venezuela is kidnapping and an act of war
https://www.peoplesworld.org/article/u-s-attack-on-venezuela-is-kidnapping-and-an-act-of-war/
Americans are stunned because this is not how democratic nations claim to behave. This is how empires announce themselves.
MADURO MAY NOT BE A LEGITIMATE PRESIDENT—BUT VENEZUELA IS NOT U.S. PROPERTY
Here is the uncomfortable truth that must be faced head-on: Nicolás Maduro’s presidency may rest on a stolen election.
In August 2024, The Guardian published a detailed investigation describing how Venezuela’s opposition organized a nationwide operation—months in the making—to collect voting tallies from polling stations across the country. Using QR codes printed on official tally receipts, tens of thousands of volunteers scanned and uploaded results, ultimately gathering approximately 83% of the nationwide vote count. Those tallies showed opposition candidate Edmundo González winning by a wide margin, directly contradicting the government-controlled electoral council’s declaration that Maduro had prevailed.
How Venezuela’s opposition proved its election win: ‘A brilliant political move – August 10, 2024 -madurohttps://www.theguardian.com/world/article/2024/aug/10/gonzalez-proof-win-venezuela-election-vote-tally-maduro
AP review of Venezuela opposition-provided vote tallies casts doubt on government’s election results