Opinion
International Academic Statement Against US Bombing of Venezuela and Kidnapping of President Maduro
Over 400 scholars from around the world signed a statement condemning the Jan. 3 US attacks and demanding reparations for Venezuela.
Oil revenues have reportedly been deposited in bank accounts in Qatar and a portion will be transferred to private Venezuelan banks.
The New York Times and Washington Post had advance knowledge of the US' January 3 military attack but chose not to reveal it.
Greg Wilpert places the recent oil negotiations in the broader context of Venezuela's struggle for national sovereignty.
US military forces have seized a fifth oil tanker and are in pursuit of several more in an effort to strangle exports and ...
Atul Chandra and Tings Chak look at the US attacks and presidential kidnapping and their implications for sovereignty and multilateralism.
Activists Medea Benjamin and Nicolas Davies take stock of US claims to "run" Venezuela and the need to oppose imperialism at ...
Trump claimed that his administration will "run Venezuela" with the acquiescence from Venezuelan Vice President Delcy ...
Steve Ellner and Ricardo Vaz placed Trump's latest claims in a long context of struggle for control of Venezuela's oil ...
The Anti-Imperialist Scholars Collective’s Red Paper series takes on the pressing issues of our time with urgency and principled clarity. We are at the frontlines of the Battle of Ideas and we use ...
Nuvpreet Kalra takes stock of a quarter century of US imperialist aggression against Venezuela, dating back to the Hugo Chávez government.
Alexander Mckay and Kit Klarenberg discuss how the US kidnapping of Maduro showcases its imperial decay and savagery.
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