Caracas Streets Surge as Thousands Demand Release of Maduro Following US Military Capture
Thousands of protesters took to the streets of Caracas to demand the release of Nicolás Maduro and Cilia Flores, one month after their capture by U.S. forces. The massive rally marks a significant escalation in anti-U.S. sentiment as the former leaders face narco-terrorism charges in the United States following a dramatic military intervention.
The mobilization centered around the recent extradition of Maduro and Flores to the United States, where they currently face a litany of federal charges involving narco-terrorism and drug trafficking. Holding aloft portraits of the former first couple and placards reading “Venezuela needs Nicolas,” the crowd marched toward the city center to voice their opposition to President Donald Trump’s administration. Demonstrators argued that the detention of Maduro represents a breach of international law and an assault on Venezuelan self-determination. The protest highlights the deep-seated polarization within the country, as loyalists to the former administration struggle to reconcile with the reality of a U.S.-backed transitional period and the absence of the figures who dominated the nation's political landscape for over a decade.
The administrative and legal fallout of this crisis continues to resonate across the hemisphere. Since the January operation that saw U.S. special forces secure the presidential palace, the legal proceedings against Maduro have been fast-tracked through the American judicial system. While Washington maintains that the arrest was a necessary step to dismantle a criminal regime, the thousands gathered in Caracas on Sunday viewed the move as a geopolitical kidnapping. The rally was not merely a call for a legal release but a broader indictment of U.S. foreign policy, with speakers at the event condemning the military presence and the freezing of national assets.
As the month-long occupation continues, the scale of Sunday’s demonstration underscores the significant challenges facing any attempt at long-term stabilization in the region. The persistence of pro-Maduro sentiment suggests that the judicial resolution in U.S. courts may not easily translate into political peace on the ground in Venezuela. With the former president and his wife awaiting trial on foreign soil, the streets of Caracas remain a frontline for a geopolitical struggle that shows no signs of dissipating. The international community continues to watch closely, as the tension between U.S. enforcement actions and local resistance creates a precarious and unpredictable future for the South American nation.

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