Wednesday, January 7, 2026

The removal of Nicolás Maduro marks...

Editor's note: ...a pivotal step toward Pax Judaica by dismantling one of the Western Hemisphere’s most entrenched anti-Israel regimes. Under Maduro, Venezuela severed diplomatic ties with Israel, aligned closely with Iran and other anti-Israel states, and embedded hostility toward Israel into its foreign policy doctrine. His removal clears the way for a fundamental geopolitical realignment, weakening the Iran-led axis in Latin America and opening space for Venezuela to reenter a diplomatic order increasingly oriented around Israeli security, Western alignment, and regional stabilization. In this context, Maduro's removal functions less as a domestic political change than as a strategic advance in the broader consolidation of Pax Judaica.
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Israeli Intrigue in Venezuela?

By W.M. Peterson | January 5, 2026

"The question is: who's really in charge? I know President Trump appears to be. I'm not convinced that's the case because remember… you had this giant Israeli flag suddenly appear in the middle of the Republican convention. And certainly in my lifetime… I don't know of a single instance where either the Democratic or Republican parties held a convention and hoisted a giant foreign flag… I've never heard of that before."

                                                                      — Col. Douglas Macgregor on the Judging Freedom podcast
                                                                           with Judge Andrew Napolitano (Jan. 3, 2026)

Just four days after Benjamin Netanyahu appeared as a guest on Newsmax's The Record with Greta van Sustern and informed the insufferable newscaster that Iran is "exporting terrorism… to Venezuela. They're in cahoots with the Maduro regime… this has got to change," it was announced that U.S. military forces had carried out a large scale operation against Venezuela, capturing President Nicolas Maduro and his wife Cilia Flores, who will both "face the full wrath of American justice" after being indicted on drugs and weapons charges in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York.

The capture of Maduro occurred exactly 36 years to the day after US Delta Forces captured Panamanian President/CIA informant Manuel Noriega, and it's unlikely that Netanyahu's recent visit to the U.S.– the fifth in 2025 by the international fugitive — and the American operation are unrelated. While talk of 'stolen oil' and 'narco-terrorism' currently dominates the mainstream discourse, the fact that Israel has been seeking regime change in Venezuela since the days of Hugo Chavez has gone virtually unreported.

Prior to Maduro's predecessor Chavez winning Venezuela's 1998 presidential election, relations between the naturally wealthy South American country and Israel had been relatively good. Venezuela voted in favor of the United Nations Partition Plan for Palestine in 1947 — which allocated 55% of historic Palestine to the as-yet-unfounded Jewish state — and two years later voted in favor of Israeli membership to the UN. By the mid 1960s, Venezuela boasted a robust Jewish population equipped with an impressive communal structure of schools, synagogues and cultural centers organized by middle-to-upper-class members of the community. In 1967, Jewish ethnic solidarity inspired a large number of Venezuelan Jews to travel to Israel to fight alongside their co-religionists in the Six-Day War. Following the conflict, a large influx of Sephardic Jews from Morocco arrived and settled in Caracas contributing to the largest Jewish population in Venezuela’s history, numbering 30,000 at its peak, evenly split between Sephardim and Askenazim.

By the mid-2000s, however, relations between Venezuela and the Synagogue began to fray.

The first notable rift occurred in late 2004 following the assassination of Venezuelan state prosecutor Danilo Anderson, who was killed by a car bomb at age 38.[1]

At the time of his death Anderson had been investigating more than 400 people suspected of involvement in the Llaguno Overpass shootout and the failed 2002 coup d'état, during which Chavez was ousted from office for two days before being restored to power by popular support and a number of loyal military men. (Accusations of Jewish involvement in the coup were made at the time by pro-Chavez newspaper Diario VEA, and later by Venezuela's ambassador to Russia, Alexis Navarro.)

Suspicions of a possible Mossad dimension to the assassination plot were already high when Venezuelan authorities received a tip suggesting that weapons and explosives connected to the murder may have been transferred from the Club Magnum shooting range to the Colegio Hebraica Jewish school in Caracas, prompting Chavez to authorize his investigative police force DISIP to conduct an armed raid on the school on the morning of November 29, 2004. Chavez's investigators intercepted busloads of kids and evacuated 1,500 students from the building while searching for any materials related to Anderson’s assassination. Ultimately nothing of value was found and the incident was loudly condemned by local and international Jewish organizations like the Simon Wiesenthal Center, who referred to it in typically melodramatic fashion as a "pogrom."

Throughout the next two years Chavez's rhetoric concerning Jewish behavior became considerably more pointed, especially following Israel's invasion of Lebanon in 2006. It was during this time that Chavez recalled his country's ambassador to Israel and threatened to sever diplomatic ties with the Jewish state in protest of its military operation, describing it as a "new Holocaust" and "similar or, perhaps worse… than what the Nazis did." Chavez further inflamed the sensibilities of Jews at home and abroad by traveling to Tehran and affirming that Venezuela would "stand by Iran at any time and under any condition."[2]
"Israel has gone mad. It's attacking, doing the same thing to the Palestinian and Lebanese people that they have criticised – and with reason – the Holocaust. But this is a new Holocaust." - Hugo Chávez
In January 2009, Chavez finally made good on his threat when Venezuela severed all diplomatic ties with the Jewish state due to its conduct in the 2009 Gaza War which left 1,400 Palestinians dead and over 5,000 wounded. Once again referring to the violence as a "Holocaust" and a "flagrant violation of International Law," Chavez expelled Israel's ambassador to Venezuela and called for Prime Minister Ehud Olmert to be tried for war crimes in the International Criminal Court. Shortly thereafter, foreign minister Nicolas Maduro met in Caracas with representatives from the Palestinian National Authority and Venezuela officially recognized the existence of a Palestinian State on April 27, 2009.

Please go to Truth Blitzkrieg to continue reading.
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What is Venezuela all about?

A. ______  Oil
B. ______  Silver
C. ______  Drugs
D. ______  Election interference (Smartmatic)
E. ______  Russia
F. ______  Pax Judaica
G. ______  All of the above

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