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Venezuelan opposition leader María Corina Machado dedicated her Nobel Peace Prize on Friday to President Donald Trump for his "decisive support" of their cause.
The Norwegian Nobel Committee (NNC) granted the prize Friday to Machado for "promoting democratic rights for the people of Venezuela and for her struggle to achieve a just and peaceful transition from dictatorship to democracy,"
according to a press release. Machado promptly dedicated her prize to "the suffering people of Venezuela" and the American president.
Trump has long sought a Nobel Peace Prize. However, the deadline for nominations is Jan. 31, according to the Nobel Prize website. The prize was handed out to Monchado days after the first phase of a peace deal negotiated in part by the Trump administration was agreed upon between Hamas and Israel, potentially ending the two-year conflict."This recognition of the struggle of all Venezuelans is a boost to conclude our task: to conquer freedom," Monchado wrote on X.
"We are on the threshold of victory and today, more than ever, we count on President Trump, the people of the United States, the peoples of Latin America, and the democratic nations of the world as our principal allies to achieve Freedom and democracy," she continued.
"I dedicate this prize to the suffering people of Venezuela and to President Trump for his decisive support for our cause!"A statement from Machado said she dedicates the prize "to the suffering people of Venezuela and to President Trump."
Trump showed support for Machado in January for "peacefully expressing the voices and the WILL of the Venezuelan people with hundreds of thousands of people demonstrating against the regime."Machado was praised by the committee for standing up against Venezuela's "brutal, authoritarian state" for years.
She secured election to the country's National Assembly back in 2010, The
New York Times (
NYT)
reported. Although nearly 8 million people have fled the country, Machado stayed behind to run as the opposition presidential candidate against President Nicolas Maduro, according to the committee.
Machado's candidacy was blocked by the regime over allegations of financial irregularities from her time as a legislator and she endorsed another candidate in 2024, the NYT reported.Machado mobilized observers across the country to ensure election transparency. The committee described the opposition's efforts in Venezuela as "innovative and brave, peaceful and democratic."
The opposition claimed that they had won the election, but Maduro refused to step down, according to the
NYT.
"María Corina Machado meets all three criteria stated in Alfred Nobel's will for the selection of a Peace Prize laureate. She has brought her country's opposition together. She has never wavered in resisting the militarization of Venezuelan society. She has been steadfast in her support for a peaceful transition to democracy," the committee said.
Those three criteria are disarmament, a brotherhood between nations and peace congresses,
according to the Nobel Peace Center.
Reader Comments
Anyone who praises an admin that has been the cause of so many problems in the country in the past and present cannot be trusted IMO.
Similar situation but even more egregious was the situation with the Dutch in Indonesia, many were forced or encouraged to leave that brilliant live style where they had servants at their beck and call, not all citizens that left were in that category, some (I had a friend indigenous to the Nation) having fought in the resistance also had to leave at pain of death, never able to return.
The Dutch Indonesians and Indonesians that came to Australia that I personally knew counted at least 8 families.
Maria says "to conquer freedom"; what does that even mean?
Why even have a peace prize if it is going to be so fixed.
To think Trump was even considered says it all.
Preparatory actions for the regime change attempt to come.
I see a Nobel prize as a clear sign we are dealing with globalist system stooge here. Not only for "peace nobel prizes", mind you.
But, way over there, the James Webb has revealed potential "dark stars" powered by dark matter, with one candidate, JADES-GS-z14-0, being among the most distant objects ever observed.
Thats important finding as Peace on Earth was the most distant.
Its a big show - might as well have some popcorn....
A "perfect world" does not exist I think, but I can prove a flawed one does - pass the popcorn...or no - here let me pass it to you.
Now you got all types of whisky - just now tis Jimmy Beam keeping me company.....
Perty soon I'll have better company - oh yeah it is a show no doubt when somebody evidently "biased" gets the peace prize from the fella discovered dynamite.
~
At the campfire I like to talk the trash - but you think I don't know my stuff you learn soon enough: Of course without dynamite there would be no Blue Ridge Parkway I reckon.
Nor better munitions in the day.
Peace my ass....peace prize - how offensive...
.
"Yesterday, Venezuelan opposition leader and the newest nobel prize laureate, Maria Corina Machado gave a podcast interview to Donald Trump Jr ., during which she gave an inspirational, moving speech about how much money the U.S. companies will make in Venezuela once she takes power: “Forget Saudi Arabia, I mean we have more oil than them, I mean endless possibilities. We will privatize our entire industry for you. American companies will profit greatly!” Trump Jr. could hardly conceal his excitement: he looked like he was struggling to stay awake.
Ms. Machado has been dying to get into power in Venezuela for over 20 years now. In 2002 she participated in the failed coup against then President Hugo Chavez for which she accepted funding from the CIA front, the National Endowment for Democracy. Well, great ends might justify great means and Machado has continued to seek such means ever since.
Sanctioning Venezuela to death When Trump imposed severe sanctions on Venezuela in 2017, she was enthusiastically supportive in spite of the fact that the sanctions killed tens of thousands of Venezuelans. The 2019 Center for Economic Policy Research (CEFR) report on US sanctions against Venezuela, co-authored by Mark Weisbrot and Jeffrey Sachs came to the conclusion that the sanctions killed over 40,000 in just one year.
The sanctions didn’t do the trick and by 2018, Machado was calling for stronger medicine, arguing that the Maduro regime could only be removed by force. The following year she wrote a letter to Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu : citing the R2P (responsibility to protect) doctrine, she asked Netanyahu to intervene in Venezuela and overthrow Maduro already so she could become the country’s new democratic President. She sent a similar letter to Argentina’s President Macri and also to Santa Claus, according to three people familiar with the matter.
All these years, Machado has persevered and now it appears that a renewed push to free Venezuela’s resources people from the odious, undemocratical Maduro regime is gathering momentum once more. Trump has moved American naval assets to the region and yesterday blew up yet another Venezuelan boat, killing six people on board. No worries, all six were very, very bad people. That was the 5th such strike, which killed a total of 27 very bad people. However, the reasons given by the administration for killing these bad people make little sense.
Supposedly, these are suspected drug traffickers. But even if they were, deploying the U.S. military to kill them wouldn’t be the best way to stop the drugs flow into the U.S. The real purpose of these strikes is to exert pressure on Maduro regime and embolden its opposition. With any luck, this will provoke them into retaliating, giving the U.S. a justification to bomb Venezuela - like nobody’s ever seen before. Eventually, we do in Venezuela as we did in Libya, Syria, Iraq and a few other places around the world.
Why are regime changes necessary?
Of course, everyone understands that the real reason for the regime change is Venezuela’s oil wealth. But as we learned from the New York Times last week, President Maduro did reach out to the Trump administration, offering his country’s resources to the U.S. in order to avoid a military conflict.
Here’s the relevant excerpt:
Venezuelan officials, hoping to end their country’s clash with the United States, offered the Trump administration a dominant stake in Venezuela’s oil and other mineral wealth in discussions that lasted for months, according to multiple people close to the talks.
The far-reaching offer remained on the table as the Trump administration called the government of President Nicolas Maduro of Venezuela a “narco-terror cartel,” amassed warships in the Caribbean and began blowing up boats that American officials say were carrying drugs from Venezuela.
Under a deal discussed between a senior U.S. official and Mr. Maduro’s top aides, the Venezuelan strongman offered to open up all existing and future oil and gold projects to American companies, give preferential contracts to American businesses, reverse the flow of Venezuelan oil exports from China to the United States, and slash his country’s energy and mining contracts with Chinese, Iranian and Russian firms.
The answer from the Trump White House was, NO, confirmed with yesterday’s killing of another six very bad people on a Venezuelan boat.
If Maduro was offering what the Trump administration wanted, and they could have had it without a fight, then why was that offer declined? In general, resources can always be obtained through trade. For the regional behemoth like the United States, they would always be able to negotiate guaranteed long-term contracts on very favorable terms, so Venezuela’s riches could flow to the U.S. markets even without Maria Corina Machado and still, the “American companies would profit greatly.”
It’s all about bank collateral
So then, how is Maduro a problem, and Machado the solution? As always, the key element in the geopolitical equation isn’t the resources as such, but resources as collateral. With political control over Caracas, Venezuelan resources would become the collateral of U.S. and other Western banks. Their clients - companies like BP, Shell, Exxon Mobil and even the Venezuelan state itself - would be able to obtain credit secured with Venezuelan oil, gold and other resources. In this way, Venezuela’s natural resource wealth magically turns into profit-generating assets on the balance sheets of banks like JPMorgan, Goldman Sachs, Citigroup and others.
This relationship highlights the driving incentive behind imperialism and colonial wars over centuries, whether we are talking about Venezuela, Libya, Syria, Ukraine, Russia, India, Congo, or any other resource rich nation. It may be hard to imagine that the fine, affluent gentlemen in expensive suits sitting in corner offices in New York or London could be the ultimate butchers of humanity, but they are the only group in society that have the motive, the means and the opportunity under their control..."
Maria is a player.