Sunday, January 11, 2026
16.1 C
New Delhi

Maduro dancing to ‘No War, Yes Peace’ may have triggered Trump into kidnapping him

Maduro dancing to 'No War, Yes Peace' may have triggered Trump into kidnapping him and bombing Venezuela: Report

An innocent dance to a remix called “No War, Yes Peace” may have been the final straw that pushed US President Donald Trump to order the capture of Venezuela’s leader, Nicolás Maduro, and bomb the Latin American country.The MAGA chief was frustrated by Maduro’s casual response to rising tensions with the US. However, it was a televised moment last month, when the Venezuelan president stood up and danced to a remix of his own speech, that pushed Trump’s temper off the edge, according to sources cited by the New York Times.In the now viral video, Maduro can be seen grooving and bouncing to the music as his own recorded voice is repeated in English, “No crazy war.” For Trump and his advisers, the dance felt like open mockery, coming just days after US carried out a strike on a Venezuelan dock it said was linked to drug trafficking. Maduro’s dancing was not unusual. He had appeared moving to the same song at other public events, including one a month earlier featuring lyrics such as: “Victory! Forever, forever, forever. Not crazy war! Peace! Forever, forever, forever!” But officials said the repeated performances helped convince the White House that he was trying to call the American bluff. Within days, the administration decided to act. On Saturday, an elite US military team carried out a midnight raid in Caracas, destroying several military installations and detaining Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores. The pair were flown to New York to face charges including narco-terrorism conspiracy, weapons offences and cocaine-importation conspiracy.In custody, Maduro wished drug enforcement agents a “Happy New Year” and posed with his thumbs up while awaiting transfer to the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn, where he and his wife are now being held.After the operation, Trump said that Washington intended to take charge of Venezuela in Maduro’s absence. Speaking at a press conference at Mar-a-Lago, he said: “We’re going to run the country until such time as we can do a safe, proper and judicious transition.” He made no mention of the dance but focused a little too much on Venezuela’s oil sector. “We’re going to have our very large United States put up companies, the biggest anywhere in the world, to go in, spend billions of dollars to fix the badly broken infrastructure, the oil infrastructure, and start making money for the country,” he said.US officials said they had already identified an interim replacement who could work with the Venezuelan government. Vice president Delcy Rodríguez, who had overseen Venezuela’s oil policy, was the preferred candidate. Go to Source

Hot this week

UK, European allies plan Arctic deployment amid Trump’s Greenland threat: Report

The United Kingdom is reportedly in talks with European partners to station troops in Greenland, a self-governing island under Denmark, after US President Donald Trump threatened to take control of the territory. Read More

‘Dangerous And Alarming’: Google Removes Some AI Summaries After It Puts Users’ Health At Risk

Google pulled some AI health summaries after reports of dangerous errors, raising concerns about misleading content. Experts warn of dangers and ongoing concerns. Read More

A Winter Feast: Traditional Lohri Recipes For The Festive Season

Celebrate Lohri with traditional winter recipes, featuring comforting sweets and savoury favourites perfect for festive home cooking. Read More

Will Indian Nationals Be Evacuated From Iran Amid Protests? Exclusive From Intelligence Sources

“New Delhi is working out viability of evacuation amid blackouts and flight suspensions,” said top intelligence sources Go to Source Read More

FIFA World Cup trophy returns to India after 12 years: How fans can see it and what to know

The original FIFA World Cup trophy has arrived in India for a three-day tour ahead of the 2026 tournament. Fans can see it in Delhi on January 11 and in Guwahati on January 13. Read More

Topics

UK, European allies plan Arctic deployment amid Trump’s Greenland threat: Report

The United Kingdom is reportedly in talks with European partners to station troops in Greenland, a self-governing island under Denmark, after US President Donald Trump threatened to take control of the territory. Read More

‘Dangerous And Alarming’: Google Removes Some AI Summaries After It Puts Users’ Health At Risk

Google pulled some AI health summaries after reports of dangerous errors, raising concerns about misleading content. Experts warn of dangers and ongoing concerns. Read More

A Winter Feast: Traditional Lohri Recipes For The Festive Season

Celebrate Lohri with traditional winter recipes, featuring comforting sweets and savoury favourites perfect for festive home cooking. Read More

Will Indian Nationals Be Evacuated From Iran Amid Protests? Exclusive From Intelligence Sources

“New Delhi is working out viability of evacuation amid blackouts and flight suspensions,” said top intelligence sources Go to Source Read More

FIFA World Cup trophy returns to India after 12 years: How fans can see it and what to know

The original FIFA World Cup trophy has arrived in India for a three-day tour ahead of the 2026 tournament. Fans can see it in Delhi on January 11 and in Guwahati on January 13. Read More

South Africa wildfires: Firefighters battle blazes spreading across Western Cape— what we know

. Stanford and Pearly Beach in South Africa’s Western Cape are on high alert as firefighters battle multiple wildfires. Read More

Aleppo clashes: Syrian government takes control of Sheikh Maqsoud; detains 300 Kurds

Syrian government forces evacuated took control of Sheikh Maqsoud, the last district in Aleppo outside state control, on Sunday. Read More

Somaliland row: Somalia accuses Israel of planning Palestinian relocation

File photo: Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu (Picture credit: ANI) Somalia’s defence minister Ahmed Moalim Fiqi has alleged that Israel is working on a plan to forcibly relocate Palestinians to Somaliland, calling the reported move a “ Read More

Related Articles