Trump calls Venezuela strikes ‘amazing’ and ‘brilliant’ in remarks to House Republicans – live | Donald Trump

Trump calls Venezuela strikes ‘amazing’ and ‘brilliant’ in remarks to House Republicans – live | Donald Trump

Trump calls Caracas strikes ‘amazing’ and ‘brilliant’ at House GOP retreat

Donald Trump has characterized the weekend strikes on Venezuela’s capital, Caracas, as “amazing” and “brilliant”.

“It was amazing. And think of it, nobody was killed. And on the other side, a lot of people were killed,” Trump said, noting the large number of Cubans who were killed in attacks. “They knew we were coming, and they were protected, and our guys weren’t. You know, our guys are jumping out of helicopters … it was so brilliant.”

The president called the operation “brilliant tactically” and “an incredible thing”. He added that the deposed leader, Nicolás Maduro, is a “violent guy”.

“He gets up there and he tries to imitate my dance a little bit, but he’s a violent guy, and he’s killed millions of people,” Trump said.

Speaking to House Republicans at their annual retreat, the president also said that lawmakers across the aisle have been reluctant to congratulate the president, despite their ongoing condemnation of Maduro’s regime.

“At some point they should say, you know, ‘you did a great job’,” Trump said. “Wouldn’t it be good? I would say that if they did a good job, their philosophies are so different, but if they did a good job, I’d be happy for the country. They’ve been after this guy for years and years and years, and he was a violent guy.”

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Updated at 10.47 EST

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Top House Democrat says Trump has ‘attempted to rewrite history’ on fifth anniversary of January 6th attacks

Chris Stein

Hakeem Jeffries, the top House Democrat, opened a hearing commemorating the fifth anniversary of the January 6 attack by strongly criticizing Donald Trump and his Republican allies’ efforts to undercut accountability for the insurrection.

“Instead of holding those responsible for the attack accountable, Donald Trump and far-right extremists in Congress have repeatedly attempted to rewrite history and whitewash the horrific events of January 6. We will not let that happen,” Jeffries said.

Trump pardoned almost everyone convicted or facing charges in the attack on his first day in office, and Jeffries noted that many of those went on to be charged with other offenses.

“It’s been a Trump-inspired crime spree. Why won’t Republicans in Congress condemn this dangerous behavior and ongoing threat to public safety?” Jeffries asked.

“They refuse to serve as a check and balance on an increasingly out of control executive branch, preferring to be nothing more than a reckless rubber stamp for Donald Trump’s extreme agenda. The January 6 violent attack on the Capitol that took place five years ago today was shameful then, it is shameful now, and it will be shameful always and forever.”

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Trump calls Caracas strikes ‘amazing’ and ‘brilliant’ at House GOP retreat

Donald Trump has characterized the weekend strikes on Venezuela’s capital, Caracas, as “amazing” and “brilliant”.

“It was amazing. And think of it, nobody was killed. And on the other side, a lot of people were killed,” Trump said, noting the large number of Cubans who were killed in attacks. “They knew we were coming, and they were protected, and our guys weren’t. You know, our guys are jumping out of helicopters … it was so brilliant.”

The president called the operation “brilliant tactically” and “an incredible thing”. He added that the deposed leader, Nicolás Maduro, is a “violent guy”.

“He gets up there and he tries to imitate my dance a little bit, but he’s a violent guy, and he’s killed millions of people,” Trump said.

Speaking to House Republicans at their annual retreat, the president also said that lawmakers across the aisle have been reluctant to congratulate the president, despite their ongoing condemnation of Maduro’s regime.

“At some point they should say, you know, ‘you did a great job’,” Trump said. “Wouldn’t it be good? I would say that if they did a good job, their philosophies are so different, but if they did a good job, I’d be happy for the country. They’ve been after this guy for years and years and years, and he was a violent guy.”

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Updated at 10.47 EST

Donald Trump addresses House Republicans at annual retreat

The president is now addressing GOP House lawmakers at their annual retreat. “You win the presidency, and we sure as hell are having a successful presidency, I will say that,” Trump said in his opening remarks. “There’s been nothing like what we’re doing. We had a very good day two days ago too,” he added, seemingly referring to the strikes in Venezuela that resulted in the capture and arrest of Nicolás Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores.

Trump went on to express his condolences at the death of California congressman Doug LaMalfa.

“A true defender of American children. He was a defender of everybody,” the president added. “And our hearts go out to his wife, Jill, and his entire family.”

Donald Trump addresses a House Republican retreat, 06 January 2026. Photograph: Alex Wong/Getty ImagesShare

Top Trump administration officials to brief all US senators on Venezuela strikes and Maduro capture

Several of the Trump administration’s top officials will brief all Senate lawmakers on Capitol Hill tomorrow. This comes as the same group, including secretary of state Marco Rubio, attorney general Pam Bondi, defense secretary Pete Hegseth, chairman of the joint chiefs of staff Dan Caine, spoke with a small group of congressional leaders on Monday about the military operation in Venezuela.

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Updated at 10.11 EST

My colleagues, Dharna Noor and Oliver Milman, have been reporting on the climate implications of the president’s focus on taking over oil production in Venezuela. Here’s an excerpt of their story below:

Donald Trump, by dramatically seizing Nicolás Maduro and claiming dominion over Venezuela’s vast oil reserves, has taken his “drill, baby, drill” mantra global.

Achieving the president’s dream of supercharging the country’s oil production would be financially challenging – and if fulfilled, would be “terrible for the climate”, experts say.

Trump has aggressively sought to boost oil and gas production within the US. Now, following the capture and arrest of Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores, he is seeking to orchestrate a ramp-up of drilling in Venezuela, which has the largest known reserves of oil in the world – equivalent to some 300bn barrels, according to research firm the Energy Institute.

Leading US oil businesses such as Exxon and Chevron have so far remained silent on whether they would spend the huge sums required to enact the president’s vision for Venezuela. But should Venezuela ramp up output to near its 1970s peak of 3.7m barrels a day – more than triple current levels – it would further undermine the already faltering global effort to limit dangerous global heating.

Even raising production to 1.5m barrels of oil a day from current levels of around 1m barrels would produce around 550m tons of carbon dioxide a year when the fuel is burned, according to Paasha Mahdavi, an associate professor of political science at the University of California, Santa Barbara. This is more carbon pollution than what is emitted annually by major economies such as the UK and Brazil.

“If there are millions of barrels a day of new oil, that will add quite a lot of carbon dioxide to the atmosphere and the people of Earth can’t afford that,” said John Sterman, an expert in climate and economics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

You can read their full story here:

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A reminder that in an interview with NBC News on Monday, Donald Trump named several top administration officials – including secretary of state Marco Rubio, defense secretary Pete Hegseth, deputy White House chief of staff Stephen Miller and vice-president JD Vance – as the team who will help oversee America’s involvement in Venezuela.

“They have all expertise, different expertise,” Trump said.

Trump also told NBC that there was no possibility of an election within the next 30 days.

“We have to fix the country first. You can’t have an election. There’s no way the people could even vote,” Trump said.

The president also noted in the interview that Delcy Rodríguez, who was sworn in as Venezuela’s interim leader after Maduro was arraigned in a Manhattan courtroom yesterday, has been “cooperating” with US officials. Trump also declined to say whether he’s spoken to Rodríguez yet, but he said that Rubio “speaks to her fluently in Spanish” and that their “relationship has been very strong”.

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Donald Trump is in Washington today. We’ll hear from him at 10am ET, when he addresses House Republicans at their annual retreat – taking place at the newly-minted ‘Trump Kennedy Center’. It will be the president’s first public appearance since Nicolás Maduro, and his wife, Cilia Flores, appeared in federal court on Monday and plead “not-guilty” to all charges against them.

At the same time, House Democrats are holding a hearing to mark the five-year anniversary of the January 6th attack on the US Capitol. Those speaking include Brendan Ballou, who prosecuted several of the rioters, Winston Pingeon, a former Capitol police officer who was attacked on the day, and Pamela Hemphill, a rioter who refused Donald Trump’s sweeping pardon.

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A group of European countries underlined their support for Denmark today amid Donald Trump’s renewed calls to take over Greenland after the removal of Venezuela’s president Nicolás Maduro.

You can read the statement from the leaders of France, Germany, Italy, Poland, Spain, Britain, and Denmark, and catch up with the latest developments on Ukraine, in our Europe live blog.

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Updated at 07.46 EST

My colleagues Tom Phillips and Sam Jones have looked at the opposition’s reaction to the US’s operation in Venezuela and Donald Trump’s apparent dismissal of the idea that the conservative activist María Corina Machado could now lead Venezuela. Here is an extract from their story:

“[I felt] astonished, I could not believe what I was hearing,” Ricardo Hausmann, a former minister and opposition supporter, said, capturing the opposition confusion and frustration that their movement’s leader appeared to have been unexpectedly cast aside by the White House.

“The political strategy that Trump and Marco Rubio have laid out is truly bizarre,” Hausmann added, warning that post-Maduro Venezuela found itself in “a legal and a political vacuum” and still under the control of “illegitimate leaders” led by Rodríguez, who was sworn in as interim president on Monday.

María Corina Machado and Edmundo González address supporters in Caracas in July 2024. Photograph: Leonardo Fernández Viloria/Reuters

One US official told the New York Times: “[Rodríguez is] certainly someone we think we can work at a much more professional level than we were able to do with [Maduro].”

Machado, whose movement is widely believed to have beaten Maduro in Venezuela’s 2024 presidential election, sought to put a brave face on the situation on Monday, hailing Trump’s “courageous vision” and offering to share her Nobel peace prize with him during an interview with Fox News.

“[Maduro’s removal] is a huge step for humanity,” said Machado, who has not returned to Venezuela since sneaking out to travel to Oslo last month to receive the Nobel prize.

But analysts said opposition leaders were bitterly disappointed by Trump’s decision not to back Machado and Edmundo González, a former diplomat who ran in the 2024 election on Machado’s behalf after she was banned and who is widely believed to have won by a landslide.

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Updated at 07.33 EST

Free all the Venezuelan political prisoners, opposition demands

The Reuters news agency has a quick snap saying that Venezuelan opposition leader María Corina Machado’s movement has demanded the release of all political prisoners after the US’s capture of Nicolás Maduro.

“Those who unjustly hold the civilian and military political prisoners should free them immediately,” the Vente Venezuela movement said of political detainees, whom a leading local rights group puts at 863.

Machado’s movement is widely believed to have beaten Nicolas Maduro in Venezuela’s 2024 presidential election, which many countries, including the US, rejected the official result of.

Many people were imprisoned for protesting Maduro’s declaration of victory or for participating in the opposition’s electoral campaign.

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Updated at 07.34 EST

Protesters have gathered outside the US embassy in Jakarta, Indonesia, to demonstrate against the US attack in Venezuela:

Activists hold posters during a protest against the US’s attack on Venezuela outside the US embassy in Jakarta, Indonesia. Photograph: Willy Kurniawan/ReutersActivists carrying posters and a Venezuelan flag attend the protest outside the US embassy in Jakarta. Photograph: Willy Kurniawan/ReutersActivists step on a poster with the image of US President Donald Trump in Jakarta. Photograph: Willy Kurniawan/ReutersShare

Updated at 07.00 EST

If you would like to hear some reflections on Donald Trump’s first year in power (this time around) you can join our upcoming event: Year One of Trumpism: Is Britain Emulating the US?

On Wednesday 21 January 2026, join Jonathan Freedland, Tania Branigan and Nick Lowles as they discuss the first year of Trump’s second presidency. Book tickets here or at guardian.live

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Updated at 06.54 EST

US trial of Maduro undermines stability of international relations, China’s foreign ministry says

Amy Hawkins

Amy Hawkins is the Guardian’s senior China correspondent

China’s foreign ministry spokesperson said on Tuesday that the trial of Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro in New York “severely violat[ed] Venezuela’s national sovereignty” and undermined the stability of international relations.

The comments came the day after a China-backed emergency meeting at the UN Security Council in which countries condemned the US’s military operation to capture Maduro as illegal.

Venezuela is a key China ally in Latin America. The South American country has received over $100bn in Chinese loans and Maduro’s last meeting was with a Chinese delegation visiting Caracas, who he greeted hours before he was captured by US forces.

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Here is some more of the statement on Venezuela from the spokesperson for the UN high commissioner for human rights:

The state of emergency declared by the Venezuelan authorities that took effect on Saturday raises concerns as it authorises restrictions on free movement of people, the seizure of property necessary for national defence, and the suspension of the right to assembly and to protest, among other measures.

The high commissioner calls on the US and the Venezuelan authorities, as well as the international community, to ensure full respect for international law, including human rights.

The future of Venezuela must be determined by the Venezuelan people alone, with full respect for their human rights, including the right to self-determination, and sovereignty over their lives and their resources.

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Updated at 05.45 EST

It is ‘clear’ the US raid on Venezuela ‘undermined a fundamental principle of international law’, UN human rights office says

A spokesperson for the UN high commissioner for human rights, Volker Türk, has said it is “clear” that the US military operation to capture Maduro and his wife over the weekend “undermined a fundamental principle of international law”.

In a statement, the spokesperson said Türk, a career UN official and human rights lawyer, is “deeply worried” about the “situation in Venezuela”, which has left many Venezuelans fearful as the country’s acting president, Delcy Rodríguez, starts presiding under the apparent supervision of Washington, with Trump vowing to take control of Venezuela’s oil industry with the help of America’s biggest oil companies.

Here is more of the statement issued by the spokesperson for the UN high commissioner for human rights:

It is clear that the operation undermined a fundamental principle of international law – that states must not threaten or use force against the territorial integrity or political independence of any state.

The US has justified its intervention on the grounds of the Venezuelan government’s longstanding and appalling human rights record, but accountability for human rights violations cannot be achieved by unilateral military intervention in violation of international law. The people of Venezuela deserve accountability through a fair, victim-centred process.

As has been clear in the UN Human Rights Office’s consistent reporting on the continued deterioration of the situation in Venezuela for about a decade, the rights of the Venezuelan people have been violated for too long. We fear that the current instability and further militarisation in the country resulting from the US intervention will only make the situation worse.

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Updated at 05.34 EST

Maduro’s legal team includes acclaimed lawyer who represented Julian Assange

Adam Gabbatt

Adam Gabbatt is a writer and presenter for Guardian US, based in New York

When Nicolás Maduro appeared in court in New York on Monday, his choice of lawyer quickly raised eyebrows.

The captured Venezuelan president was accompanied by Barry Pollack, a top-tier US trial lawyer who spent years representing Julian Assange, eventually securing the WikiLeaks founder’s release from prison in the UK in 2024.

Pollack is a partner at Harris St Laurent & Wechsler, a law firm based on New York’s Wall Street in the financial district of lower Manhattan, just a few minutes walk from the federal court where Maduro pleaded not guilty to criminal charges on Monday.

Lawyer Barry Pollack speaks in Canberra, Australia, on 26 June 2024. Photograph: Lisa Maree Williams/Getty Images

Pollack will take on a case as Maduro’s private counsel that could prove to be just as challenging as that of Assange. Maduro was charged on Monday with drug-terrorism conspiracy, cocaine-importation conspiracy, and possession of machine guns and destructive devices, with the US government labelling Maduro a “narco-terrorist” and an “illegitimate president”. He faces up to life in prison.

Harris St Laurent & Wechsler did not respond to requests for comment about Pollack’s involvement, but it is clear that in the legal world, he is highly regarded. According to Chambers USA, Pollack is a “thorough and deep-thinking lawyer” who “lives, breathes and sleeps trials, and has such a natural way in front of juries”.

You can read the full story here:

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Among the international laws the US may have breached, if it provides no justification for the attacks, is the founding charter of the UN.

Article 2 of the UN charter says all members should refrain from “the threat or use of force against the territorial integrity or political independence of any state”.

My colleague Geraldine McKelvie spoke to leading experts in the field of international law to ask for their view on the US attack on Venezuela. Here is an extract from her story:

The experts the Guardian spoke to agreed that the US is likely to have violated the terms of the UN charter, which was signed in October 1945 and designed to prevent another conflict on the scale of the second world war. A central provision of this agreement – known as article 2(4) – rules that states must refrain from using military force against other countries and must respect their sovereignty.

Geoffrey Robertson KC, a founding head of Doughty Street Chambers and a former president of the UN war crimes court in Sierra Leone, said the attack on Venezuela was contrary to article 2(4) of the charter. “The reality is that America is in breach of the United Nations charter,” he added. “It has committed the crime of aggression, which the court at Nuremberg described as the supreme crime, it’s the worst crime of all.”

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The UK’s foreign secretary, Yvette Cooper, made a statement in the House of Commons on Monday about the US raid on Venezuela.

Cooper told the Commons she had stressed the importance of international law in a conversation with the US secretary of state, Marco Rubio, but would not say whether she saw the US attack as illegal, saying it was for Washington to set out its justification.

A large section of her statement focused on the brutality of Nicolás Maduro’s dictatorship. “We have seen Maduro’s regime systematically dismantle democratic institutions, silencing dissent and weaponizing state resources to maintain power through fear and corruption,” she said.

Cooper added:

I discussed with Secretary Rubio what should happen next and our continued commitment to a transition to a peaceful and stable democracy.

Our collective immediate focus must be on avoiding any deterioration in Venezuela into further instability, criminality or violence. That would be deeply damaging for the people of Venezuela, our own overseas territories, our allies in the US and other regional partners.

The UK has long been clear that leadership of Venezuela must reflect the will of the Venezuelan people.

You can read her full statement on Venezuela here.

Yvette Cooper said she reminded Marco Rubio of his duties under international law after US strikes on Venezuela. Photograph: House of Commons/UK Parliament/PAShare

Updated at 04.09 EST

British PM choosing his ‘words carefully’ over response to US attack on Venezuela, health secretary says

In the UK, the health secretary Wes Streeting has defended Keir Starmer’s cautious response to the US attack in Venezuela despite MPs wanting the prime minister to condemn what is seen as an operation against a sovereign country in violation of international law.

Starmer, always keen to keep on the good side of the US, has declined to criticise the US military operation over the weekend, unlike several Labour MPs including Emily Thornberry, who chairs the Commons foreign affairs committee.

Streeting told BBC Breakfast this morning that he had “enormous respect” for Thornberry, who was “right” to speak “honestly and candidly” about her view (that the lack of western condemnation could embolden China and Russia to take similar action against other countries).

But he added:

The prime minister and the foreign secretary have a different role and responsibility, and their words carry different weight.

And what I can tell you is that at every moment in recent days, since the US action in Venezuela, the prime minister has judged what he says and when he says it with one overriding consideration, which is how to make a challenging situation better, not worse, and how to do so in a way that protects the UK’s national interests, our collective security, particularly in Europe at a difficult time, and also the best interests of the people of Venezuela who have the right to choose their own leaders and who governs them.

That’s what the prime minister has been doing, and I appreciate there are others who have been more strident and have been more critical of the United States.

The prime minister has a different responsibility, and he is choosing his words carefully and wisely to try and influence how events unfold from here on.

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Updated at 03.52 EST

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