Chinese Mainland Backs UN Emergency Meeting on US Strike in Venezuela
The Chinese mainland backs a UN Security Council emergency meeting after a US strike on Venezuela, urging respect for international law and dialogue.
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The Chinese mainland backs a UN Security Council emergency meeting after a US strike on Venezuela, urging respect for international law and dialogue.
US strikes in Venezuela prompt Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Mexico, Spain and Uruguay to condemn the action, urging dialogue, respect for international law, and peaceful resolution.
Professor Christopher Isike says US airstrikes in Venezuela bypass legal frameworks, risk regional trust and could reshape how Africa views US interventions.
The African Union and South Africa voiced solidarity with Venezuela after recent US military actions, emphasizing sovereignty, dialogue, and UN principles for peaceful crisis resolution.
German expert Helga Zepp-LaRouche warns that recent U.S. actions in Venezuela violate international law and risk sparking chaos across Latin America.
The Chinese mainland urges the U.S. to immediately release Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro and his wife, calling the seizure a breach of international law.
The UN warns that the US attack on Caracas, which removed President Maduro, sets a dangerous precedent and calls for respect of international law and inclusive dialogue.
Global leaders react to US strikes in Venezuela and the capture of President Maduro, with Europe urging restraint, Russia and the Chinese mainland condemning, and mixed responses in Latin America.
On Jan 3, 2026, the US launched a military strike on Venezuela, raising legal questions under international law and sparking global debate on intervention limits.
US air strikes in Venezuela and the capture of President Maduro raise questions about sovereignty, international law, and the 21st-century Monroe Doctrine.