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Tag: Nobel

  • Machado’s Nobel Peace Prize speech: A call to resist tyranny and reclaim democracy

    Ana Corina Sosa, daughter of Venezuelan opposition leader Maria Corina Machado is greeted by vice-chair of the Norwegian Nobel Committee Asle Toje as she represents her mother at the Nobel Peace Prize ceremony at Oslo City Hall on December 10, 2025 in Oslo, Norway. The 2025 Nobel Peace Prize was awarded to Machado for her efforts to bring democracy to Venezuela, challenging the iron-fisted rule of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, who has been president since 2013. (Photo by Odd ANDERSEN / AFP via Getty Images)

    Ana Corina Sosa, daughter of Venezuelan opposition leader Maria Corina Machado, is greeted by the vice-chair of the Norwegian Nobel Committee, Asle Toje, as she represents her mother at the Nobel Peace Prize ceremony at Oslo City Hall on December 10, 2025 in Oslo, Norway. The 2025 Nobel Peace Prize was awarded to Machado for her efforts to bring democracy to Venezuela, challenging the iron-fisted rule of Venezuelan strongman Nicolás Maduro.

    AFP via Getty Images

    Venezuelan opposition leader María Corina Machado used her Nobel Peace Prize lecture on Wednesday to deliver a sweeping account of her country’s two-decade struggle against authoritarianism, portraying Venezuela’s crisis not only as a national tragedy but as a global warning about the fragility of democracy and the cost of freedom.

    Machado was unable to leave Venezuela — where she is living in hiding — in time to attend the ceremony in Oslo. Her remarks were read on her behalf by her daughter, Ana Corina Sosa Machado, before members of Norway’s royal family and international diplomats. Even in her absence, Machado said, the message carried the voice of a nation — the echo of “millions of Venezuelans who rose, once again, to reclaim the destiny that was always theirs.”

    Moments after receiving the prize on her mother’s behalf, Sosa announced that she expected to embrace Machado in Oslo within hours — and that the opposition leader intends to return to Venezuela “very soon.”

    “I must say that my mother never breaks a promise. And that’s why, with all the joy in my heart, I can tell you that in just a few hours we will be able to hug her here in Oslo after 16 months,” she told attendees at the ceremony. She added that while she and her mother have waited two years for this moment, she was mindful of “the other daughters and sons who today will not be able to see their mothers.”

    “This is what drives her, what drives all of us,” Sosa continued. “She wants to live in a free Venezuela and will never give up that goal. That is why we all know — I know — that she will soon be back in Venezuela.” Until then, Sosa said she carries “the difficult task of giving voice to her mother’s words, the speech she prepared for this occasion.”

    She opened with “infinite gratitude” on behalf of her family and the country to the Norwegian Nobel Committee for recognizing that “the struggle of an entire people for truth, freedom, democracy, and peace is today recognized throughout the world.”

    “I am here on behalf of my mother, María Corina Machado, who has united millions of Venezuelans in an extraordinary effort that you, our hosts, have honored with the Nobel Peace Prize,” she said.

    Over the next 40 minutes, her daughter read Machado’s speech, which traced the arc of Venezuelan history, from independence to the oil-fueled prosperity of the 20th century and the subsequent dismantling of democratic institutions under Hugo Chávez and Nicolás Maduro. The lecture was both a tribute to ordinary citizens who resisted repression and a roadmap to what she described as Venezuela’s imminent democratic transition.

    “Freedom is not something we wait for, but something we become,” she said, arguing that authoritarianism took root not only through the ambitions of rulers but through a society convinced its democracy was unshakable. “My generation was born in a vibrant democracy, and we took it for granted. We assumed freedom was as permanent as the air we breathed.”

    Venezuelan opposition leader Maria Corina Machado
    Venezuelan opposition leader Maria Corina Machado JONATHAN LANZA NurPhoto via AFP

    She said the concentration of oil revenue in state hands created “perverse incentives,” turning public wealth into a tool of political control and eroding the civic culture needed to sustain a republic. When Chávez — a former coup leader — won the 1998 election, many believed charisma could replace institutions. “From 1999 onward, the regime dismantled our democracy,” she said. “They eroded institutions, politicized the military, censored the press and criminalized dissent.”

    The collapse, Machado added, was moral as well as economic. Oil wealth “was not used to uplift, but to bind,” she said, recalling televised handouts of appliances that masked rising poverty. In two decades, the economy contracted by more than 80 percent. Poverty exceeded 86 percent. Nearly nine million people fled — an exodus she described as “an open wound” that tore families across continents.

    Yet exile, she said, ultimately forged unity. In 2023, when the opposition organized primary elections despite repression and scarce resources, Venezuela “rediscovered itself.” With no access to media and campaign events held amid blackouts and fuel shortages, supporters spread the message “by conviction alone.”

    Machado recounted a teacher who convinced her local ruling-party captain to support the opposition after her son, living in Peru, urged her to vote for change. In a mountain town controlled by guerrillas, flags hidden for years out of fear reappeared on rooftops. “That day, love defeated fear,” she said. “That day, courage defeated oppression.”

    The primaries on Oct. 22, 2023, became a civic uprising, she said, with Venezuelans at home and abroad lining up to vote even after ballots ran out. Machado won by a landslide, only to be barred from running for president. The opposition later rallied behind Edmundo González Urrutia, a former diplomat then little known to the public. “They underestimated the resolve of millions,” she said.

    Ahead of the July 2024 presidential election, activists built a vast volunteer network to protect the vote — using QR-scanning apps, clandestine Starlink antennas hidden in fruit trucks and training sessions in church basements. On election day, turnout surged. Volunteers photographed tally sheets and carried them by hand, mule and canoe. “What began as a mechanism to legitimize leadership became the rebirth of a nation’s confidence in itself.”

    González won with 67 percent of the vote, Machado said. The regime responded with “state terrorism,” she said — arrests, disappearances, torture and sexual abuse, even of minors. She accused authorities of hunting down citizens who shared tally sheets from the vote and forcing detained children to incriminate themselves under electric shocks. “These are crimes against humanity,” she said, noting United Nations documentation of abuses.

    Still, Machado insisted the country has crossed a point of no return. “During these past sixteen months in hiding we have built new networks of civic pressure and disciplined disobedience, preparing for Venezuela’s orderly transition to democracy,” she said. The prize, she added, was proof the world stands with Venezuelans at a decisive hour.

    Machado framed the struggle not as partisan but existential — a fight for truth, for life and for the right to reunite families. She imagined the future in intimate scenes: political prisoners stepping into sunlight, children hearing stories of their parents’ bravery, students debating freely, streets filled again with music and laughter.

    “The world will witness one of the most moving sights of our time,” she said. “Our loved ones coming home.”

    Machado vowed to stand at the Simón Bolívar bridge — once a route of mass exodus — to welcome returning Venezuelans, “the greatest blood loss our country has ever suffered.”

    Throughout the speech, Machado rejected the idea that peace can exist without democracy. Peace, she said, “is ultimately an act of love,” attained only when citizens defend freedom with “willingness and courage.” Venezuela’s struggle, she added, belongs to humanity — both a warning and an example.

    She ended by naming those she said share the peace prize: political prisoners, persecuted families, journalists, human rights defenders, activists and the millions who sheltered and protected the resistance.

    “To them belongs this honor. To them belongs this day. To them belongs the future,” her daughter read, voice breaking at the final words.

    Antonio Maria Delgado

    el Nuevo Herald

    Galardonado periodista con más de 30 años de experiencia, especializado en la cobertura de temas sobre Venezuela. Amante de la historia y la literatura.

    Antonio María Delgado

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  • No, Donald Trump isn’t the first US president to solve a war

    During a White House visit from Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, President Donald Trump expanded on his oft-repeated boast about ending multiple wars and made an even bolder assertion: that no president had solved even one war before him.

    Trump said Oct. 17 that people tell him, “‘Sir, if you solve one more, you’re going to be known as a peacekeeper.’ So to the best of my knowledge, we’ve never had a president that solved one war, not one war. (George W.) Bush started a war (in Iraq). A lot of them start wars, but they don’t solve the wars. They don’t settle them, and especially when they’re not, when they have nothing to do with us.”

    Trump is ignoring at least two instances of presidents personally overseeing negotiations that ended other countries’ wars, plus several others in which presidents’ designated diplomats successfully reached peace agreements following negotiations.

    “Like a lot of Trump’s statements, it massively exaggerates what he’s done, while ignoring any history of what other presidents have done,” said David Silbey, a Cornell University military historian. 

    For our analysis, we did not count wars that the United States participated in militarily and won, such as World War II. Trump said he was focusing on wars that “have nothing to do with us,” and none of the eight wars he claims to have ended have primarily involved the U.S. as a combatant.

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    White House Deputy Press Secretary Anna Kelly told PolitiFact that Trump’s “direct involvement in major conflicts, leveraging tools from America’s military might to our superior consumer market, has brought peace to decades-long wars around the world in a fashion unlike any of his predecessors.”

    Wars settled by U.S. presidents

    In this 1904 file photo, Theodore Roosevelt campaigns for the presidency in 1904. Roosevelt was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1906 for negotiating peace in the 1904-5 war between Russia and Japan. (AP)

    Japan became the first modern Asian power to defeat a European power in the Russo-Japanese War in 1904 and 1905. President Theodore Roosevelt helped mediate a settlement at the Portsmouth Naval Shipyard in 1905. Roosevelt was awarded the 1906 Nobel Peace Prize for his role in ending the war.

    President Jimmy Carter, center, shakes hands with Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin and Egyptian President Anwar Sadat before signing a peace treaty at the White House on March 26, 1979. (AP)

    By the time President Jimmy Carter brought Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin to the White House to sign the Camp David Accords on Sept. 17, 1978, Israel and Egypt had been at war for three decades, alternating between periods of hot and cold war. The agreement was the fruit of negotiations conducted at the presidential retreat, Camp David. Sadat and Begin won the 1978 Nobel Peace Prize.

    Wars settled by U.S. diplomats on a president’s watch

    Secretary of State Warren Christopher, center, is flanked by Bosnian President Alija Izetbegovic, left, and Croatian President Franjo Tudjman as they sign an accord Nov. 10, 1995, in Dayton, Ohio. (AP)

    The Bosnian War

    On Nov. 21, 1995, the presidents of Bosnia, Croatia and Serbia reached an agreement for peace in Dayton, Ohio, ending the Bosnian War, which began in 1992. The primary U.S. officials involved in the negotiations over the Dayton Accords were veteran diplomat Richard Holbrooke and Secretary of State Warren Christopher, along with leaders from Europe and Russia. The U.S. president at the time was Bill Clinton.

    Former President Bill Clinton and, from left, former Sen. George Mitchell, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and former Irish Prime Minister Bertie Ahern on the 25th anniversary of the Good Friday Agreement, in Belfast, Northern Ireland, April 17, 2023. (AP)

    Northern Ireland’s ‘Troubles’

    The sectarian violence between Protestants and Catholics — known as “the Troubles” — in the United Kingdom-administered Northern Ireland persisted for roughly three decades before the 1998 Good Friday Agreement, also known as the Belfast Agreement. Former Senate Majority Leader George Mitchell, D-Maine, spearheaded it, and it followed shuttle diplomacy — when an intermediary carries out a negotiation by traveling back and forth between the disputing parties — between Washington and Belfast. Clinton was also the president at the time.

    Secretary of State Colin Powell is among the witnesses of the Sudan Comprehensive Peace Agreement in  Nairobi’s Nyayo Stadium on Jan. 9, 2005. (AP)

    Civil war in Sudan

    Fighting between the government of Sudan and the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement, based in southern Sudan, ended in 2005 with the Sudan Comprehensive Peace Agreement, thanks to negotiations overseen by U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell. George W. Bush was president at the time of the 2005 agreement. In 2011, a referendum led to the creation of a new country, South Sudan. 

    What has Trump previously said about settling multiple wars?

    Trump has often repeated the exaggerated claim that he’s ended six, seven or eight wars. 

    Trump had a hand in ceasefires that recently eased conflicts between Israel and Iran, India and Pakistan, and Armenia and Azerbaijan. But these were mostly incremental accords without a strong likelihood of long-term peace. Some leaders also dispute the extent of Trump’s role. 

    The U.S. was involved in a temporary peace deal between the Democratic Republic of Congo and Rwanda, but violence in the region has continued, with hundreds of civilians killed since the deal’s June signing. After Trump helped broker a deal between Cambodia and Thailand, the countries accused each other of ceasefire violations.

    A long-running standoff between Egypt and Ethiopia over an Ethiopian dam on the Nile River remains unresolved. In the case of Kosovo and Serbia, there is little evidence a potential war was brewing.

    Most recently, Trump has made notable progress by securing an agreement to end the Israel-Hamas war. The agreement involves multiple stages, so it will take time to see if peace holds.

    For weeks, Trump has cited his diplomatic activity as being worthy of a Nobel Peace Prize. 

    “Everyone says that I should get the Nobel Peace Prize for each one of these achievements,” Trump said during a Sept. 23 speech at the United Nations.

    The Norwegian Nobel Committee awarded Venezuelan opposition leader Maria Corina Machado with the prize Oct. 10 for her “tireless work promoting democratic rights for the people of Venezuela.”

    Our ruling

    Trump said, “We’ve never had a president that solved one war, not one war.”

    At least two U.S. presidents — Roosevelt and Carter — personally conducted negotiations that led to peace agreements, both of which resulted in Nobel Prizes for some of the participants.

    Several other presidents saw peace agreements hammered out on their watch by officials they appointed.

    We rate the statement Pants on Fire! 

    Staff Writer Samantha Putterman contributed to this report.

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  • Defying a dictatorship: María Corina Machado wins 2025 Nobel Peace Prize

    Venezuelan opposition leader Maria Corina Machado waves a national flag during a protest called by the opposition on the eve of the presidential inauguration, in Caracas on January 9, 2025. Machado won the Nobel Peace Prize on Friday. (Photo by Juan BARRETO / AFP) (Photo by JUAN BARRETO/AFP via Getty Images)

    Venezuelan opposition leader Maria Corina Machado waves a national flag during a protest called by the opposition on the eve of the presidential inauguration, in Caracas on January 9, 2025. Machado won the Nobel Peace Prize on Friday. (Photo by Juan BARRETO / AFP) (Photo by JUAN BARRETO/AFP via Getty Images)

    AFP via Getty Images

    Venezuelan opposition leader María Corina Machado has been awarded the 2025 Nobel Peace Prize for her “tireless work promoting the democratic rights of the Venezuelan people” and her “struggle to achieve a just and peaceful transition from dictatorship to democracy,” the Norwegian Nobel Committee announced Friday.

    The decision places Machado—long the face of Venezuela’s democratic movement—among the ranks of global icons such as Nelson Mandela and Aung San Suu Kyi, leaders who have challenged autocratic rule at extraordinary personal cost.

    “The Nobel Peace Prize for 2025 goes to a brave and committed champion of peace—a woman who keeps the flame of democracy burning amid a growing darkness,” the committee said while announcing its decision. Machado “is receiving the Nobel Peace Prize for her tireless work promoting democratic rights for the people of Venezuela and for her struggle to achieve a just and peaceful transition from dictatorship to democracy.”

    The committee described Machado as “one of the most extraordinary examples of civic courage in Latin America in recent times,” emphasizing that she has shown how “the tools of democracy are also those of peace.” It credited her with uniting a once-fractured opposition around a common goal: free elections and representative government.

    Jorgen Watne Frydnes, the chair of the Norwegian Nobel Committee, holds his smartphone with a photo of Venezuelan opposition leader María Corina Machado, the winner of the 2025 Nobel Peace Prize at the Norwegian Nobel Institute in Oslo, Norway, on October 10, 2025. (Photo by Rodrigo Freitas / NTB / AFP) / Norway OUT (Photo by RODRIGO FREITAS/NTB/AFP via Getty Images)
    Jorgen Watne Frydnes, the chair of the Norwegian Nobel Committee, holds his smartphone with a photo of Venezuelan opposition leader María Corina Machado, the winner of the 2025 Nobel Peace Prize at the Norwegian Nobel Institute in Oslo, Norway, on October 10, 2025. (Photo by Rodrigo Freitas / NTB / AFP) / Norway OUT (Photo by RODRIGO FREITAS/NTB/AFP via Getty Images) RODRIGO FREITAS NTB/AFP via Getty Images

    The honor comes as Machado’s whereabouts remain in hiding in Venezuela for security reasons. Supporters say she continues to operate from within the Latin American nation despite arrest warrants and government accusations that she is conspiring to destabilize the country.

    In an op-ed published last year in The Wall Street Journal, titled “I Can Prove That Maduro Got Trounced,” Machado revealed she was in hiding and feared for her life.

    “I write this from hiding, fearing for my life, my freedom, and that of my fellow countrymen under the dictatorship of Nicolás Maduro,” she wrote. “Mr. Maduro did not win the Venezuelan presidential election…. He lost by a landslide to Edmundo González, 67% to 30%. I know this to be true because I can prove it.”

    Her column came just days after Venezuela’s electoral authority—controlled by Maduro loyalists—declared the president re-elected with 51% of the vote, triggering widespread protests across the country.

    Machado and her team claim to possess receipts from more than 80% of the country’s polling stations, which they say confirmed that opposition candidate Edmundo González won by a wide margin. The regime has so far failed to release the official vote records.

    As the disputed results reverberated across Venezuela, the Maduro government launched one of its most severe crackdowns in years. Human rights groups report that at least 2,000 people have been arrested, with dozens confirmed dead and hundreds injured in clashes with security forces.

    Machado’s political journey has been marked by both perseverance and persecution. Once a member of Venezuela’s National Assembly, she rose to prominence as a fierce critic of Hugo Chávez and later Nicolás Maduro.

    Her popularity surged after she won the 2023 opposition primary with 93% of the vote, positioning her as the clear challenger to Maduro ahead of the 2024 presidential election. But the government swiftly disqualified her from holding public office, citing spurious administrative charges.

    Unable to run, Machado threw her support behind González—a former diplomat—whose candidacy she helped unify across Venezuela’s fragmented opposition. Her endorsement proved decisive.

    Polls and independent observers indicate that González likely won nearly 70% of the vote—a result recognized by the United States, the European Union, and multiple Latin American governments.

    After the disputed election, González fled into exile, while Machado remained behind, going underground as the government rounded up opposition activists, journalists, and protesters.

    Human rights groups estimate that more than 2,400 people have been arrested since July, with at least 28 confirmed dead during the demonstrations. Some victims, according to activists, were tortured to death in custody.

    This week’s Nobel announcement caps a series of international tributes to Machado’s defiance and moral authority.

    In April, she was named one of Time magazine’s 100 most influential people of 2025, with U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio contributing a glowing tribute, calling her “a beacon of hope.”

    “A woman of faith who valiantly marches the streets of her homeland armed with the holy rosary and supported by countless courageous Venezuelans, Machado has stood firm against it all,” Rubio wrote. “Her principled leadership is making our region and our world a better place.”

    Rubio described her as “the Venezuelan Iron Lady,” praising her resilience and patriotism.

    Antonio Maria Delgado

    el Nuevo Herald

    Galardonado periodista con más de 30 años de experiencia, especializado en la cobertura de temas sobre Venezuela. Amante de la historia y la literatura.

    Antonio María Delgado

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