4 C
New York
Friday, January 9, 2026
Home Blog Page 9

Challenging Client

0



Client Challenge



JavaScript is disabled in your browser.

Please enable JavaScript to proceed.

A required part of this site couldn’t load. This may be due to a browser
extension, network issues, or browser settings. Please check your
connection, disable any ad blockers, or try using a different browser.

Mayor says Swiss ski bar where deadly fire occurred had not been inspected in five years

0

The Swiss bar that was the scene of a fire that killed 40 people and injured 116 hadn’t undergone safety checks for five years, authorities say.

The mayor of Crans-Montana, Nicolas Feraud, told a Tuesday press conference that he could not explain why the La Constellation bar hadn’t been checked in so long, but that the council was “profoundly sorry”.

“We regret that – we owe it to the families and we will accept the responsibility,” he said.

He added that sparklers – which are believed to have caused the fire – will be banned in local venues. Local authorities will now bring in an external contractor to inspect and audit all 128 venues in the area.

Feraud conceded there was a team of five people inspecting more than 10,000 buildings – and explained that in 2016, four village councils had merged to become a larger authority: Crans Montana.

Taking repeated questions on why the bar had not been checked in so long, Feraud said: “I have no answer for you today.”

“We’re profoundly sorry about that and I know how hard that will be for the families.”

“I’m not resigning, no, and I don’t want to,” he later added.

He said it would be “down to the judges to know whether we’ll be part of this case or not”, referring to the criminal investigation that has been opened by Swiss prosecutors.

New tranche of physical silver ETC securities issued by Xtrackers ETC plc

0


Xtrackers ETC plc issues new tranche of physical silver ETC securities

Japan Experiences 5.7-Magnitude Earthquake according to Map

0

Note: Map shows the area with a shake intensity of 4 or greater, which U.S.G.S. defines as “light,” though the earthquake may be felt outside the areas shown.  All times on the map are Japan time. The New York Times

A moderately strong, 5.7-magnitude earthquake struck in Japan on Tuesday, according to the United States Geological Survey.

The temblor happened at 10:18 a.m. Japan time about 11 miles south of Matsue, Japan, data from the agency shows.

U.S.G.S. data earlier reported that the magnitude was 5.8.

As seismologists review available data, they may revise the earthquake’s reported magnitude. Additional information collected about the earthquake may also prompt U.S.G.S. scientists to update the shake-severity map.

Aftershocks in the region

An aftershock is usually a smaller earthquake that follows a larger one in the same general area. Aftershocks are typically minor adjustments along the portion of a fault that slipped at the time of the initial earthquake.

Quakes and aftershocks within 100 miles

Source: United States Geological Survey | Notes: Shaking categories are based on the Modified Mercalli Intensity scale. When aftershock data is available, the corresponding maps and charts include earthquakes within 100 miles and seven days of the initial quake. All times above are Japan time. Shake data is as of Monday, Jan. 5 at 9:02 p.m. Eastern. Aftershocks data is as of Tuesday, Jan. 6 at 3:04 a.m. Eastern.

Maps: Daylight (urban areas); MapLibre (map rendering); Natural Earth (roads, labels, terrain); Protomaps (map tiles)

Reviving Venezuela’s oil industry under Trump’s plan may come with a $100 billion price tag for the U.S.

0

President Donald Trump’s plans to restore Venezuela’s beleaguered oil industry faces a series of challenges that will cost U.S. oil companies many billions of dollars to overcome.

Over the weekend, U.S. forces arrested Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro on drug trafficking charges, with Trump claiming the U.S. would “run” the country and take over the country’s nationalized oil reserves.

“American dominance in the western hemisphere will never be questioned again. Won’t happen,” Trump said on Saturday, while explicitly endorsing the “Donroe doctrine,” a social media meme/portmanteau that describes the retro-nostalgic version of imperial authority increasingly on display in his second term. The Monroe Doctrine meets the Donald.

The move follows a series of deadly strikes on Venezuelan boats supposedly carrying drugs, attacks widely considered to be illegal. The United Nations Secretary General António Guterres, the body’s top official, called Trump’s ousting of Maduro a violation of the UN’s charter. 

Home to the world’s largest oil reserves, Venezuela reached its output peak in the 1970s, producing more than 3.5 million barrels of oil daily, though production has significantly tapered off to about 1 million barrels daily. Analysts have high hopes that oil companies entering Venezuela can tap back into the country’s black gold. JPMorgan predicted that with control of Venezuela’s oil, the U.S. could hold 30% of the world’s oil reserves. Other analysts said the country could double or triple its current output, returning it to its highs from 50 years ago, quite quickly.

But experts warn that the path to dominance, at least as far as oil is concerned, will be an uphill battle following decades of mismanagement and sanctions. State-owned oil giant Petróleos de Venezuela S.A. (PDVSA) collapsed in the mid-2010s following the loss of  foreign financial support, as well as skilled workers to maintain pipelines. In 2017, the first Trump administration escalated oil sanctions on Venezuela, restricting the country’s access to U.S. markets.

Small war, big questions

According to Helima Croft, head of global commodity strategy at RBC Capital Markets, oil companies’ efforts to grow production, such as rebuilding infrastructure, would take about a decade. She wrote in a note to investors on Saturday that according to oil executives, these efforts will cost $10 billion annually, bringing total investments over the next 10 years to about $100 billion.

Part of those steep rebuilding costs are also a result of the need to extract and refine heavy crude oil, which makes up about 75% of Venezuela’s reserve, most of which is in the Orinoco Belt. Venezuela’s oil boom of yesteryear was also a result of light crude oil found in the oilfields of western Venezuela, which was easy to access and therefore were depleted quickly. While heavy crude oil is what is predominantly being drilled for today, its viscous consistency and high levels of metals and sulfur mean extracting and refining this product is significantly more costly than its light crude counterpart.

The mass undertaking to restore the Venezuelan oil industry to its peak means oil prices are unlikely to budge anytime soon, said Miguel Tinker Salas, a professor emeritus of history at Paloma College and author of The Enduring Legacy: Oil, Culture, and Society in Venezuela. It’s a hit to Trump’s “drill baby, drill” vision and, according to the historian, the president’s hope of gaining momentum ahead of the midterm elections.

“The notion that Venezuela has the largest reserves of oil in the world—303 billion barrels of oil [in reserve]—may be a stimulant in trying to get the price of oil to drop for potentially his own electoral purposes,” Tinker Salas told Fortune. “Although [Trump] is grossly mistaken if he thinks that Venezuelan oil comes online tomorrow and will affect prices of oil before the election.”

Several other analysts see more than a little bit of midterm maneuvering behind the U.S. strike on Venezuela, given the offyear rout that Republicans suffered in 2025 and Trump’s dismal poll ratings. Macquarie’s global analysts Viktor Shvets and Kyle Liu noted that their 2026 outlook included “start a small war” as one policy the Republicans could pursue to avoid a “meltdown” in the midterms. Maduro’s capture is about oil and the Monroe Doctrine, they added, but it also strengthens the Republican Party’s “tough on crime and drugs” image. 

Elsewhere, UBS chief economist Paul Donovan argued in a Monday podcast that perceptions of “affordability” seem to have shaped U.S. administration policy over the past few weeks. He noted two tariff decisions in particular: a delay on a furniture levy, and a cut on planned fees for tariffs on Italian pasta. 

“The weekend’s action in Venezuela also raises fiscal questions,” he wrote. “It is not clear how, if at all, the US intends to ‘run’ Venezuela but military adventures carry a fiscal cost. Despite the noise of social media warriors, geopolitical considerations are likely to concern investors less.”

Risks of political instability

The factors influencing U.S. oil companies go beyond just the infrastructure challenges plaguing the industry in Venezuela. According to RBC Capital Markets’ Croft, increasing oil production will hinge on companies feeling confident about the safety of setting up shop in Venezuela. That begins with who will be leading the country moving forward.

That individual will likely not be Nobel Peace Prize winner and opposition leader María Corina Machado, whom Trump said lacked support to fill the role; nor will it be Edmundo González, who ran against Maduro in the 2024 election, which was considered to be the fair winner of the election. González is in a self-imposed exile in Spain. Delcy Rodriguez, Maduro’s vice president, was sworn in as Venezuela’s interim president on Monday.

“We don’t really know who’s in charge, who is going to be running Venezuela,” Croft told CNBC on Monday. 

The U.S. will also have to learn from its past efforts to build up authority in the oil-rich countries of Iraq and Libya. Both endeavors included attempts to depose the countries’ respective leaders that led to political collapse and civil unrest.

“We thought Libya was going to be an easy turnaround, post-[former Libyan Prime Minister Muammar] Gaddafi,” Croft said. “So the question is, What’s our template for a rapid recovery of an oil sector that has suffered decades of decline and mismanagement?”

Tinker Salas argued that other factors, including an improvement in technology to extract low crude oil, could expedite production, but until there’s evidence that companies can thrive in Venezuela, there will likely be few efforts to escalate drilling.

“I don’t think any large U.S. major company is going to want to invest without a series of guarantees, because you’re talking about billions of dollars of investment,” Tinker Salas said. “This is an investment for the long term, not for the short term.”

Macquarie’s Shvets and Liu added an ominous warning for the long term of U.S. foreign policy, writing, that this is “another nail in the coffin of [the] global rules-based order,” marginalizing the UN “similar to the League of Nations circa 1930s.” The League of Nations was the forerunner to the UN and is famous among historians for its formation after the wreckage of World War I and its almost immediate failure to prevent the rise of authoritarianism in the 1930s that gave way to World War II.

This could also signal that the Church Committee rules may be “obsolete,” the Macquarie analysts wrote, referring to the regulations in place since 1975 to address abuses intelligence revealed during the Vietnam era. The CIA reportedly played a critical role in ensuring the success of this military action in Venezuela, after all.

A strong Republican midterm showing would reinforce the “unitary system of governance,” on the one hand, but Macquarie argued that it would likely further erode the “few remaining semi-independent agencies (principally the Fed).” Right on cue, a new Federal Reserve chairman is expected to be selected in the coming days.

Breaststroker Sofia Szymanowski Commits to Michigan for 2027

0

Fitter and Faster Swim Camps is the proud sponsor of SwimSwam’s College Recruiting Channel and all commitment news. For many, swimming in college is a lifelong dream that is pursued with dedication and determination. Fitter and Faster is proud to honor these athletes and those who supported them on their journey.

Sofia Szymanowski from Newport Coast, California, has verbally committed to swim and study at the University of Michigan beginning in the 2027-28 school year. She confirmed to SwimSwam:

“I’m so excited to announce my verbal commitment to continue my academic and athletic career at the University of Michigan! I want to thank my family, friends, and coaches for being so supportive throughout this entire process. A special thank you to Coach Nathan for believing in me every step of the way and my former coach, Coach Hickman for always cheering me on. I am so grateful for Coach Bryon, Coach Matt, Coach Priscilla, and the rest of the Michigan staff for giving me this amazing opportunity. GO BLUE! 💙〽️”

Szymanowski is a junior at Corona Del Mar High School. She swims year-round with Irvine Novaquatics and specializes in breaststroke, freestyle, and IM. We considered her an “Honorable Mention” on our Way Too Early list of top girls’ recruits from the high school class of 2027.

As a sophomore at the 2025 CIF-Southern Section Division I Championships, she was runner-up in the 100 breast (1:00.79) and 13th in the 200 IM (2:03.63). She led off CDM’s 200 free relay (23.84) and split a 27.97 breaststroke 50 on the medley relay. Three weeks later, she kicked of long-course season with PBs in the 100 breast (1:11.04) and 200 breast (2:34.09) at the Grand Challenge in her home pool.

By the end of the summer, she had brought those times down to 1:10.44/2:33.66. At Junior Nationals in Irvine, she placed 9th in the 50 breast (PB of 32.36 in prelims), 11th in the 100 breast (PB of 1:10.63), and 20th in the 200 breast (2:34.08). She then time-trialed the 200 IM and hit a new time of 2:23.34. A week later, at Summer Championships, also in Irvine, she finished 11th in the 50 breast (32.72), 7th in the 100 breast (1:10.44), and 7th in the 200 breast (2:33.66).

Szymanowski has improved her SCY lifetime bests in all her top events this fall. In November, she dropped .06 in the 50 free, 1.3 in the 200 free, 1.2 in the 200 IM. At Winter Juniors West, she placed 3rd in the 100 breast with her first sub-minute (59.97) performance, and she was 4th in the 200 breast with a PB of 2:12.09. The next weekend, at Walnut Sectionals, she lowered her 100 free time by 1.2 seconds.

Szymanowski will join swimmers Khanh Seaton, Leila Stafford, and Eunis Man, and diver Shannon Waldron, in the Wolverines’ class of 2031. She is already fast enough to score for Michigan in the ‘A’ final of the 100 breast and the ‘B’ final of the 200 breast at Big Ten Women’s Championships. She will be a welcome addition to the squad when she arrives in 2027, as Letitia Sim (58.56/ 2:07.28 last season) and Devon Kitchel (59.82/ 2:12.42 last season) will have graduated. She will overlap two years with Cecilia Howard and Sarah Pasquella, who rank 2nd and 3rd behind Sim so far this season.

Best SCY times:

  • 100 breast – 59.97
  • 200 breast – 2:12.09
  • 200 IM – 2:01.61
  • 200 free – 1:49.44
  • 100 free – 50.60
  • 50 free – 23.60

If you have a commitment to report, please send an email with a photo (landscape, or horizontal, looks best) and a quote to [email protected].

About the Fitter and Faster Swim Tour 

Fitter & Faster Swim Camps feature the most innovative teaching platforms for competitive swimmers of all levels. Camps are produced year-round throughout the USA and Canada. All camps are led by elite swimmers and coaches. Visit fitterandfaster.com to find or request a swim camp near you.

FFT SOCIAL

Instagram – @fitterandfasterswimtour
Facebook – @fitterandfastertour
Twitter – @fitterandfaster

FFT is a SwimSwam partner.

Sabalenka attributes ‘Battle of the Sexes’ tennis match to ‘improved fitness’ | Tennis News

0

Women’s number one believes the match against Nick Kyrgios helped her to up the intensity of her power-packed game.

Aryna Sabalenka believes her much-maligned “Battle of the Sexes” exhibition tennis match against Nick Kyrgios has paid dividends for her preparations before the Grand Slam season.

The world number one demolished Cristina Bucsa in the Brisbane International tournament on Tuesday as she gears up for next week’s Australian Open first round.

Sabalenka took just 48 minutes to dispose of the Spaniard 6-0, 6-1 in the second round of the season-opening tournament in Queensland, Australia.

She raced through the first set in just 22 minutes and took only 26 minutes to claim the second against an opponent who had no answer to the power of the 27-year-old.

The ease of the win against the world number 50 will send a warning to the title contenders in Melbourne, where Sabalenka will look to win her third Australian Open title in four years.

Sabalenka said the fact that she played so well in her first match of the season showed that the December 28 exhibition in Dubai against the mercurial but controversial Kyrgios was worthwhile.

“I mean, when you play against a guy, the intensity is completely different,” she said.

“Especially when there is Nick, who is drop-shotting every other shot, so you move a lot, so there was great fitness for me.

“And today I was, like, whew, let’s move around, you know.

“That exhibition, it was fun. It was a great challenge,” she added.

“I think we brought so many eyes on tennis. It wasn’t about proving something to anyone, it was about showing that tennis can be really huge.”

Sabalenka will now play either Jelena Ostapenko or Sorana Cirstea in the third round and remains on track to meet Madison Keys in the quarterfinals in a rematch of last year’s Australian Open final, won by the American.

AI and Radar Technology Help Prevent Complex Ship Collisions

0

If you want to spoil a sailor’s day, then a ship collision is the way to do it. That’s why Texas A&M University has come up with its Ship collision avoidance of Machine learning And Radar Technology for Stationary Entities and Avoidance (SMART-SEA).

If you thought a fender bender was nasty, then imagine two container ships slamming into one another. Actually, that doesn’t take much imagination because collisions involving everything from rowboats to supertankers are all too common. Google “ship collision” and you’ll find a depressing parade of images of tankers, freighters, containerships, warships, yachts, bridges, piers, and assorted bits of geography coming into unwelcome contact.

Insurance companies would love it if this was due purely to human error, but there’s much more to the story than poor seamanship, though there’s a depressing amount of that these days. It’s also the reason why building an anti-collision system for ships is much more complex than the ones used to make motor cars play nice on the road.

The problem is a convergence of physics, technology, geography, sea conditions, weather, and human psychology – especially if the ship in question is an extremely large one.

For example, a large, fully-laden ship can’t stop on a dime. In fact, if you visit the bridge of a containership you might find a placard reminding the crew of the stopping distance, which can be measured in miles even if the engines are in full reverse. That’s why a Man Overboard emergency on a large ship often has a depressing ending.

Related to this is that big ships don’t turn like cars. When the rudder is put over, the stern swings out first, so that if the vessel is in restricted waters, trying to avoid something ahead can result in hitting something behind. Then there’s the squat effect when the ship is in shallow water where the passage of the ship can cause a drop in pressure, sucking the hull downward.

You can add into these factors including radar limitations, blind spots, sensor time lags, and communication barriers combined with windage, currents, waves, and other sea conditions. The result is a lot of things that can go wrong and the need to rely heavily on the Captain’s skill, judgment, and experience.

Developed under a one-year contract by the U.S. Department of the Interior (DOI) and the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) through the Ocean Energy Safety Institute (OESI), A&M’s SMART-SEA is under the direction of Dr. Mirjam Fürth, an assistant professor in the Department of Ocean Engineering. Its purpose is to mitigate human error in maritime navigation by developing an improvement on fully autonomous navigation systems by keeping a “human-in-the-loop” advisor.

According to A&M, SMART-SEA uses raw radar data instead of post-processed AIS (Automatic Identification System) data, which allows it to detect moving objects in all weather conditions. In addition, machine learning is used to classify and identify stationary hazards and to correlate sensor data to better understand the ship’s behavior. Meanwhile a hybrid-physics-AI framework to produce maneuvering models to deal with uncertainty with currents and winds.

Behind all of this is a tiered logic system that’s based on seafarer experience culled through focus groups by Texas A&M Galveston faculty who are former professional mariners to categorize decision-making skills. This works with a Modified Velocity Obstacle (VO) algorithm combined with an Asymmetric Grey Cloud (AGC) model to assess risks and calculate the best way to avoid collisions while compiling with International Regulations for Preventing Collisions at Sea (COLREGs).

“Many of these collisions are caused by human error,” said Fürth. “By using data to provide seafarers with real-time instructions, we hope to reduce marine collisions.”

The research was published in Process Safety and Environmental Protection.

Source: Texas A&M

Audio music streaming in the UK reached a record high of 210 billion in 2025, with year-on-year growth showing a slight decrease

0

The UK saw over 210 billion annual streams of audio music tracks in 2025 – but year-on-year growth significantly decelerated.

That’s according to new annual data from recorded music trade group BPI, showing the volume of music consumption in the UK last year.

The BPI’s report on UK music consumption shows music streaming crossed the 200 billion-stream mark for the first time in 2025, growing 5.5% year-over-year to 210.3 billion streams.

In numerical terms, that represented YoY volume growth of 10.7 billion streams vs. the 199.6 billion streams seen in 2024.

For comparison: 2024’s audio stream volume (199.6B) was up 11.0% YoY in percentage terms (vs. 2023), and up by 20.0 billion YoY in terms of annual stream volume growth (see below).



Streaming accounted for a record 89.3% of music consumption in the UK, according to the BPI – which bases that calculation on its own formula for ‘Album Equivalent Sales’, which in turn is broadly in line with trade value.

The BPI measures one album ‘equivalent’ sale as 1,000 track streams through a premium (paid) service, or 6,000 streams from a free (ad-supported) tier. The body also counts 10 sales/downloads of individual tracks from a single LP as one album ‘equivalent’.

Under this formula,

Physical music sales rose 1.4%, with sales of vinyl growing 13.3% YoY to 7.6 million, marking their 18th consecutive year of growth. CD sales fell 7.6% to 9.7 million.

“We have been watching this consistent growth in demand for vinyl for a long time,” said Neil Gibbons, COO of Key Production Group, the UK’s largest physical music manufacturing agency.

“The core audience has shifted even beyond Gen Z now as fans build deeper connections with artists by listening to whole albums and collecting multiple formats.”

And the success of vinyl isn’t limited to catalog sales; six of the 10 biggest-selling vinyls during the years were released in the previous two years, including the top-selling vinyl album in the UK in 2025, Taylor Swift’s The Life of a Showgirl, which sold more than 147,000 units, the most vinyl albums sold in data going back to 1994.

BPI’s data measured the 52 weeks ending on December 25, 2025. The trade group is planning to release recorded music sales numbers for 2025 in Q1 or Q2 of this year.

While consumption hit new all-time records in 2025, the rate of growth was slower than in previous years. This year’s growth in overall consumption was little more than half the 9.7% YoY growth rate seen in 2024. Streaming growth also slowed from the 11% YoY growth seen in 2024 and 12.8% YoY growth in 2023.

“From Olivia Dean and Lola Young to Sleep Token and Sam Fender, new British talent are now chart-topping sensations at home and are making their presence felt in key markets around the world.”

Dr. Jo Twist OBE, BPI

The BPI says the UK saw a “surging” recorded music industry in 2025, propelled by both domestic and international sales and driven in particular by breakthrough female acts. The BPI singled out Brit School alumnus Lola Young, who had 2025’s second-biggest UK single with Messy, and Olivia Dean, who became the first female in UK chart history to achieve a No. 1 album and single in the same week.

It was overall “another exceptional year for women,” the BPI said, with Taylor Swift setting a new UK album record by becoming the first artist in nearly 50 years to have the biggest album in two consecutive years with different releases (2024’s The Tortured Poets Department and 2025’s The Life of a Showgirl). Swift also became the first artist to debut simultaneously in the top three positions on the UK’s Official Singles Chart, with The Fate Of Ophelia, Opalite and Elizabeth Taylor,  in that order.

The BPI also gave shout-outs to Skye Newman (the first British female artist in over a decade to have both of her first two singles place in the Top 20 singles charts), PinkPantheress (shortlisted for a 2025 Mercury Prize for mixtape Fancy That), as well as Chappell Roan, Gracie Abrams, and Huntr/X, the fictional girl group from Kpop Demon Hunters.


Source: BPI

“2025 saw UK talent break through domestically and globally, an impressive feat given more acts than ever are vying for audience attention,” BPI Chief Executive Dr. Jo Twist OBE said in a statement.

“From Olivia Dean and Lola Young to Sleep Token and Sam Fender, new British talent are now chart-topping sensations at home and are making their presence felt in key markets around the world, while the likes of Ed Sheeran continue to reinforce their icon status.”

She added: “This is testament to the diverse, exceptional talent that exists throughout the UK, and to the vital role labels play in supporting artists to long-term success. This impact should be a powerful reminder that British music is a global headline act, and one of the crown jewels of the UK’s creative industries.”

The BPI’s boosting of the British music industry comes at a time when the UK and other English-language music markets are seeing their share of global music streaming shrink amid a boom in the popularity of regional and local music. Music from the US, UK and Canada accounted for 56.2% of global streams in 2024, down from 57.5% in 2023, continuing a long, slow decline.

Ensuring the UK music industry’s continued success “should be high on the government’s agenda in 2026,” Twist said. “We need the commitment of policy makers, the continued protection of the UK’s gold-standard copyright framework, and a business environment which supports direct licensing between music and tech companies in order for labels to continue to discover, nurture and promote the global stars of tomorrow.”Music Business Worldwide

Cuba remains strong as it prepares for post-Maduro era

0

Will GrantBBC’s Mexico, Central America and Cuba correspondent, Colombia

EPA/Shutterstock Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel holds Cuban and Venezuelan flags as he speaks at a rally in Havana in support of Venezuela. Photo: 3 January 2026EPA/Shutterstock

Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel addressed a rally in Havana in support of Venezuela, condemning Washington’s operation

After Venezuela, there is no nation in the Americas more affected by the events in Caracas than Cuba.

The two nations have shared a political vision of state-led socialism since a fresh-faced Venezuelan presidential candidate, Hugo Chávez, met the aged leader of the Cuban Revolution, Fidel Castro, on the tarmac at Havana airport in 1999.

For years, their mutual ties only deepened, as Venezuelan crude oil flowed to the communist-run island in exchange for Cuban doctors and medics travelling in the other direction.

After the deaths of the two men, it was Nicolás Maduro – trained and instructed in Cuba – who became Chávez’s handpicked successor, chosen partly because he was acceptable to the Castro brothers. He represented continuity for the Cuban revolution as much as the Venezuelan one.

Now he, too, is gone from the seat of power in Caracas, forcibly removed by the US’s elite Delta Force team. The prospects for Cuba in his absence are bleak.

For now, the Cuban government has robustly denounced the attack as illegal and declared two days of national mourning for 32 Cuban nationals killed in the US military operation.

Their deaths revealed a key fact long-known about Cuban influence over the Venezuelan presidency and military: Maduro’s security detail was almost entirely made up of Cuban bodyguards. Cuban nationals are in place in numerous positions in Venezuela’s intelligence services and military too.

Cuba had long denied having active soldiers or security agents inside Venezuela, but freed political prisoners have often claimed they were interrogated by men with Cuban accents while in custody.

Furthermore, despite endless public proclamations of solidarity between the two nations, in truth the Cuban influence behind the scenes of the Venezuelan state is believed to have driven a wedge between ministers most-closely aligned with Havana and those who feel that the relationship first established by Chávez and Castro has become fundamentally unbalanced.

In essence, that faction considers that these days Venezuela gets little in return for its oil.

Venezuela is believed to send around 35,000 barrels of oil a day to Cuba – none of the island’s other main energy partners, Russia and Mexico, even come close.

Getty Images A man rummages through a dumpster in Havana, Cuba. Photo: 15 July 2025Getty Images

Food shortages have worsened in Cuba as it grapples with a severe economic crisis

The Trump administration’s tactic of confiscating sanctioned Venezuelan oil tankers has already begun to worsen the fuel and electricity crisis in Cuba and has the potential to become very acute, very quickly.

At best, the future looks increasingly complex for the beleaguered Caribbean island without Maduro at the helm in Caracas. Cuba was already in the grip of its worst economic crisis since the Cold War.

There have been rolling blackouts from end to end of the island for months. And the impact on ordinary Cubans has been taxing in the extreme: weeks without reliable electricity, food rotting in fridges, fans and air-conditioning not running, mosquitoes swarming in the heat and the fester of uncollected rubbish.

The island has experienced a widespread outbreak of mosquito-borne diseases in recent weeks with huge numbers of people affected by dengue fever and chikungunya. Cuba’s healthcare system, once the jewel in the revolution’s crown, has struggled to cope.

It is not a pretty picture. Yet it is the daily reality for most Cubans.

The idea that the flow of Venezuelan oil to Cuba could be turned off by Delcy Rodríguez fills Cubans with dread, especially if she looks to placate the Trump administration following the US raid against her predecessor and stave off the spectre of more violence.

EPA/Shutterstock Venezuelans in Miami, Florida, hold a picture of US Secretary of State Marco Rubio during a rally in support of the US operation in Venezuela. Photo: 3 January 2026EPA/Shutterstock

President Trump insists Washington is calling the shots in Venezuela now.

While those comments were walked back – to an extent – by his Secretary of State Marco Rubio, there is no doubt that the Trump administration now expects nothing less than total compliance from Rodríguez as acting president.

There would be further, potentially worse consequences, Trump threatened, if she “doesn’t behave”, as he put it.

Such language – not to mention the US operation in Venezuela itself – has shocked and angered Washington’s critics, who say the White House is guilty of the worst form of US imperialism and interventionism seen in Latin America since the Cold War.

The removal of Maduro from power amounted to kidnapping, those critics argue, and the case against him must be thrown out at his eventual trial in New York.

Unsurprisingly, Trump appears unfazed by such arguments, warning he might even carry it out again against the president of Colombia if need be.

He has dubbed the worrying new circumstances in Latin America the “Donroe Doctrine”, in a nod to the Monroe Doctrine – a 19th Century colonialist foreign policy principle which warned European powers against meddling in the US sphere of influence in the Western hemisphere.

In order words, Latin America is the US’s “backyard”, and Washington has the unalienable right to determine what happens there. Rubio used that very term – backyard – about the region as he justified the actions against Venezuela on US Sunday talk shows.

He also remains key to what comes next for Cuba. The US economic embargo has been in place for more than six decades and failed to remove the Castro brothers or their political project from power.

Rubio – a Cuban American former Florida senator and son of Cuban exiles – would like nothing more than to be the man, or the man behind the man, who brought an end to 60 years of communist rule in his parents’ homeland.

He sees the strategy of removing Maduro and laying down stark conditions to a more-compliant Rodríguez government in Caracas as the key to achieving that self-professed goal in Havana.

Cuba has faced tough times in the past, and the government remains defiant in the face of this latest act of US military intervention in the region.

The 32 “brave Cuban combatants” who died in Venezuela would be honoured, said Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel, for “taking on the terrorists in imperial uniforms”.

“Cuba is ready to fall,” retorted Trump on Air Force One.