US Senate votes to curb military action in Venezuela
PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP speaks as Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth look on during a press conference following a U.S. strike on Venezuela where President Nicolas Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores, were captured, from Trump’s Mara- Lago club in Palm Beach, Florida, U.S., January 3, 2026. (Reuters) The US Senate voted on Thursday to advance a resolution that would bar President Donald Trump from taking further military action against Venezuela without congressional authorisation, even as Trump said U.S. oversight of the troubled nation could last years.
The Senate voted 52 to 47 on a procedural measure to advance the war powers resolution, as a handful of Trump’s fellow Republicans voted with every Democrat in favour of moving ahead toward a final vote on the matter.
Earlier, Trump told the NewYork Times in an interview published on Thursday that the US could oversee Venezuela and control its oil revenue for years.
Trump also appeared to lift a threat of military action against Venezuela’s neighbour, Colombia. Trump invited Colombia’s leftist leader, whom he had previously called a “sick man,” to visit Washington.
“Only time will tell” how long the United States will oversee Venezuela,Trump said. When asked by the newspaper if it would be three months, six months, a year or longer, Trump said: “I would say much longer.”
“We will rebuild it in a very profitable way,” Trump said of Venezuela, where he sent troops to seize President Nicolas Maduro in a night raid on Saturday.
Trump added that the US was “getting along very well” with the government of interim President Delcy Rodriguez, a longstanding Maduro loyalist who had served as the ousted leader’s vice president.
Mean while, Venezuela’s top lawmaker, Jorge Rodriguez, said on Thursday that a significant number of both foreign and Venezuelan prisoners would be freed during the day.
The liberations, a repeated demand of the country’s political opposition, are a gesture of peace, Rodriguez said, adding the action was unilateral and not agreed upon with any other party.
Top opposition leader Maria Corina Machado’s movement, as well as other opposition figures and human rights groups, have demanded the release of political prisoners since the US capture of Maduro.
Local rights group Foro Penal estimates there are 863 political prisoners in the country, including political figures, human rights activists, protesters arrested after the disputed 2024 election, and journalists. (NationNews)
