Trump CANCELS Venezuela Strikes After “Sudden” Prisoner Releases—What Are They Hiding?
The threat of a U.S. military attack on Venezuela has been suddenly called off. President Trump announced he is canceling a planned second wave of strikes, declaring the regime in Caracas is now “working well” with Washington.
This shocking reversal comes only HOURS after a key opposition aide was sprung from the infamous Helicoide prison. Biagio Pilieri, an aide to fiery opposition leader Maria Corina Machado, is now free. The regime’s own Jorge Rodriguez is promising “significant” releases, after five Spanish citizens were also mysteriously let go.
This isn’t diplomacy—it’s a RAW DEAL. The Maduro regime blinked under the threat of force, trading prisoners for its own survival. They are emptying cells to buy time and protect their crippled oil industry, which Trump now says the U.S. will help “rebuild.”
Who really wins? Corrupt officials in Caracas get a lifeline and avoid American bombs. The White House gets a “win” it can sell before the election. But what about the THOUSANDS still imprisoned, tortured, and silenced? Their suffering is now a bargaining chip in a cynical game.
The violence stopped not because the dictatorship changed, but because it offered a calculated trade. The world is being told to celebrate while the machinery of oppression gets a fresh coat of paint.
They are not reforming. They are reloading.
Edited for Kayitsi.com



