
#washingtonpost.com. × Column | Trump ups the ante in Venezuela standoff. The White House’s campaign of military pressure on Venezuela seems to be intensifying, yet there’s little clarity on its end goal.
#Nov.16.2025
#washingtonpost.com. × One man’s obsessive quest to uncover Brazil’s buried Nazi past. The story of Brazil’s fugitive Nazis is clouded by uncertainty and conspiracy theories. But one local journalist is convinced he is closing in on the truth.
#Nov.16.2025
#washingtonpost.com. × Trump’s Venezuela war threats roil Latin American leaders. President Trump’s tough approach to Latin America has showered rewards on some leaders. For others, it’s an unwelcome return to the long history of U.S. intervention.
#Nov.15.2025
#washingtonpost.com. × Trump weighs Venezuela strikes as U.S. forces prepare for attack order. High-level discussions, underway for days, have explored a variety of potential military options, people familiar with the matter said.
#Nov.14.2025

#washingtonpost.com. × U.S. allies begin to push back on Trump’s Caribbean military strikes. Secretary of State Marco Rubio, appearing at a G-7 gathering in Canada, faces renewed questions about America’s foreign policy aims.
#Nov.12.2025

#washingtonpost.com. × U.S. troops not liable in boat strikes, classified Justice Dept. memo says. In a classified memo, the Trump administration’s Office of Legal Counsel said that U.S. troops would not be liable for participating in boat strikes on alleged narco-traffickers.
#Nov.12.2025

#washingtonpost.com. × If Trump attacked Venezuela, these sites could become targets. U.S. forces could pursue a range of options as targets, from Venezuelan military bases to cocaine refinery labs or clandestine airstrips, according to former U.S. and Venezuelan military officials.
#Nov.11.2025

#washingtonpost.com. × Venezuela orders massive mobilization as U.S. aircraft carrier approaches. Defense Minister Vladimir Padrino López said that Venezuela would put the entire country’s military arsenal at the ready, including its militia and almost 200,000 soldiers.
#Nov.11.2025
#washingtonpost.com. × Trump administration tells Congress war law doesn’t apply to cartel strikes. The Office of Legal Counsel told select lawmakers that the executive branch is not bound by the War Powers Resolution, which requires congressional approval for any military action that exceeds 60 days
#Nov.01.2025

#washingtonpost.com. × Julio Simón, Argentine torturer convicted in landmark case, dies at 84. The 2006 trial for atrocities during Argentina’s military dictatorship began a wave of prosecutions more than a generation after the junta.
#Mar.29.2025
#washingtonpost.com. × Before DOGE, Argentina’s Javier Milei took a chainsaw to his government. In an interview with The Washington Post, Milei celebrated Elon Musk’s embrace of his chainsaw, calling it “an emblem of the new golden era of humanity.”
#Mar.28.2025
#washingtonpost.com. × The Wright brothers invented the airplane, right? Not if you’re in Brazil.. While the Wright brothers are widely recognized as the fathers of flight, Brazilians believe the true inventor of the airplane was one of their own.
#Mar.21.2025
#washingtonpost.com. × Trump’s aid freeze hampers anti-narcotics programs in Latin America. The aid freeze has upended anti-narcotics efforts in Latin America, with programs in Colombia, Mexico, and Ecuador affected.
#Mar.16.2025
#washingtonpost.com. × Why is your morning joe so expensive? Brazil’s coffee farms have the answer.. Extreme weather is ravaging arabica harvests in Brazil, the world’s largest coffee producer, turning a cup of joe into something of a luxury item.
#Mar.15.2025

#washingtonpost.com. × Rubio says South African ambassador to U.S. ‘no longer welcome’. Secretary of State Marco Rubio called South Africa’s U.S. ambassador, Ebrahim Rasool, “a race-baiting politician who hates America” and declared him persona non grata.
#Mar.15.2025

#washingtonpost.com. × State Department warns travelers about drugging-dating scam in Brazil. There were at least 40 cases last year in which thieves drugged travelers in their hotel rooms so they could steal their belongings.
#Feb.28.2025

#washingtonpost.com. × As Trump eyes birthright citizenship, ‘birth tourists’ see opportunity. President Donald Trump’s stalled attempt to eliminate birthright citizenship has done little to slow the popular practice of “birth tourism” among Brazilians.
#Feb.28.2025

#washingtonpost.com. × Trump says he’s ending Venezuela oil deal. Trump’s announcement marked an abrupt reversal of his administration’s outreach to President Nicolás Maduro.
#Feb.26.2025

#washingtonpost.com. × Turned away at the U.S. border, migrants make a dangerous trek in reverse. Trump’s hard-line immigration policies have sparked a reverse migration wave, with migrants traveling south through Panama and Colombia.
#Feb.25.2025
#washingtonpost.com. × The prosecutor marked to die by South America’s most dangerous gang. The Post spent four months following the Brazilian state attorney who has gone after the country’s increasingly powerful narcos — and could pay with his life.
#Feb.24.2025
#washingtonpost.com. × In Suriname, a shadowy hunt for traffickers selling jaguar parts to China. Wildlife trafficking is the fourth-largest source of illicit revenue globally after drugs, human smuggling and counterfeit goods, according to Homeland Security Investigations.
#Feb.23.2025

#washingtonpost.com. × Brazilian judge suspends Rumble, host of Trump’s Truth Social platform. The order is the latest salvo in a conflict between Brazilian judge Alexandre de Moraes and the American right wing, including prominent Trump supporters.
#Feb.22.2025

#washingtonpost.com. × Brazil charges Bolsonaro with leading plot to seize power, kill rivals. Former president Jair Bolsonaro is accused of plotting the assassination of political rivals and a military takeover of Latin America’s largest country.
#Feb.19.2025
#washingtonpost.com. × Relatives and records cast doubt on Guantánamo migrants being ‘worst of the worst’. Details on some of the Guantánamo migrants have begun to emerge. They are young Venezuelan men, and relatives say they have been falsely branded Tren de Aragua gang members.
#Feb.16.2025
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