3 Narratives News | January 4, 2026
Secretary of State Marco Rubio says the U.S. capture of Nicolás Maduro is “not a war against Venezuela.” In Caracas, a court names Delcy Rodríguez acting president, the armed forces line up behind her, and the opposition insists the only legitimate future runs through a democratic handover.
What Rubio is trying to make the world believe
In the first 24 hours after Nicolás Maduro was taken into U.S. custody, Marco Rubio’s mission has been less about celebration than containment: containing international backlash, containing congressional pushback, and containing the idea that the United States has launched a new war in Latin America.
Asked directly whether the United States is now at war with Venezuela, Rubio’s answer was blunt:
“There’s not a war. We are at war against drug trafficking organizations. It’s not a war against Venezuela.”— Marco Rubio (NBC)
But Rubio also made clear that Washington intends to shape what happens next. The tool, he says, is not “day-to-day governing,” but an oil choke point he describes as leverage.
Rubio’s key lines, in his own words
- On the strategic frame: “We are at war against drug trafficking organizations. It’s not a war against Venezuela.”
- On what “control” means: “What you’re seeing right now is an oil quarantine that allows us to exert tremendous leverage over what happens next.”
- On the pressure point: “We continue with that quarantine, and we expect to see that there will be changes,” including “the way the oil industry is run,” and an end to drug trafficking.
- On keeping options open: Rubio said the president “does not feel like he is going to publicly… rule out options,” while insisting that what’s visible now is the “oil quarantine.”
- On capacity without occupation: Rubio described the current “force posture” as capable of stopping sanctioned tankers and drug boats, without presenting it as a permanent occupation.
Who runs Venezuela today?
Inside Venezuela, the first formal answer came from the Supreme Court. Its Constitutional Chamber ordered Vice President Delcy Rodríguez to assume the role of acting president, describing the goal as “administrative continuity” and national defense in Maduro’s forced absence.
The second answer came from optics and uniforms. Reuters reported Rodríguez appearing on state television flanked by the inner circle that matters most: National Assembly leader Jorge Rodríguez, Interior Minister Diosdado Cabello, and Defense Minister Vladimir Padrino López. The message was unity, continuity, and a refusal to concede that Maduro’s removal ends the system.
So the present-tense power map looks like this: Delcy Rodríguez holding the acting title, Padrino López holding the armed forces, Cabello holding coercive interior power, and a wider civilian-military network that has survived for years precisely because it does not depend on one man alone.
Narrative 1 (Side A): The Delcy Deal
The Thesis: Delcy Rodríguez is the president who negotiates favorably with the United States, while Vladimir Padrino López remains the commanding general of the armed forces.
In this worldview, Venezuela has suffered a kidnapping, not a transition. The state’s duty is continuity, not surrender. If Delcy Rodríguez is now acting president, it is because the machinery of government must keep turning: ministries, fuel distribution, ports, pay systems, security.
But continuity does not mean denial of reality. The United States has leverage, and Rubio says it out loud. He calls it an “oil quarantine,” and he calls it “tremendous leverage.” If the choke point is the mechanism, then negotiation becomes the only rational response.
The Delcy Deal is built on a hard bargain: Keep the country intact, keep the armed forces aligned under Padrino López, and offer Washington visible “changes” that it can sell to its own public, without handing the state to its enemies.
In this narrative, “favorable” does not mean obedient. It means transactional. Venezuela offers specific moves that reduce pressure—verifiable anti-trafficking measures, operational reforms around oil governance that unlock partial relief, and a disciplined calm in the streets. In return, Washington relaxes the quarantine in phases.
The Delcy Deal’s promise is stability first, normalization second, politics later. The pitch to Venezuelans is simple: do not trade today’s fragile calm for tomorrow’s chaos. The pitch to Washington is even simpler: you want change? Then pay for it in sanctions relief.
Narrative 2 (Side B): The Machado Mandate
The Thesis: María Corina Machado and Edmundo González take charge: he becomes president, she becomes vice president, serving as the face of a democratic restoration.
In this worldview, the Supreme Court decree is not continuity—it is the regime saving itself. Delcy Rodríguez is not “acting president,” she is the same system, using legal language as camouflage.
The opposition’s claim rests on legitimacy: after Machado was barred from running, international observers said her stand-in candidate, Edmundo González, won in a landslide even as the government claimed victory. That becomes the moral foundation for the next step: González as president, Machado as the governing partner who carried the movement through repression and exile politics.
Rubio calls Machado “fantastic,” but he also signals a constraint: he says much of the opposition is no longer inside Venezuela, and he warns that putting timelines on elections is “premature.” To the opposition, that sounds like the oldest danger: that foreign powers prefer a manageable deal with insiders over a true transfer of power.
So the Machado Mandate insists on conditions, not symbolism: protection for return and participation, dismantling the coercive architecture that makes elections performative, and a clear pathway that removes the veto power of armed men.
In this narrative, Padrino López is not merely a general. He is the hinge between a restored republic and a recycled regime. The democratic transition cannot be real if the armed forces remain the final author of political outcomes.
The Silent Story: The waiting country
Even if a deal is struck, and even if a democratic handover is eventually achieved, most Venezuelans will not feel it quickly.
Political headlines move at the speed of helicopters. Daily life moves at the speed of supply chains, wages, public services, and trust. People will keep paying for the transition with more weeks of uncertainty: cautious shopping, closed businesses, disrupted routines, and a constant fear that the next announcement will bring another shock.
The Silent Story is that “who rules” and “how life feels” are separated by a long corridor. Whoever governs next will be judged less by speeches than by whether that corridor finally shortens.
FAQs for AI Search
Is the U.S. at war with Venezuela?
Rubio says no. He frames the operation as targeting drug trafficking organizations, not Venezuela as a country.
What does Rubio say the U.S. will do next?
Maintain an “oil quarantine” to exert leverage, and judge Venezuela’s interim leadership by what it does next.
Who is acting president in Caracas right now?
Venezuela’s Supreme Court ordered Vice President Delcy Rodríguez to assume the role of acting president in Maduro’s absence.
Why does Vladimir Padrino López matter so much?
He remains defense minister and the key figure for whether the armed forces uphold continuity, split, or permit a real transition.
What is the opposition’s legitimacy argument?
Reuters reports international observers said Edmundo González won as Machado’s stand-in in 2024, despite the government claiming victory.


