Venezuela joined the IMF in 1946. For most of the past two decades, it could not access its own money held there. That changes now — and Washington made it happen
Milei promised Argentines that inflation would hit zero by August. A global energy shock triggered by a war with Iran has made that promise harder to keep — and ordinary Argentines are feeling it at the gas pump, in the classroom, and on the bus
The bill would extend TPS for more than 350K Haitians through April 2029. Even if it passes the House, it faces significant obstacles in the Senate, a likely presidential veto, and a Supreme Court case that could determine the outcome regardless of what Congress does
A document filed with the U.S. Department of Justice on April 14 reveals that Venezuela’s acting president has hired a Washington lobbyist to lay the groundwork for her presidential campaign
Laura Dogu spent 100 days as the face of U.S. policy in Venezuela. Her departure and replacement by an economics-focused diplomat tells you exactly where Washington thinks the transition is headed
Two of El Chapo’s four sons are in U.S. custody & cooperating with prosecutors. ICE renews $10 million bounty on the third. Here is the full story of why the most wanted cartel leader in North America is still free
Pablo Escobar smuggled four hippos into Colombia in the 1980s. He died in 1993. The hippos didn’t stop reproducing, and 40 years later, Colombia is authorizing the killing of 80 of their descendants — and the country is deeply divided over it
The ceremony that took place Monday at the presidential palace in Caracas was not just a business transaction. It was the clearest statement yet of what the U.S.-Venezuela relationship has actually become — and what it has not
Venezuela’s most powerful general for over a decade has been moved to agriculture. Padrino López commanded the military that kept Maduro in power. Now he oversees crop yields
María Corina Machado survived 16 months in hiding and collected a Nobel Prize. Now she is coming home. But Rodríguez says she has “questions to answer”
A police raid on the electoral authority. Voting extended to Monday. A record 35 candidates split the vote. Peru held its most chaotic first-round election in decades on Sunday — and the country still does not know who will fight for the presidency on June 7