The war between the U.S., Israel, and Iran has produced the largest oil supply disruption since the 1970s. Latin America is not a bystander. Brazil is winning, Chile is exposed, Venezuela is constrained — and tonight’s Trump deadline could change everything
Since formal review talks launched on March 18, three major developments have reshuffled the negotiating table. The July 1 deadline is not what most people think it is — and what happens next will shape North American trade for decades
Reps. Pramila Jayapal and Jonathan Jackson met with Díaz-Canel, toured hospitals, and called Trump’s blockade “economic bombing.” But will they be taken seriously by Cubans in Miami?
Three months after the most dramatic regime change in Latin America in decades, Venezuela has no elections scheduled, a former chavista insider in the presidency, and a Nobel laureate in exile. Miami’s Venezuelan community is asking what liberation actually looks like
On April 12, Peruvians choose their next president from a field of 35 candidates. The harder question isn’t who wins. It's whether whoever wins will last
A second Russian oil tanker is heading to Cuba. It will buy the island days, not months. The harder question is what happens when the fuel runs out again
Thousands of fans in flamingo pink, Marc Anthony singing the anthem, and Lionel Messi heading a goal in the 10th minute. Nu Stadium opened Saturday in Miami — and a city that has always spoken fútbol finally has the cathedral to prove it
Three months after the U.S. capture of Nicolás Maduro, Venezuela faces a deepening constitutional crisis as acting President Delcy Rodríguez governs without an electoral mandate, defying constitutional requirements for new elections
Venezuela’s oil exports surged to 1.09 million barrels per day in March, marking the highest monthly total in six months as international trading partnerships and sanctions relief drive the energy sector’s dramatic recovery
Disturbing images from Cuba’s largest zoo show skeletal lions lying on concrete floors, as the island’s economic collapse extends its reach to the most vulnerable captive animals
Hours after Argentine lawyer Agostina Páez returned from Brazilian detention, her father was filmed making the same racist monkey gestures that led to her legal troubles, forcing her to publicly condemn his “deplorable” behavior
Daniel Noboa’s latest emergency decree grants the military extended powers as joint U.S.-Ecuador operations escalate “war” against drug cartels ahead of Easter holiday weekend