Iran called it an “unforgivable red line.” Milei called it the truth. Argentina is the only country in South America that Iran has formally designated as an enemy
Colombia’s president called Donald Trump to prevent a war with a U.S.-backed neighbor. Twenty-seven charred bodies found near the border. Troops deployed & a 2008 precedent that nearly triggered a regional military confrontation
Ronald Ojeda survived torture, a prison escape, and years of exile before being abducted in front of his wife and child in Santiago and buried under concrete. Now Chile wants Maduro to answer for it
Washington has told Havana what it will cost to turn the lights back on: Díaz-Canel must go. Trump says he can do “anything he wants” with Cuba. And on Monday, the entire island went dark
The fires in Morón's Communist Party headquarters had barely been extinguished when the pots started banging in Havana. Cuba’s energy crisis has become a political uprising—and Trump says a deal is coming either way
The Monroe Doctrine promised protection. What followed was two centuries of coups, invasions, and proxy wars. Now Trump is invoking it again, and some Latin American leaders are listening. Whether they keep listening depends on what Washington does next
Díaz-Canel stepped before cameras Friday and said what weeks of protests, secret diplomacy, and pot-banging in the dark had been pointing toward: Washington and Havana are talking. Officially. And Raúl Castro is at the table
Washington moves to designate Brazil’s two largest criminal gangs as terrorist organizations—a move that could justify military action on Brazilian soil, sending Lula’s government into crisis mode
Washington and Havana are negotiating in secret—and a deal that could end Cuba’s 67-year standoff, open the island to U.S. investment, and usher out Díaz-Canel may be only days away