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The capture of Uruguayan drug lord Sebastián Marset in Bolivia exposes a transnational cocaine network stretching from the Southern Cone to major European port cities and the Italian mafia—raising bigger questions about the challenges for Latin American security
A Russian tanker docks in Cuba. The U.S. Embassy reopens in Caracas. Nearly 1,000 prisoners freed. And Rubio tells Al Jazeera exactly what Washington wants next
Brazil condemned the US-Israel strikes on Iran, abstained on a lopsided UN Security Council resolution, and is now facing the deepest tension between its foreign policy identity and Washington in a generation
President Trump said Sunday he has “no problem” with a Russian tanker delivering 730,000 barrels of crude to Cuba, stating that the island’s population needs to survive—a humanitarian carve-out within a blockade that has caused repeated island-wide blackouts and a deepening civilian crisis
In three days, Washington authorized U.S. companies to invest in Venezuela’s gold mines and cleared the path for Caracas to reopen its embassy. Oil. Gold. Diplomacy. The normalization is moving fast—and the conditions attached tell the full story
Trump told a room full of investors at Miami Beach’s Faena Hotel that “Cuba is next.” Nobody pretended not to hear it. Here is what is happening on the island, in Washington, and behind closed doors between Havana and the White House
The UN says more than 10,000 Colombians have been recruited to fight in foreign wars. From Sudan to Ukraine to Mexico’s cartel battlefields, Colombia’s veterans have become the world’s most in-demand mercenaries
Medellín Mayor Federico Gutiérrez confirmed Friday that a body found in rural Antioquia is believed with “very high probability” to be American Airlines flight attendant Eric Fernando Gutiérrez Molina, missing since March 22. Extradition of suspects is under consideration
Brazil lost to France without Neymar. Colombia fell to Croatia in Orlando. And Bolivia came back from a goal down to stay alive in the World Cup playoffs. One night, three South American stories, all pointing to June
Milei cut inflation from 211% to 31%. Argentina grew 4.4% last year. The IMF is applauding. So why are millions of Argentines still struggling to pay for food, utilities, and rent?
A U.S.-donated plane. 69 soldiers dead. And a Colombian president pointing the finger at Washington before the wreckage had even cooled. The crash in Putumayo is the latest flashpoint in the most turbulent chapter of U.S.-Colombia relations in a generation