Freelance Correspondent
Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro made it clear yesterday that no foreign “threat or aggression” will intimidate the Venezuelan people, following what he called 17 weeks of threats from the US, as he commemorated the 105th anniversary of the Bolivarian Military Aviation of Venezuela and the 33rd anniversary of the November 27, 1992 attempted coup.
“If we have to take up arms, we will do so, and we would have a destiny of triumph and dignity,” Maduro said during a military ceremony in Caracas.
He also said that “imperialism” has unleashed psychological warfare and immoral pressures.
However, he added that this situation has yielded “great insights that, in previous years filled with apparent calm, we could not clearly discern from our current perspective”.
Other senior officials addressed issues that have been reported in the international media.
Venezuela’s Justice Minister Diosdado Cabello revealed that a US plane landed in Venezuela yesterday, contradicting warnings that Venezuelan airspace is unsafe.
“By the way, how is it so dangerous that a US plane brought Venezuelan migrants here today? It’s the immorality of those who govern the US. They say things to others, and then they brought a plane here today that landed with 175 people,” he said during the broadcast of his programme, Con el Mazo Dando, on Wednesday night.
The flight Cabello referred to is flight number 92 of the Plan Vuelta a la Patria (Return to the Homeland Plan), through which Venezuelan migrants are brought back home.
The flight yesterday returned 175 Venezuelan nationals: 142 men, 26 women, two boys and five girls.
Last Friday, the US government issued a NOTAM (Notice to Airmen), declaring Venezuela a zone of “potentially dangerous security environment”.
The Venezuelan government also announced the revocation of the concessions of six international airlines after they “unilaterally suspended their commercial air operations to and from the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela”.
Venezuela’s Defence Minister, General Vladimir Padrino López, also sent greetings to members of Venezuela’s air force on Venezuela’s Military Aviation Day.
In an official statement, Padrino López said the Bolivarian Military Aviation has distinguished itself by “taking on great challenges, renewing goals and overcoming enormous difficulties”, and that in this commemoration of the 105th anniversary of “air power”, they reaffirm their commitment to fight for the defence of Venezuela’s independence.
Meanwhile, outside of the tensions between the governments of Venezuela and the US, most Venezuelans continue to work, play and carry out Christmas-related activities.
From Friday until Monday, Venezuela will host the International Tourism Fair of Venezuela 2025 (FitVen) in the city of Puerto Cabello, where international tourism operators will be present.
Just last week, DAMASCO, a Venezuelan electronics and appliance manufacturer, opened its newly constructed corporate head office in Caracas, a US$10 million skyscraper.
On Wednesday, President Maduro also launched newly refurbished hospitals and health clinics throughout the country, as the country’s economy slowly recovers.
