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Venezuela’s Maduro Receives Honorary Military Degree Amid US Standoff

Khabor Wala Desk

Published: 1st October 2025, 6:29 AM

Venezuela’s Maduro Receives Honorary Military Degree Amid US Standoff

Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro was awarded an honorary doctorate on Tuesday from a military academy, as Caracas faces a tense standoff with the United States in the Caribbean.

Dressed in a black tunic, red beret, and medal, Maduro received a degree in “security issues” from the Bolivarian Military University, one of twelve military academies in Venezuela. The ceremony comes as Venezuela confronts a six-week-long US naval deployment off its coast.

Context of the Standoff

Country Actions Venezuelan Response
United States Deployed warships; attacked and destroyed boats allegedly carrying drugs from Venezuela to the US High alert; threatens state of emergency to grant special powers in defence and security
Venezuela Condemns US actions as a siege; asserts sovereignty Maduro delivers “master class” defending national response; rejects US claims of military collusion with drug cartels

US authorities claim their operations target drug trafficking, while Caracas likens the naval deployment to being under siege.

 

Speaking on stage at the university, Maduro was accompanied by Defence Minister Vladimir Padrino López and other senior military officials.

“I have my tunic and my combat beret,” Maduro said, referencing the iconic cap once worn by his late mentor, socialist icon Hugo Chávez.

After receiving the degree, Maduro delivered a “master class”, defending his response to US actions.

  • He announced that Venezuela is on high alert.
  • He indicated readiness to declare a state of emergency, which would grant him special powers in matters of defence and security in the event of US aggression.
  • Maduro framed his response as a way to “flex national muscle” and protect Venezuela’s sovereignty.

 

Maduro also denied claims by US Secretary of State Marco Rubio that the Venezuelan military is colluding with drug cartels: “I reject and repudiate the comments by Marco Rubio and I defend the morality of our soldiers,” he said.

In contrast, US President Donald Trump has labelled Maduro as a leader of a drug cartel and asserted that the warship deployment is designed to combat drug trafficking.

The United States has now offered a $50 million bounty for Maduro’s arrest.

Regional and International Concerns

  • Many Latin American countries and Venezuela fear that the US deployment could act as a dress rehearsal for a military attack to remove Maduro.
  • Maduro is widely regarded in the West as a repressive and corrupt autocrat, accused of stealing the last two elections.

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