The World This Hour - The World This Hour for 2026/01/03 at 22:00 EST
Episode Date: January 4, 2026The World This Hour for 2026/01/03 at 22:00 EST...
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from cbic news the world this hour i'm mike miles
venezuelan president nicholas maduro is now at the metropolitan detention center in
brooklyn new york less than 24 hours after the u.s military invaded the country raided his home
and evacuated maduro and his wife both are now at the mdc joining other infamous inmates
including r kelly shan p ditty combs and luigi mangione the reaction to the u.s attack on
Venezuela is reverberating through capitals around the world. President Donald Trump says
the U.S. will run Venezuela for now, and American companies will take over Venezuela's oil
company, excuse me, industry, and sell its oil. Karen Paul says more on the reaction.
This is illegal. It's unjustified. Congressional Democrats say the administration didn't have
legal authority for its actions and say Heg Seth and Secretary of State Marco Rubio
lied to Congress in briefings last year. Seth Moulton is a congressman for
from Massachusetts. When we had briefings on Venezuela, we asked, are you going to invade the
country? We were told no. Rubio says they didn't have to notify Congress ahead of time because
it's not a war. It's mostly a law enforcement mission. So it's the end of one dictator,
but it is not the beginning of democracy. I mean, this is really the law of the jungle.
Ben Rosewell is a former Canadian ambassador to Venezuela and a consultant with Catalyze 4,
a strategic advisory and leadership development firm.
The fact that the United States will enter the sovereign territory of another country sends a signal
that every president and every prime minister is potentially a target of U.S. military action.
Karen Paul's, CBC News, Washington.
Still unclear, who is leading Venezuela now?
Though Trump had said it was the country's vice president, Del C. Rodriguez, who was stepping in,
she's rejecting the U.S. intervention.
Kraylance reporter Corey Weddell is in Bogota, Columbia,
with more. Well, I think, first of all, what was so striking about her appearance on TV was that she was
surrounded by top members of the Maduro governments. These are people who, like Maduro,
had bounties put on them by the U.S. State Department. So clearly for now, that inner circle of
Maduro remains defiant and remains in Caracas. So she described that attack that happened. She
called it, quote, an aggression without precedence, and she said that those who launched it
will pay for it. She did not say that she has assumed the presidency. She actually said she
demanded the immediate return and release of Nicolas Maduro, and that actually contradicts
what Trump had said earlier in the day. He said that she had been sworn in as the new president
and that they were cooperating with her.
But she appeared on TV, and she was certainly defiant.
Freelance reporter Corey, not Cody, Weddell in Colombia.
By the way, Venezuela Supreme Court has just ordered Rodriguez to take over as acting president,
calling it necessary to preserve administrative continuity.
Venezuelans living in Nova Scotia are reacting to the military action.
Veronica Guterres lives in Bridgewater, Nova Scotia.
She says she's still in shock, but is holding some cautious opposition.
optimism. Like, we have been living in this dictatorship for 26 years. And I live there until I was
24. The infrastructure is completely destroyed. And we, yeah, the corruption was like really,
really bad. We didn't have water. We didn't have power. Yeah. The question is like, is this okay to
happen with Trump? She says her parents are currently visiting Venezuela and are not sure how they'll
get back to Canada. The British Defense Secretary says the UK has carried out air strikes in Syria
targeting an underground ISIS facility.
John Healy says the facility was most likely being used to hold explosives and weapons,
along with the French aircraft, the U.K. bomb excess tunnels.
Part of what Healy describes is the U.K.'s effort to stamp out any resurgence of ISIS.
And Japan and South Korea say North Korea launched ballistic missiles Sunday morning.
Those missiles apparently flying about 900 kilometers before falling into the sea.
It's exchanging data on the launch with U.S. authorities.
That is the world this hour.
For CBC News, I'm Mike Miles.
