The United Nations Security Council has scheduled an urgent meeting for Monday morning to address the rapidly developing situation in Venezuela following a military operation conducted by the United States. According to an official statement from the council’s presidency, the emergency session will commence at 10:00 AM Eastern Time (1500 GMT) at UN headquarters in New York.
Khadija Ahmed, spokesperson for the Somali Permanent Mission to the United Nations, confirmed the meeting arrangements. Somalia currently holds the rotating presidency of the Security Council for January 2026, placing the East African nation at the center of diplomatic efforts regarding this international crisis.
The emergency session was prompted by Saturday’s dramatic developments in Caracas, where US forces successfully captured Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro and his wife. This operation represents a significant escalation in the long-standing political confrontation between Washington and the Maduro administration, which the United States and several other nations have consistently refused to recognize as Venezuela’s legitimate government.
The upcoming Security Council meeting is expected to feature heated debates among the fifteen member states, particularly between the United States and its allies and those nations that have maintained diplomatic relations with Maduro’s government. The discussion will likely focus on the legality of the military intervention, its implications for international norms regarding sovereignty, and the potential consequences for regional stability in Latin America.
This extraordinary session marks one of the first major international diplomatic responses to the operation and could set the tone for how the global community addresses similar situations in the future. The outcome of Monday’s meeting may influence subsequent actions by regional organizations including the Organization of American States and could determine the political trajectory of Venezuela’s leadership crisis.
