Mexico’s statement at a UN Security Council meeting on Venezuela

In a forceful address to the United Nations Security Council, Mexico’s Ambassador to the UN, Héctor Enrique Vasconcelos y Cruz, delivered a stern condemnation of recent military operations against Venezuela. The emergency session, convened on January 5, 2026, at UN headquarters in New York, addressed the escalating situation following military strikes and the reported capture of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro and First Lady Cilia Flores.

Ambassador Vasconcelos articulated Mexico’s official position, characterizing the January 3rd military intervention as an act of aggression that blatantly violates Article 2 of the UN Charter. The Mexican diplomat asserted that such operations represent not merely isolated incidents but a fundamental assault on international law and the principles of multilateral diplomacy.

The ambassador issued a grave warning regarding rhetoric suggesting potential expansion of military operations to other nations within the Latin American region, emphasizing that such discourse poses a direct threat to regional stability and security frameworks. He further challenged the concept of externally imposed regime change, describing extraterritorial measures as historically counterproductive actions that typically exacerbate conflicts and weaken national social and political structures.

Vasconcelos concluded with a poignant observation that the current violation of international norms dangerously jeopardizes the political equilibrium of the region while simultaneously disregarding the hard-won independent history of Latin American and Caribbean nations. The address positioned Mexico as a vocal defender of sovereignty principles within international governance structures.