Natasha Villa was driving when Venezuela's earthquake struck. Her car slid from side to side, electrical posts fell, sparks flew everywhere, and communication networks collapsed instantly — leaving her with no way to know the extent of the disaster.
Venezuela's earthquake death toll could reach 5 digits — and the US, not Venezuela's own government, is now effectively running the country's disaster response.
The Daily
Venezuela's earthquake death toll could reach 5 digits — and the US, not Venezuela's own government, is now effectively running the country's disaster response.
TL;DR
Two massive earthquakes struck Venezuela, killing at least 2,000 people with estimates potentially reaching 10,000 or more, devastating the coastal state of La Guaira [1] — Anatoly Karmanayev "Official death toll ~2,000; could reach 10,000+: The Venezuelan government's official count stood at around 2,000 dead, but officials thems…" 08:23 . NYT correspondent Anatoly Karmanayev reports from the rubble, explaining how decades of politically-driven shoddy construction under Chávez and Maduro, combined with a hollowed-out state under Delcy Rodríguez, left Venezuela catastrophically unprepared [2] — Anatoly Karmanayev "Standing on a collapsed residential building in La Guaira, Anatoly Karmanayev encountered something he had never experienced in years of fo…" 06:15 . The disaster has deepened the US-Venezuela alliance under Trump — with 900 soldiers and $300M committed — while pushing free elections even further off the horizon [3] — Anatoly Karmanayev "The US controls Venezuela's public revenues, influences its political system, and effectively makes its everyday governance decisions. This…" 17:05 . The single most useful takeaway: ordinary Venezuelans, not the government, led the rescue effort in the crucial first 48 hours.
Two massive earthquakes devastate Venezuela, killing thousands and reducing much of the coastal state of La Guaira to rubble. NYT correspondent Anatoly Karmanayev reports from the disaster zone, while producer Carlos Prieto speaks with Venezuelan residents about the collapse of government response and the extraordinary civilian effort that filled the void.
The episode opens with a sponsored segment for Anthropic's Claude AI, featuring testimonials from startup founders who describe how Claude has enabled them to build faster, work more collaboratively, and unlock new capabilities with each model update. The ad directs listeners to Claude.com/problem-solvers to watch a full documentary series.
Natalie Kitroeff opens The Daily by framing the episode around two massive earthquakes that struck Venezuela, sending colleague and Venezuelan-born producer Carlos Prieto to call contacts in the country. Prieto, who grew up in Caracas, was shocked to find the city unrecognizable in photographs. The episode will examine how Venezuelans responded to the disaster and explore its geopolitical consequences — particularly how it has forced the Trump administration to shift its Venezuela strategy.
Natasha Villa was driving when her car began sliding uncontrollably. She saw light posts and electrical lines crashing down, sparks flying in all directions, and people running screaming in the streets. With no phone signal and power out across the country, she had no way to reach her friends or grasp the scale of what had happened. Comedian Carlos Yalambi, who was supposed to perform stand-up that same night, drove around Caracas searching for a signal. When he finally connected, he saw images of collapsed buildings — and then the footage from La Guaira, which was simply 'too much.'
La Guaira is typically one of Venezuela's most popular vacation spots, a bustling coastal state just outside Caracas. The images that began emerging after the earthquake showed something unrecognizable: entire blocks reduced to rubble, buildings pancaked, and tens of thousands of people wandering in search of missing family members. Natasha Villa visited the Domingo Luciani Hospital and witnessed truckloads of patients arriving directly from La Guaira — including a four-year-old girl with life-threatening injuries. 'The city is lost,' she said.
Kitroeff transitions from the eyewitness accounts to set up the episode's larger reporting agenda: first, the extraordinary story of civilian solidarity in a country whose authoritarian government had spent two decades trying to suppress exactly that; and second, the geopolitical ripple effects of the earthquake on Venezuela's relationship with the United States. NYT correspondent Anatoly Karmanayev, speaking from La Guaira, takes over as the episode's primary source.
Playing back audio from his own car recording, Karmanayev describes the journey into La Guaira: the procession of supply trucks, motorbikes carrying groceries, and the eerie normalcy of the surrounding landscape until the moment you entered the city itself. Then: walls blown out, lifts collapsed, people's possessions hanging from shattered buildings. The apparent randomness was striking — one block completely unscathed, the next utterly leveled. Standing on a collapsed high-rise, he was struck for the first time in his career by the physical smell of death: the unmistakable odor of decaying flesh rising from the rubble as dozens of volunteers dug around him.
When Natalie Kitroeff pressed Karmanayev on the numbers, the picture was deeply unsettling. The official Venezuelan government count stood at roughly 2,000 deaths. The government itself had suggested the total could climb to around 10,000. Crowdsourcing platforms had aggregated reports of up to 50,000 missing — a figure Karmanayev treats with significant caution but does not entirely dismiss. His own assessment: a final death toll in the five digits is far from unlikely. The earthquake's unusually powerful force, combined with the fact it struck during a public holiday when La Guaira was packed with vacationers, amplified what was already a catastrophic event.
The earthquake was powerful, but the death toll was also shaped by decades of political decision-making. Karmanayev identifies Hugo Chávez's Gran Misión Vivienda — the grand housing project — as a central culprit. Built rapidly across Venezuela to deliver homes to the poor around election time, these thousands of social housing blocks were a potent political tool. But there are growing indications that construction quality was sacrificed for speed and optics. Many of the buildings that caused the most deaths were from this program. Venezuela sits in a well-documented earthquake-prone zone; statistical models had flagged the risk of a major quake for years. That the country was nonetheless unprepared points to political choices, not just geological bad luck.
Under Chávez, Venezuela's oil wealth funded a sprawling welfare state: free food, housing, subsidized travel, support for students, the elderly, and even pet owners. Oil revenues made it affordable. Then oil prices crashed in 2014, US sanctions bit, and the model became unsustainable. Delcy Rodríguez, Maduro's economic troubleshooter, orchestrated Venezuela's pivot to a hands-off market approach — easing currency controls, ending expropriations, letting supply and demand fill the gaps left by the retreating state. In Karmanayev's words, paraphrasing a Russian proverb: 'the survival of a drowning is the business of a drowning.' It improved daily life during calm times. But when two massive earthquakes demanded a massive coordinated state response, the hollowed-out government had nothing left to deploy.
Beyond the Rodríguez economic shift, Maduro introduced a second layer of dysfunction. Fearing coups and rebellions, he began deliberately atomizing the Venezuelan state — splitting it into small, isolated power centers controlled by loyal officials who enriched themselves and answered to no one else. The design was effective at preventing organized resistance to his rule. But it meant that when Venezuela desperately needed its police, military, civil protection services, and healthcare system to function as a single coordinated entity, there was no mechanism for them to do so. Each fiefdom ran around independently, unable to mount a coherent response.
When the Trump administration extracted Maduro earlier in 2026, it didn't just remove a dictator — it installed itself as the de facto governing power. US Secretary of State Marco Rubio and his team now make everyday decisions about Venezuela's governance, its public revenues, and its political direction. This is, Karmanayev emphasizes, 'not a metaphor.' At the damaged main airport in La Guaira, he witnessed the full absurdity of the situation: Granco Arteaga, a senior Venezuelan security official wanted by the US for alleged torture and political killings, standing quietly and watching US military helicopters taking off and landing a few hundred yards in front of him. The former nemesis now has complete free rein on Venezuelan soil.
The government was caught completely flat-footed. In the 24 hours immediately following the earthquakes — the golden window when survival rates are highest — there was almost nothing: sporadic government statements, minimal heavy machinery, and ordinary citizens left entirely to fend for themselves. Natasha Villa described hearing people screaming from inside collapsed buildings with no machinery available to reach them. A friend of hers spent 48 hours standing at a pile of rubble where her father was buried, with no rescue team arriving. The government's failures were not a matter of bad luck — they were the predictable consequence of years of deliberate hollowing-out.
A brief mid-episode break is announced before the reporting continues.
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As the government failed, Venezuelans took over. Natasha Villa coordinated food deliveries to La Guaira within the first 24 hours. Carlos Yalambi and friends woke up each morning, loaded supplies, and drove into the disaster zone. The encounters were profound: strangers saying goodbye with hugs after conversations of just five minutes. Yalambi received calls from Venezuelans abroad begging him to check on their mothers. He rode motorcycles into the hardest-hit areas — in one case, arriving at a building that had completely collapsed — to try to locate people for desperate families. Many survivors had seen no official help at all; the civilians arriving with food and information were their first contact with the outside world.
For Karmanayev, witnessing the civilian response was emotionally overwhelming — rich and poor Venezuelans alike cooking food, delivering supplies, digging through rubble with their bare hands, opening their homes, providing transportation. He notes the deep irony: authoritarian regimes, from Putin to Maduro, deliberately atomize their societies to prevent exactly this kind of collective action. That the Venezuelan people came together so powerfully despite 20 years of systematic division is a testament to something resilient in the national character. But Karmanayev is clear-eyed: 'these are just regular people facing a massive catastrophe, and they are putting Band-Aids at a massive problem.' Without organized state involvement, the volunteers can only do so much.
As the acute rescue phase wound down and reconstruction began, US involvement ramped up dramatically. Karmanayev credits the US contribution as genuinely impactful — its helicopters, logistical infrastructure, and financial commitment made a real difference that would otherwise have been absent. But the political cost is significant. The US privately told Delcy Rodríguez they are 'all in' on her government. Public statements from Washington praised her response effusively. A US government statement noted that the Venezuelan government had 'agreed to all of their requests' — language that, Karmanayev notes, implies the US is the one making the decisions. The earthquake has transformed an already unusual alliance into something deeper and more explicit.
Secretary of State Marco Rubio had publicly articulated a clear three-stage roadmap for Venezuela: first stabilize the economy, then the political system, then enable democratic transition. The earthquake scrambled all three stages simultaneously. With reconstruction now the overriding priority and the US deeply invested in Rodríguez's stability, free elections have been pushed even further over the horizon. Meanwhile, the Venezuelan opposition finds itself in an impossible bind: engaging risks accusations of politicizing tragedy; staying silent cedes ground to their enemies. Most acutely, opposition leader Maria Corina Machado — in exile, without a valid passport, and widely seen as the most popular politician in the country — pleaded publicly for US help to return. Washington's response was to publicly label her effort a political stunt, accusing her of undermining reconstruction efforts.
Karmanayev maps the political stakes with precision. For Rodríguez, the earthquake is either the crisis that topples her or the moment she cements her legitimacy as a ruler. For the opposition, it is survival or irrelevance. For Trump, who has repeatedly described Venezuela as a 'very happy country' with people dancing in the streets, the catastrophic images emerging from La Guaira directly contradict his narrative — forcing him to actually deliver on the vision he has been selling. And for Venezuelans themselves, the stakes are existential: can they trust a government and a US partner to keep them safe? The answer so far has been mixed, but something remarkable is happening: residents in La Guaira are chasing government officials out of the rubble, booing them openly. Twenty years of suppressed anger, Karmanayev says, is finally finding voice. The earthquake may be pulling free elections further away, but the desire for democracy has never been stronger.
Producer Carlos Prieto returns to the personal story of Carlos Yalambi's rescue mission: two friends had begged him to find their missing mothers in La Guaira. The first building had completely collapsed. Riding further into the disaster zone for the second search, with no signal and no map, Yalambi asked a stranger at a bus stop if he knew the street. The stranger asked who he was looking for. When Yalambi gave the name, the stranger replied: 'Well, yes, I'm her brother.' He walked them directly to her home. She was alive, unharmed, simply unreachable by phone. After days of rubble, death, and despair, it was the episode's quietly extraordinary moment of grace.
The episode's final segment includes advertising spots for TikTok, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center (highlighting a 100% cancer remission result in a small immunotherapy trial), Ollie fresh dog food, and Jira by Atlassian. Kitroeff then delivers a science news brief: a University of Minnesota team announced a significant step toward understanding the origin of life, blending dozens of ingredients to synthesize simple proto-cells capable of feeding, growing, and passing genetic material to future generations. The lead researcher nicknamed the creation 'Spud Cell' for its potato-like appearance. Scientists hope such synthetic cells could eventually be engineered to produce new medicines or capture atmospheric carbon dioxide. Kitroeff signs off with production credits and her signature close.
Chapter 2 · 00:33
Natalie Kitroeff opens The Daily by framing the episode around two massive earthquakes that struck Venezuela, sending colleague and Venezuelan-born producer Carlos Prieto to call contacts in the country. Prieto, who grew up in Caracas, was shocked to find the city unrecognizable in photographs. The episode will examine how Venezuelans responded to the disaster and explore its geopolitical consequences — particularly how it has forced the Trump administration to shift its Venezuela strategy.
Natasha Villa was driving when Venezuela's earthquake struck. Her car slid from side to side, electrical posts fell, sparks flew everywhere, and communication networks collapsed instantly — leaving her with no way to know the extent of the disaster.
Chapter 3 · 01:55
Natasha Villa was driving when her car began sliding uncontrollably. She saw light posts and electrical lines crashing down, sparks flying in all directions, and people running screaming in the streets. With no phone signal and power out across the country, she had no way to reach her friends or grasp the scale of what had happened. Comedian Carlos Yalambi, who was supposed to perform stand-up that same night, drove around Caracas searching for a signal. When he finally connected, he saw images of collapsed buildings — and then the footage from La Guaira, which was simply 'too much.'
Comedian Carlos Yalambi was supposed to perform stand-up the night of the earthquake. When he finally got a phone signal, he saw buildings collapsing in Caracas — and then the images from La Guaira hit him. 'It was too much.'
Chapter 6 · 06:15
Playing back audio from his own car recording, Karmanayev describes the journey into La Guaira: the procession of supply trucks, motorbikes carrying groceries, and the eerie normalcy of the surrounding landscape until the moment you entered the city itself. Then: walls blown out, lifts collapsed, people's possessions hanging from shattered buildings. The apparent randomness was striking — one block completely unscathed, the next utterly leveled. Standing on a collapsed high-rise, he was struck for the first time in his career by the physical smell of death: the unmistakable odor of decaying flesh rising from the rubble as dozens of volunteers dug around him.
Claims made here
The official Venezuelan earthquake death toll is around 2,000, with government projections suggesting it could rise to 10,000.
Standing on a collapsed residential building in La Guaira, Anatoly Karmanayev encountered something he had never experienced in years of foreign correspondence: the unmistakable physical smell of mass death — decayed flesh rising from the rubble as rescuers dug below.
Venezuela's official earthquake death toll sits at around 2,000, but the government itself has suggested the number could climb to 10,000. Crowdsourcing platforms list up to 50,000 missing. The final figure, Karmanayev says, is not unlikely to end up in the five digits.
The Venezuelan government's official count stood at around 2,000 dead, but officials themselves suggested the toll could rise to about 10,000, with some crowdsourced estimates of 50,000 missing.
Chapter 7 · 08:25
When Natalie Kitroeff pressed Karmanayev on the numbers, the picture was deeply unsettling. The official Venezuelan government count stood at roughly 2,000 deaths. The government itself had suggested the total could climb to around 10,000. Crowdsourcing platforms had aggregated reports of up to 50,000 missing — a figure Karmanayev treats with significant caution but does not entirely dismiss. His own assessment: a final death toll in the five digits is far from unlikely. The earthquake's unusually powerful force, combined with the fact it struck during a public holiday when La Guaira was packed with vacationers, amplified what was already a catastrophic event.
Claims made here
Crowdsourcing platforms estimate approximately 50,000 people are missing after the Venezuelan earthquakes, though this figure carries significant caveats.
The earthquakes struck during a public holiday, making La Guaira — normally a vacation spot — unusually crowded and amplifying the death toll.
Many of the buildings that caused the most deaths were social housing built rapidly under Hugo Chávez's Gran Misión Vivienda program around election time, with corners cut in construction.
The earthquakes struck during a public holiday when the coastal area of La Guaira, normally a vacation spot, was unusually crowded with visitors, dramatically amplifying the death toll.
Hugo Chávez's flagship Gran Misión Vivienda built thousands of social housing blocks rapidly, distributed to the poor around election time. Corners were cut. Many of those buildings have now collapsed in the earthquake, raising damning questions about whether political expediency cost thousands of lives.
Chapter 8 · 09:20
The earthquake was powerful, but the death toll was also shaped by decades of political decision-making. Karmanayev identifies Hugo Chávez's Gran Misión Vivienda — the grand housing project — as a central culprit. Built rapidly across Venezuela to deliver homes to the poor around election time, these thousands of social housing blocks were a potent political tool. But there are growing indications that construction quality was sacrificed for speed and optics. Many of the buildings that caused the most deaths were from this program. Venezuela sits in a well-documented earthquake-prone zone; statistical models had flagged the risk of a major quake for years. That the country was nonetheless unprepared points to political choices, not just geological bad luck.
Claims made here
Statistical models had predicted a strong earthquake in Venezuela for some years before the disaster struck.
Hugo Chávez's flagship social housing program, Gran Misión Vivienda, built thousands of blocks rapidly for electoral purposes, and many of those buildings collapsed in the earthquakes due to corner-cutting in construction.
Statistical models had predicted a strong earthquake in Venezuela for years, yet the country was unprepared for the disaster.
Chapter 9 · 11:40
Under Chávez, Venezuela's oil wealth funded a sprawling welfare state: free food, housing, subsidized travel, support for students, the elderly, and even pet owners. Oil revenues made it affordable. Then oil prices crashed in 2014, US sanctions bit, and the model became unsustainable. Delcy Rodríguez, Maduro's economic troubleshooter, orchestrated Venezuela's pivot to a hands-off market approach — easing currency controls, ending expropriations, letting supply and demand fill the gaps left by the retreating state. In Karmanayev's words, paraphrasing a Russian proverb: 'the survival of a drowning is the business of a drowning.' It improved daily life during calm times. But when two massive earthquakes demanded a massive coordinated state response, the hollowed-out government had nothing left to deploy.
Under Chávez, Venezuela's oil wealth funded a sprawling welfare state. When oil prices collapsed and US sanctions hit, Delcy Rodríguez dismantled it. The state stopped providing basic services. People fended for themselves. That worked during stability — but when the earthquake struck, there was nothing left to coordinate a response.
As Maduro grew more unpopular, he deliberately split the Venezuelan state into siloed fiefdoms to prevent organized resistance. It worked against coups — but it also meant that when the earthquake hit, the police, military, civil protection, and healthcare system couldn't coordinate with each other at all.
Chapter 10 · 15:20
Beyond the Rodríguez economic shift, Maduro introduced a second layer of dysfunction. Fearing coups and rebellions, he began deliberately atomizing the Venezuelan state — splitting it into small, isolated power centers controlled by loyal officials who enriched themselves and answered to no one else. The design was effective at preventing organized resistance to his rule. But it meant that when Venezuela desperately needed its police, military, civil protection services, and healthcare system to function as a single coordinated entity, there was no mechanism for them to do so. Each fiefdom ran around independently, unable to mount a coherent response.
In his final years, Maduro split Venezuela's state into siloed fiefdoms controlled by different officials who couldn't communicate with each other — preventing coups but also preventing coordinated disaster response.
Chapter 11 · 17:05
When the Trump administration extracted Maduro earlier in 2026, it didn't just remove a dictator — it installed itself as the de facto governing power. US Secretary of State Marco Rubio and his team now make everyday decisions about Venezuela's governance, its public revenues, and its political direction. This is, Karmanayev emphasizes, 'not a metaphor.' At the damaged main airport in La Guaira, he witnessed the full absurdity of the situation: Granco Arteaga, a senior Venezuelan security official wanted by the US for alleged torture and political killings, standing quietly and watching US military helicopters taking off and landing a few hundred yards in front of him. The former nemesis now has complete free rein on Venezuelan soil.
Claims made here
The US has direct control over Venezuela's public revenues and effectively makes everyday governance decisions for Venezuela through Marco Rubio and his team.
The US controls Venezuela's public revenues, influences its political system, and effectively makes its everyday governance decisions. This isn't a metaphor. Marco Rubio and his team are the real decision-makers — and during a disaster response, that extra layer of bureaucracy cost precious time.
After the US extracted Maduro, the Trump administration gained direct control over Venezuela's public revenues and effectively makes everyday decisions about how Venezuela is run.
At Venezuela's damaged main airport, Karmanayev watched a senior Venezuelan security official — accused of torture and killings, long sought by the US — calmly watching American military helicopters take off and land just hundreds of yards in front of him. US power, once Venezuela's great enemy, now has free rein.
In the critical first 24 hours after the quakes — when survivors are most likely to be found alive — there was virtually no organized government response, no heavy machinery, and no civil servants on the streets.
Chapter 15 · 22:14
As the government failed, Venezuelans took over. Natasha Villa coordinated food deliveries to La Guaira within the first 24 hours. Carlos Yalambi and friends woke up each morning, loaded supplies, and drove into the disaster zone. The encounters were profound: strangers saying goodbye with hugs after conversations of just five minutes. Yalambi received calls from Venezuelans abroad begging him to check on their mothers. He rode motorcycles into the hardest-hit areas — in one case, arriving at a building that had completely collapsed — to try to locate people for desperate families. Many survivors had seen no official help at all; the civilians arriving with food and information were their first contact with the outside world.
Ordinary Venezuelans — rich and poor alike — were the first and often only help that many survivors saw, mounting impromptu rescue missions with no experience or official support.
With the government missing in action in the critical first 24-48 hours, ordinary Venezuelans took over: cooking food, delivering supplies, digging through rubble, opening their homes. Karmanayev, a veteran correspondent, was moved to tears. But he warns it was Band-Aids on a catastrophe.
Chapter 16 · 26:20
For Karmanayev, witnessing the civilian response was emotionally overwhelming — rich and poor Venezuelans alike cooking food, delivering supplies, digging through rubble with their bare hands, opening their homes, providing transportation. He notes the deep irony: authoritarian regimes, from Putin to Maduro, deliberately atomize their societies to prevent exactly this kind of collective action. That the Venezuelan people came together so powerfully despite 20 years of systematic division is a testament to something resilient in the national character. But Karmanayev is clear-eyed: 'these are just regular people facing a massive catastrophe, and they are putting Band-Aids at a massive problem.' Without organized state involvement, the volunteers can only do so much.
Chapter 17 · 29:05
As the acute rescue phase wound down and reconstruction began, US involvement ramped up dramatically. Karmanayev credits the US contribution as genuinely impactful — its helicopters, logistical infrastructure, and financial commitment made a real difference that would otherwise have been absent. But the political cost is significant. The US privately told Delcy Rodríguez they are 'all in' on her government. Public statements from Washington praised her response effusively. A US government statement noted that the Venezuelan government had 'agreed to all of their requests' — language that, Karmanayev notes, implies the US is the one making the decisions. The earthquake has transformed an already unusual alliance into something deeper and more explicit.
Claims made here
There are already 900 American soldiers on the ground in Venezuela helping with earthquake recovery efforts.
The US has committed $300 million in aid to Venezuela following the earthquakes.
The US deployed 900 soldiers and pledged $300 million in aid. More significantly, US officials told Delcy Rodríguez they are 'all in' on her. Statements from Washington now imply Venezuela simply approves decisions the US has already made — a stunning reversal of any notion of national sovereignty.
The United States deployed 900 soldiers to Venezuela to assist with earthquake recovery efforts, a remarkable show of direct military involvement.
The Trump administration committed $300 million in aid to Venezuela following the earthquakes, underscoring the depth of the new US-Venezuelan alliance.
The Trump administration had a three-stage plan for Venezuela: economic recovery, political stabilization, then transition to free elections. Secretary Rubio himself admitted the earthquake complicates that plan. The alliance with Rodríguez is now deeper than ever — making elections harder to imagine than before.
Chapter 18 · 31:50
Secretary of State Marco Rubio had publicly articulated a clear three-stage roadmap for Venezuela: first stabilize the economy, then the political system, then enable democratic transition. The earthquake scrambled all three stages simultaneously. With reconstruction now the overriding priority and the US deeply invested in Rodríguez's stability, free elections have been pushed even further over the horizon. Meanwhile, the Venezuelan opposition finds itself in an impossible bind: engaging risks accusations of politicizing tragedy; staying silent cedes ground to their enemies. Most acutely, opposition leader Maria Corina Machado — in exile, without a valid passport, and widely seen as the most popular politician in the country — pleaded publicly for US help to return. Washington's response was to publicly label her effort a political stunt, accusing her of undermining reconstruction efforts.
Claims made here
The Trump administration's Venezuela plan had three stages: economic recovery, political stabilization, and transition to free elections — a plan that Secretary Rubio admitted is complicated by the earthquake.
Maria Corina Machado holds an expired Venezuelan passport and needs US assistance to re-enter Venezuela.
The US government publicly stated that Maria Corina Machado's campaign to return to Venezuela is a political stunt.
If the opposition stays silent, the US deepens ties with the government they oppose; if they act, they face accusations of politicizing disaster — leaving them in an impossible position.
Maria Corina Machado, the most popular politician in Venezuela and likely winner of any free election, is stranded in exile with an expired passport. She begged the US for help returning to her earthquake-ravaged country. Washington's response: her campaign to return is a political stunt.
Opposition leader Maria Corina Machado, the most popular politician in Venezuela, is in exile with an expired passport and needs US help to return, but the US has labeled her campaign to re-enter as a 'political stunt'.
Chapter 19 · 35:15
Karmanayev maps the political stakes with precision. For Rodríguez, the earthquake is either the crisis that topples her or the moment she cements her legitimacy as a ruler. For the opposition, it is survival or irrelevance. For Trump, who has repeatedly described Venezuela as a 'very happy country' with people dancing in the streets, the catastrophic images emerging from La Guaira directly contradict his narrative — forcing him to actually deliver on the vision he has been selling. And for Venezuelans themselves, the stakes are existential: can they trust a government and a US partner to keep them safe? The answer so far has been mixed, but something remarkable is happening: residents in La Guaira are chasing government officials out of the rubble, booing them openly. Twenty years of suppressed anger, Karmanayev says, is finally finding voice. The earthquake may be pulling free elections further away, but the desire for democracy has never been stronger.
In La Guaira, residents are doing something new: openly booing and chasing government officials away from collapsed buildings. Two decades of fear, repression, and lack of independent media had kept this anger bottled up. The earthquake, Karmanayev says, is a cathartic breaking point.
Chapter 20 · 39:35
Producer Carlos Prieto returns to the personal story of Carlos Yalambi's rescue mission: two friends had begged him to find their missing mothers in La Guaira. The first building had completely collapsed. Riding further into the disaster zone for the second search, with no signal and no map, Yalambi asked a stranger at a bus stop if he knew the street. The stranger asked who he was looking for. When Yalambi gave the name, the stranger replied: 'Well, yes, I'm her brother.' He walked them directly to her home. She was alive, unharmed, simply unreachable by phone. After days of rubble, death, and despair, it was the episode's quietly extraordinary moment of grace.
Carlos Yalambi and friends rode motorcycles into earthquake-devastated La Guaira searching for two missing mothers. The first building was completely collapsed. The second search ended when a random stranger at a bus stop turned out to be the missing woman's own brother — who walked them directly to her door.
No indexed bits in this chapter.
This episode
Current leader of Venezuela, former economic troubleshooter under Maduro who shifted the country toward market liberalization; her governance failures are central to the earthquake response critique.
Former Venezuelan president whose Gran Misión Vivienda social housing program built rapidly-constructed blocks that collapsed in the earthquake.
Former Venezuelan president who continued Chávez's policies and atomized the state into fragmented fiefdoms, contributing to disorganized disaster response; was extracted by the US earlier in 2026.
US Secretary of State who is described as literally making everyday governance decisions for Venezuela and who acknowledged the earthquake complicates the US plan for Venezuelan elections.
Leader of the Venezuelan opposition, Nobel Peace Prize laureate, and likely winner of free elections; stranded in exile with an expired passport and blocked from returning by the US.
Senior Venezuelan security official accused of gross human rights violations and sought by US governments for years; witnessed calmly watching US military helicopters at Venezuela's main airport.
Described as having direct control over Venezuela's public revenues and political decisions, deploying 900 soldiers and $300M in aid while deepening the alliance with Delcy Rodríguez.
Hugo Chávez's flagship social housing program that rapidly built thousands of apartment blocks for political purposes; many collapsed in the earthquake due to poor construction quality.
Central subject of the episode — a country struck by two massive earthquakes, whose governmental failures, complex US-relationship, and civilian resilience are examined in depth.
Coastal Venezuelan state and the epicenter of earthquake destruction, described as once a popular vacation spot now reduced to rubble.
Venezuela's capital city where Carlos Prieto grew up; several buildings collapsed there but the worst destruction was in nearby La Guaira.
Hospital in Venezuela where Natasha Villa witnessed earthquake victims being brought in from La Guaira, including a 4-year-old girl with severe injuries.
Stats
This episode
Factual claims made this episode, and whether a source was named.
The official Venezuelan earthquake death toll is around 2,000, with government projections suggesting it could rise to 10,000.
Crowdsourcing platforms estimate approximately 50,000 people are missing after the Venezuelan earthquakes, though this figure carries significant caveats.
Many of the buildings that caused the most deaths were social housing built rapidly under Hugo Chávez's Gran Misión Vivienda program around election time, with corners cut in construction.
Statistical models had predicted a strong earthquake in Venezuela for some years before the disaster struck.
The US has direct control over Venezuela's public revenues and effectively makes everyday governance decisions for Venezuela through Marco Rubio and his team.
There are already 900 American soldiers on the ground in Venezuela helping with earthquake recovery efforts.
The US has committed $300 million in aid to Venezuela following the earthquakes.
Maria Corina Machado holds an expired Venezuelan passport and needs US assistance to re-enter Venezuela.
The US government publicly stated that Maria Corina Machado's campaign to return to Venezuela is a political stunt.
The Trump administration's Venezuela plan had three stages: economic recovery, political stabilization, and transition to free elections — a plan that Secretary Rubio admitted is complicated by the earthquake.
The earthquakes struck during a public holiday, making La Guaira — normally a vacation spot — unusually crowded and amplifying the death toll.
A team at the University of Minnesota synthesized simple cells that can feed, grow, and reproduce, passing along genetic material — a major step toward understanding how chemicals can turn into life.
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