Italy: Growing rejection of US sttack and threats on Venezuela

In an unprecedented display of international solidarity, hundreds of thousands of Italian citizens flooded the streets across thirty major cities in coordinated demonstrations against United States foreign policy toward Latin American nations. The widespread protests, organized through a coalition of political parties, labor unions, student associations, and social advocacy groups, represented one of Europe’s most significant expressions of dissent against American interventionism.

The mobilization spanned the entire Italian peninsula, with substantial gatherings documented in Rome, Milan, Turin, Venice, Bologna, Genoa, Florence, Naples, Palermo, and numerous other urban centers. Participants voiced strong opposition to what they characterized as US imperialist ambitions, state-sponsored terrorism, and the continued application of the nineteenth-century Monroe Doctrine, which they view as an anachronistic tool of hemispheric domination.

Rome witnessed one of the largest concentrations of protesters, where columns of demonstrators advanced along central thoroughfares from Esquiline Square toward the US Embassy. The atmosphere remained charged with political fervor as speakers addressed the crowds, warning of escalating tensions and potential military confrontations. ‘We gather today knowing the threat of further aggression remains imminent,’ declared one organizer, capturing the movement’s apprehensive mood.

The protests specifically highlighted solidarity with Venezuela’s Bolivarian government and Cuba’s socialist administration, both facing increased US economic and diplomatic pressure. Demonstrators carried banners and chanted slogans advocating for alternative global governance models free from American hegemony, with many participants emphasizing their commitment to continued mobilization for ‘a different world order based on mutual respect and sovereignty.’