海角大神

A morsel of mercy that might save Venezuela

The country鈥檚 regime remains in power since the U.S. removed its dictator. Yet its slow release of political prisoners and an imperfect amnesty law open a window for national reconciliation.

Political activist Antonio Briceno is hugged by relatives after being released from detention in Caracas, Venezuela, March 8.

Pedro Mattey/AP

March 24, 2026

Many nations that have emerged from internal conflict 鈥 Rwanda, Colombia, Indonesia, to name a few 鈥 have anchored their national reconciliations in acts of mercy. In its own peculiar way, Venezuela might now join this group, nearly three months after the United States removed its dictator, Nicol谩s Maduro, by force and charged him with narcoterrorism and drug trafficking.

Most of Mr. Maduro鈥檚 colleagues remain in power in a deal made with U.S. President Donald Trump in the name of stability and a sharing of oil wealth. Yet the regime has also begun releasing political prisoners 鈥 just how many is in dispute. And in late February, Venezuela鈥檚 National Assembly passed an amnesty law that, for all its serious flaws, covers hundreds of detainees over decades.聽

These acts of mercy might seem useless. Many of the political prisoners violated no law, or at least none based on democratic rights. And the proceedings for their release from prison are conducted in front of judges tied closely to the regime. In addition, many Venezuelans are still being arrested for speaking out.

US fights a war abroad, faces terror threats at home

Yet the mere prospect of a general amnesty has begun to erode the regime鈥檚 legitimacy and has raised hopes for justice. More crucially, it opens a window to a full transition to democracy, one based on truth about the dictatorship鈥檚 worst abuses but that might include forgiveness for lesser crimes.

鈥淎mnesty聽does not defeat the regime on its own, but it does take away its capacity for coercion, breaks the logic of political hostages, and renders terror ineffective as a tool of social control,鈥 wrote Orlando Viera-Blanco, a Venezuelan human rights activist, in Analitica.com, a digital media outlet. 鈥淭hus,聽amnesty聽is not capitulation, it is the containment of oppression.鈥

The U.S. has laid out a plan that calls for both an election and a reconciliation process, often called transitional justice. That, combined with the limited amnesty, has emboldened Venezuelans to assert civil liberties. Public workers have gone on strike, activists have held vigils for detained political prisoners, and university students have organized protests.

The amnesty law itself speaks of creating 鈥減olitical pluralism鈥 and reintegrating former political prisoners into public life. Still missing are steps toward truth, accountability, and reparations. The law might be only a tactical sacrifice by the regime simply to retain power. But with each release of a political prisoner, the regime 鈥渓imits its narrative of internal enemies,鈥 as Mr. Viera-Blanco contended, 鈥渁nd weakens its monopoly on fear.鈥