Maracaibo
Intro
Located on the western shore of Lake Maracaibo near the Colombian border, Maracaibo anchors Venezuela’s northwestern region and historically served as the heart of national oil production.
Background
Maracaibo developed as an oil-driven boom city in the 20th century. Chronic underinvestment, power shortages, and economic collapse have severely degraded urban services in recent years.
History
Spanish colonial foundation
Oil discoveries in Lake Maracaibo
Rapid urban expansion
Infrastructure decline and outmigration
Present Day
Maracaibo faces acute infrastructure failures, electricity shortages, and population loss. Despite decline, it remains strategically significant due to its location and energy legacy.
Future Outlook
Maracaibo’s recovery depends on national stabilization, rehabilitation of energy infrastructure, and cross-border economic reintegration with Colombia.
Map
Articles
Why Ukraine Cannot Lose This War
And why Russia, in a deeper sense, already did
24 Hours in Tbilisi and Mtshketa
Citadel views, sulfur steam, silent prayers — and a capital caught between memory and movement.
The Geographical Pivot of Constraints
How supply chains and constraint, will shape the global struggle
Events that led to the war in Ukraine – a timeline
A 1.000 Years Struggle for An Autonomous National Identity.
Picturing the Past – Postponed Peace in Transnistria
A view inside, in 2010. It’s mainly Smirnov, Sheriff and Medvedev that you see
24 Hours in Vilnius
Baroque echoes, Jewish memory, Soviet scars — and a city that stands without spectacle.
The Baltic’s Burden
What a Nation Remembers in the Morning.
Empire Logic: How Russia Uses Borders, Identity, and Delay
Russia does not need to occupy a country to control it. It only needs to prevent resolution. From Transnistria to Crimea, from narrative warfare to financial systems, Empire Logic shows how modern power is held — not through conquest, but through structural denial.
Event Timeline
Polish-Lithuanian Rule over Ukraine
Before Moscow, there was Lublin. The Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth laid the groundwork for Western Ukrainian identity — and for centuries of contested rule.