Maduro Comments On Lennon Song During Speech

In a bizarre and frankly surreal moment that played more like parody than policy, Venezuelan strongman Nicolás Maduro once again reached into the Western pop culture vault, dusted off a Lennon classic, and tried to strum the chords of peace — all while standing knee-deep in narco-terror allegations and international sanctions.

During a mandatory broadcast by the regime’s media arm, Maduro — the self-styled revolutionary leader whose grip on Venezuela has been defined by hyperinflation, repression, and systemic corruption — awkwardly crooned John Lennon’s Imagine.

The setting: a rally of the ruling United Socialist Party of Venezuela (PSUV) in the state of Miranda. The intent: ostensibly to send a “peace message” to then-U.S. President Donald Trump amid rising tensions in the Caribbean, where the U.S. Navy had deployed forces to counter regional drug cartels — many of which Washington links directly to Maduro’s regime.


“Peace, peace, peace… do everything for peace,” Maduro declared, calling Lennon’s lyrics a “gift to humanity” and urging Venezuelan youth to look them up. What followed was a theatrical rendition of Imagine, complete with peace signs, staged cheer, and a soundtrack that did most of the heavy lifting. Maduro even broke into English — or something close to it — declaring “Long live peace!” while referring to Lennon as a “great poet.”

But the tone-deaf performance was more than cringe-inducing — it was grotesquely ironic.

This is the same Maduro who faces a $50 million bounty from the U.S. government, accused of leading the Cartel of the Suns, a narco-terror network allegedly responsible for shipping vast quantities of cocaine into the United States. While Maduro waved his hands in a pantomime of peace, Secretary of State Marco Rubio was announcing plans to formally designate the cartel as a Foreign Terrorist Organization.

In stark contrast to the Lennon-inspired spectacle, White House officials reiterated that the Maduro regime is viewed not as a legitimate government, but as a criminal enterprise — and a clear threat to regional stability.

The contradiction is glaring: a man at the helm of a regime deeply embedded in organized crime, sending out awkward, mistranslated soundbites like “no crazy war, please” and “not war, yes pits,” while presiding over a collapsing nation marked by hunger, mass emigration, and silence from the once-vibrant opposition.