By CHRIS POWELL
President Trump’s people say the U.S. military raid in Venezuela to abduct President Nicolas Maduro wasn’t an act of war. Then why was it conducted with so many ships and aircraft operated by the War Department? If the raid was just an ordinary arrest, why did it kill scores of people, many of them Maduro’s bodyguards? Why is the United States blockading Venezuela’s coast and seizing ships on the high seas? These are all acts of war.
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And since no war was declared, how was the U.S. raid any different than the infamous sneak attack by Japan on Pearl Harbor on Dec. 7, 1941? If Maduro’s Venezuela was such a threat, why couldn’t the United States have declared war first?
Democratic members of Congress, including Connecticut’s, warn that the intervention in Venezuela may become another “forever war” in pursuit of “nation building” like the wars in Vietnam and Afghanistan. But President Trump’s bluster notwithstanding, the United States is not going to occupy Venezuela militarily. Rather, the U.S. will bully, coerce, and essentially colonize the country by controlling its oil exports. If Venezuela descends into war, it will be a civil war between the gangster regime and democratic factions.
Trump says he has liberated Venezuela, which is nonsense. Maduro’s government remains in power and, indeed, Trump prefers it to a quick transition to a fairly elected government.
No, if Venezuela is to be liberated, it will have to be done by Venezuelans themselves, including the millions who fled the country to escape the gangsters. As much as the Venezuelan exiles in the United States are cheering Maduro’s removal, they aren’t likely to go back.
Democratic members of Congress, including Connecticut’s, condemn Trump, a Republican, for failing to get congressional authorization for the raid on Venezuela. But Trump’s Democratic predecessors, Barack Obama and Joe Biden, also launched military attacks around the world, which didn’t bother Connecticut’s Democratic congressmen.
U.S. security is at stake in Venezuela. The drug dealing for which Maduro has been federally indicted is only a tiny part of it. More drugs come into the United States from China via Mexico but Trump is not going to tell the War Department to abduct Xi Jinping, who has nuclear weapons and a navy larger than ours.
With Maduro and his predecessor, Hugo Chavez, in power, the biggest adversaries of the United States, China and Russia, gained footholds in Venezuela from which they more easily might attack the U.S. Presumably now the U.S. will coerce Venezuela into expelling the Chinese and Russians. But that might have been accomplished by a blockade alone after invocation of the Monroe Doctrine and a declaration of war, without the sneak attack and the killing.
And now that booting China and Russia out of Venezuela is a big concern, maybe Americans will begin to understand Russia’s violent reaction to the U.S.-supported overthrow of the pro-Russian government of Ukraine in 2014 and the new Ukrainian government’s interest in joining NATO. Maybe some Americans will even recall the blockade President Kennedy threw around Cuba in 1962 when Russia began installing nuclear missiles there. No great power can tolerate being threatened on its own borders — neither the U.S. nor Russia.
Ever megalomaniacal, Trump loves to bully and play tough guy. If he’s the dealmaker he thinks he is, he would do best not to try to “run” Venezuela but to make a deal with the gangsters still in power there, try to ease them out gradually, and return to running his own country. But he also wants to run Iran, Nigeria, Gaza, and even Greenland.
Will his toughness and recklessness in Venezuela and his imperial ambitions deter China from attacking Taiwan and deter Russia from bombing more apartment buildings in Ukraine? Or will it encourage the bad guys in their own imperialism?
Whatever happens, how much consolation will it be that Maduro and his thugs aren’t stealing Venezuela’s oil anymore — because the United States is?
Chris Powell has written about Connecticut government and politics for many years. (CPowell@cox.net)