THE WASHINGTON POST: With Venezuela intervention, Donald Trump leads the world into a geopolitical Wild West

“American dominance in the Western Hemisphere will never be questioned again,” President Donald Trump declared Saturday, after US forces hit various Venezuelan targets and elite commandos carried out the capture and rendition of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro and his wife with an audacious raid in the dead of night.
“Under the Trump administration we are reasserting American power in a very powerful way in our home region.”
The world is still digesting the consequences of the US intervention, which the Trump administration has tried to characterise as a “law enforcement” mission against Maduro, indicted in US federal court on charges of narco-trafficking, rather than the clear military operation in a foreign nation that it appeared to be.
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By continuing you agree to our Terms and Privacy Policy.Some Venezuelan military positions were levelled by US strikes, with officials reporting an unspecified number of casualties.
Maduro is already in New York City, awaiting an appearance in court. For many Venezuelans, especially millions of people compelled to flee in the country over the past decade of catastrophe under Maduro’s watch, his removal is joyous news, and the first step to a happier future.
On that count, the US operation was a clear tactical success in its brazen precision and efficacy.
Still, the likelihood of a strategic failure looms. A dark history of failed US interventions and regime-change projects haunt the current action.
Boosters of the move liken it to the capture of Panamanian dictator Manuel Antonio Noriega in 1989, with US criminal investigations into money laundering and drug smuggling justifying the operation. But the analogy to the present collapses amid Mr Trump’s talk of open-ended control over Venezuela and its tremendous oil wealth.
By the end of the weekend, the White House had done little to dispel the confusion about what comes next in Venezuela. Mr Trump himself suggested the United States would somehow “run” the South American nation until a proper transition away from the current dispensation could be forged.
His lieutenants were more circumspect, emphasising US interests in dismantling alleged criminal networks within the Venezuelan state apparatus and reasserting American control or influence over Venezuela’s vast oil sector.
Venezuela’s pro-democracy opposition voiced fears that they would be cut out in a Trump-brokered deal with the remnants of Maduro’s regime.
Speaking to the Atlantic, Mr Trump said that he expected Maduro’s former vice president - and hastily installed successor - Delcy Rodriguez to essentially do the White House’s bidding. “If she doesn’t do what’s right,” he said, “she is going to pay a very big price, probably bigger than Maduro.”
The rest of the world has watched with mixed emotions. Many in Latin America, especially among the ascendant, Trump-aligned political right, cheered Maduro’s ouster and what seems a grievous blow to the region’s remaining left-leaning autocracies.
Elsewhere, world leaders feared a grim precedent. “The bombing of Venezuelan territory and the capture of its president crosses an unacceptable line,” Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva said.
“The action recalls the worst moments of interference in Latin American and Caribbean politics, and threatens the regional preservation as a zone of peace.”
French foreign minister Jean-Noel Barrot shed no tears for Maduro in a statement, but said the US action “contravenes the principle of the non-use of force that underpins international law.”
He warned that it was part of the steady erosion of international norms, worsened by countries like Russia that are supposedly the guarantors of the rules-based order.
“The growing number of violations of this principle by nations vested with the primary responsibility of permanent membership on the United Nations Security Council will have grave consequences for global security, sparing no one,” he said.
Mr Trump’s move into Venezuela is another nail in the coffin of the old post-war status quo. The White House reneged on commitments to receive authorisation from Congress before deploying the US military in Venezuela.
Ahead of Monday’s emergency UN Security Council session on Venezuela, Trump’s UN ambassador, Mike Waltz, scoffed at the “hand-wringing” of his diplomatic counterparts. In a Sunday television interview, Secretary of State Marco Rubio waved away concerns about an open-ended regime change mission as a kind of “phobia.”
“Part of what’s troubling here is not just that the President has used force in clear violation of domestic law and international law but that it’s clear he couldn’t care less about the fact that he’s breaking these rules,” observed Oona Hathaway, a leading international legal scholar at Yale Law School.
Speaking to the New Yorker, she concluded that Mr Trump is “just going to do what he thinks is warranted based on his own kind of reasoning, as opposed to any kind of constraints or legal limits or having to seek advice or consent from the international community or the US Congress.”
The sense of a paradigm shift is overwhelming. Oliver Stuenkel, an analyst of international affairs at Fundação Getulio Vargas, a Brazilian university, suggested that the raid on Venezuela was the first “concrete” sign of Mr Trump putting into practice the White House’s National Security Strategy, which declares the Western Hemisphere to be a US sphere of influence, rekindling the instincts of an era of gunboat diplomacy and neo-imperialism from a century ago.
“This is a completely new age,” Professor Stuenkel told me. “Trump doesn’t say he wants to bring democracy. It’s petro-imperialism. Latin American policy elites are slowly grasping that it would be a mistake to believe that just because Maduro is a dictator, that other countries that are democratic would be safe from the United States.”
The timid responses of most European leaders betrays the deepening anxiety on the continent about the future of the alliance with the United States.
“Maduro’s capture is no regional anomaly; it is a signal event,” noted Asli Aydintasbas and Chris Hermann of the European Council on Foreign Relations. “It highlights the volatility of Trump’s foreign policy, his comfort with military solutions and his apparent openness to a world governed by spheres of influence rather than rules.”
That opens the door further for a new geopolitical Wild West, where might makes right, and laws and rules fall away. In a separate context, C. Raja Mohan, a prominent Indian geopolitical analyst, saw this already in action in Israel’s recognition last week of the breakaway republic of Somaliland.
“Declarations about the inviolability of borders ring hollow when aggression goes unpunished or is tacitly accepted,” he wrote. “With major powers embracing territorial revisionism - China in Asia, Russia in Europe, and the US in the Western Hemisphere - it is naive for lesser states to depend on the presumed protective shield” of the rules-based international order.
© 2026 , The Washington Post
