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U.S. Action in Venezuela: Echoes of a Century of Intervention

Featured Replies

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The recent surge in U.S. military activity in Venezuela has sent shockwaves through the Western Hemisphere. On January 3, 2026, the Trump administration conducted a series of high-profile airstrikes in Caracas and confirmed the capture of Nicolás Maduro. This dramatic escalation, described as the most significant regional intervention since the 1989 invasion of Panama, marks a boiling point for U.S.-Latin American relations.

While the White House frames these actions as a necessary "Big Stick" approach to combat drug trafficking and restore order, the move has ignited a firestorm of criticism across the Caribbean and South America. Leaders from Brazil, Colombia, and Mexico have condemned the strikes, warning that such unilateral force violates international law and threatens the region's hard-won stability.

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This latest chapter is deeply rooted in the Monroe Doctrine of 1823 and the Roosevelt Corollary, historical frameworks that have seen the U.S. intervene in Latin American affairs over 40 times in the last century. From the 1954 CIA-backed coup in Guatemala to the failed Bay of Pigs invasion, history shows that while military force can remove a leader, it often fails to build lasting democracy. Instead, these actions frequently result in unintended consequences, such as mass migration, economic destabilization, and the rise of nationalist sentiment.

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As the international community monitors the crisis, the focus shifts to whether this "regime change" will lead to a peaceful transition or a new cycle of regional unrest. With global powers like Russia and China weighing in, the stakes for regional sovereignty and global diplomacy have never been higher.

Key Takeaways

  • Historic Escalation: The 2026 airstrikes and capture of Maduro represent the boldest U.S. intervention in Latin America in over three decades.

  • Regional Backlash: Major powers like Brazil and Mexico have labeled the move a "dangerous precedent" and a violation of the U.N. Charter.

  • Historical Pattern: This action follows a long-standing U.S. policy of interventionism that dates back to the 19th century, often resulting in prolonged regional instability.


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  Adapted by ASEAN Now from NPR 2026-01-04

 

 

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  • Popular Post

How many innocent people did the US military take out this time? Same as the boat episode they "presumed" that they were drug smugglers. Killing the survivors was an act of terrorism in itself but Donny and Pete said it was neccesary to stop evil people poisoning Americans.

  • Popular Post

There is no doubt that the worst Terrorist nation in the world is the USA.

29 minutes ago, Deerculler said:

There is no doubt that the worst Terrorist nation in the world is the USA.

And you'll do 'nuttin to stop us ,

G9xJP7lXkAAApE-.jpeg

  • Popular Post
32 minutes ago, Deerculler said:

There is no doubt that the worst Terrorist nation in the world is the USA.

Not USA really, just their a$$hole president

how can one person have so much power ? why democrats opponents can't say anything ?

  • Popular Post

How many countries has the US "intervened" in. How many are now better off? Is Iraq better off? Afghanistan?

  • Popular Post
14 minutes ago, Purdey said:

How many countries has the US "intervened" in. How many are now better off? Is Iraq better off? Afghanistan?

US is not better off too. Cost US $2 - 3 trillion for the Irag War and another US $2-3 trillions for the Afghanistan War. That is what Republicans are good at. Tax cuts for the wealthy and corporations, increase military spending and go to war and then hand the economic mess to the next Democratic government to clean up.

  • Popular Post

Here's reality. The United States just opened Pandora's Box. Trump just made the kidnapping of leaders of sovereign countries, de-facto, an option for every "strong" country in the world to impose on their weaker neighbors. Now when an "enemy of the United States," like China, uses their military to project power into a neighboring country - then they'll just point to what the United State just did in Venezuela. What is good for the goose is good for the gander, right? thumbsup

🇨🇳 "If the United States can do this, so can we!" biggrin 🇷🇺

As much as US neo-cons want to say that Taiwan is a sovereign country, it is not - it's a part of China and is a secessionist state. So don't be surprised or shocked when China's President Xi order his military to bring secessionist Taiwan back into the orbit of the Chinese mainland by kidnapping the Taiwanese "president," Lai Ching-te.
US military pundits have thought China would "invade" Taiwan, but I think that Trump's action in Venezuela has just given every country that is labelled an "enemy" by the US an excuse to do the exact same thing to countries which they wish to "control."

Screenshot from 2026-01-05 11-13-57.png

In the meanwhile, what do you think. Does Trump have the cajones to "bring the Russian and Chinese and Iranian and North Korean 'dictators' to justice in the United States?" Heck, he can charge them all "conspiring to possess machine guns." It's easy - just call these foreign leaders Narco-Terrorists" or "Dictators" or "Illegal Machine-gun Owners" and send in the troops. But don't whine and cry when the people you target turn around and do the same thing to the leaders of countries you claim as "allies."
Pandoras-Box.jpg

  • Popular Post

Is anyone planning to kidnap Trump?

It doesn't matter what reason, just teach him a lesson on international tit for tat.

On 1/4/2026 at 5:07 AM, NONG CHOK said:

How many innocent people did the US military take out this time? Same as the boat episode they "presumed" that they were drug smugglers. Killing the survivors was an act of terrorism in itself but Donny and Pete said it was neccesary to stop evil people poisoning Americans.

They killed a bundle of Maduro's private Cuban security forces, that was a Bonus!

2 hours ago, Purdey said:

Is anyone planning to kidnap Trump?

It doesn't matter what reason, just teach him a lesson on international tit for tat.

Nobody wants him. And his makeup is expensive.

5 hours ago, NickyLouie said:

And you'll do 'nuttin to stop us ,

G9xJP7lXkAAApE-.jpeg

Yes we will. Yes we can.

  • Popular Post
2 hours ago, connda said:

Here's reality. The United States just opened Pandora's Box. Trump just made the kidnapping of leaders of sovereign countries, de-facto, an option for every "strong" country in the world to impose on their weaker neighbors. Now when an "enemy of the United States," like China, uses their military to project power into a neighboring country - then they'll just point to what the United State just did in Venezuela. What is good for the goose is good for the gander, right? thumbsup

🇨🇳 "If the United States can do this, so can we!" biggrin 🇷🇺

As much as US neo-cons want to say that Taiwan is a sovereign country, it is not - it's a part of China and is a secessionist state. So don't be surprised or shocked when China's President Xi order his military to bring secessionist Taiwan back into the orbit of the Chinese mainland by kidnapping the Taiwanese "president," Lai Ching-te.
US military pundits have thought China would "invade" Taiwan, but I think that Trump's action in Venezuela has just given every country that is labelled an "enemy" by the US an excuse to do the exact same thing to countries which they wish to "control."

Screenshot from 2026-01-05 11-13-57.png

In the meanwhile, what do you think. Does Trump have the cajones to "bring the Russian and Chinese and Iranian and North Korean 'dictators' to justice in the United States?" Heck, he can charge them all "conspiring to possess machine guns." It's easy - just call these foreign leaders Narco-Terrorists" or "Dictators" or "Illegal Machine-gun Owners" and send in the troops. But don't whine and cry when the people you target turn around and do the same thing to the leaders of countries you claim as "allies."
Pandoras-Box.jpg

To answer your rhetorical question: Trump and most of his acolytes, like all bullies, are proven cowards and grovelers. Venezuela is about as strong as their victims get. So: no.

Anyway, the US gave up any moral high ground it might have had when it employed kidnapping and torture and the destruction of innocent countries and the accompanying 'collateral damage' during 'shock and awe' (i.e. state sanctioned terrorism) beginning in 2001.

What the world needed then, as now, is firm statesmanship and reason and leadership. What it got, and gets now, is puerile thuggery, invasions and mass killing. Don't forget Panama, Grenada, and before that Chile and all the other fascist dictatorships the US ran in Latin America. Want to know why Iran had a Shah? Read up on 1953. And Cuba is a mess because of US sanctions. To mention a few.

At least the mask finally came off, not the gloves as Cheney or Rumsfeld once claimed.

Generally speaking the only mass of people who thought the US is benevolent are Europeans. Because the US didn't undermine our institutions, starve our people, bomb us or purposefully wreck our economies. It actively aided us and in so doing proved what really works. But even that is changing now and the scales are off our eyes. 77 million will definitely regret what we all know they knowingly voted for.

And we'll be OK with our 'socialism'. Like decent health care without bankruptcy. Or 6 weeks holiday a year. Or all the other quality of life things the MAGA dupes don't want and hate us for. And we'll be able to ward of Trump's hero Putin as well cost what it may.

Speaking as a cheese-eating, euro-commy surrender monkey who once risked his job while working for Uncle Sam in a delicate position (by making an important saving that upset one of the powers that be), I wouldn't even bend my little finger for the US nowadays.

And when you lose the support of enough little people like me, you've lost. That is increasingly the case in Europe. With our history we're no fools.

MVGA - Make Venezuela Great Again! Forget those at home and pour funds into Caracas to help rebuild it.

14 hours ago, BusyB said:

To answer your rhetorical question: Trump and most of his acolytes, like all bullies, are proven cowards and grovelers. Venezuela is about as strong as their victims get. So: no.

Anyway, the US gave up any moral high ground it might have had when it employed kidnapping and torture and the destruction of innocent countries and the accompanying 'collateral damage' during 'shock and awe' (i.e. state sanctioned terrorism) beginning in 2001.

What the world needed then, as now, is firm statesmanship and reason and leadership. What it got, and gets now, is puerile thuggery, invasions and mass killing. Don't forget Panama, Grenada, and before that Chile and all the other fascist dictatorships the US ran in Latin America. Want to know why Iran had a Shah? Read up on 1953. And Cuba is a mess because of US sanctions. To mention a few.

At least the mask finally came off, not the gloves as Cheney or Rumsfeld once claimed.

Generally speaking the only mass of people who thought the US is benevolent are Europeans. Because the US didn't undermine our institutions, starve our people, bomb us or purposefully wreck our economies. It actively aided us and in so doing proved what really works. But even that is changing now and the scales are off our eyes. 77 million will definitely regret what we all know they knowingly voted for.

And we'll be OK with our 'socialism'. Like decent health care without bankruptcy. Or 6 weeks holiday a year. Or all the other quality of life things the MAGA dupes don't want and hate us for. And we'll be able to ward of Trump's hero Putin as well cost what it may.

Speaking as a cheese-eating, euro-commy surrender monkey who once risked his job while working for Uncle Sam in a delicate position (by making an important saving that upset one of the powers that be), I wouldn't even bend my little finger for the US nowadays.

And when you lose the support of enough little people like me, you've lost. That is increasingly the case in Europe. With our history we're no fools.

You're spot on!

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