A remarkable
story on Saturday, as Donald Trump’s soldiers attacked several Venezuelan military bases while his Special
Forces (in a breathtakingly
professional operation) managed to bag the president of that country and his wife Cilia to take
them to some location in the USA – later revealed as a detention centre in
up-state New York. The Pentagon said that Maduro will
be judged for criminal offences and that the attacks on the country would
cease.
 |
| Maduro, on his way to Justice. |
Give
them their due – it was a slick operation.
The
whole enterprise was a bit similar to Putin’s 2022 attack on Ukraine, the
buildup of forces on the frontier and so on, but evidently turned out to be rather
more successful. Will China feel that it’s their turn now with Taiwan? We shall
see.
My
son, who lives in the Midwest, can now
expect cheaper petrol at the gas-station, and will thereby appreciate that
at least one of the Presidential promises has been fulfilled.
Aljazeera has
‘Maduro joins Iraq’s Saddam, Panama’s Noriega as latest leader taken by US’. Reuters
posted:
The Russian Foreign Ministry called the U.S. strike on Venezuela "deeply
concerning and condemnable", and from Argentina’s President Milei, "Freedom
moves forward, hooray for freedom Goddammit’.
Spain’s
reaction to this remarkable coup understandably varied from left to right. President
Sánchez calls
for a de-escalation – he says: “Both International law and the principles
of the Charter of the United Nations must be respected”. Pedro Sánchez, in line
with the EU, avoided expressly condemning the US operation, while Sumar
denounced the attacks against Venezuela as “imperialist aggression.” Alberto Núñez
Feijóo meanwhile was insisting on a quick transition led by Edmundo González
(the doddery old fellow who lives in exile in Madrid).
The
ex-Podemos leader Pablo Iglesias doesn't mince words after the attacks in Venezuela: "They're bombing to steal
their oil and impose a puppet government."
Gabriel Rufián (ERC
spokesperson) says "Bombing another country is not war, it's aggression,
and detaining the President of that country is not an arrest, it's a
kidnapping."
We
read at El Mundo that Maduro will
be tried for ‘narcoterrorism and possessing destructive arms against the
USA’. (We are reminded that the ex-president of Honduras Juan Orlando
Hernández was recently pardoned by Trump after being jailed for the export of 400
tons of cocaine to America).
The
American vice-president JD Vance tweeted: “The president offered multiple off-ramps, but was very
clear throughout this process: the drug trafficking must stop, and the stolen
oil must be returned to the United States. Maduro is the newest person to find
out that President Trump means what he says."
Although
Secretary of State Marco Rubio tried to emphasize that the attack and
extraction of Maduro and Flores were a law enforcement mission, Trump made it
clear the goal was regime change in order to gain control of Venezuela’s oil.
The administration acted unilaterally, without consulting Congress, and in apparent violation of international law.
Around
600,000 Venezuelans live in Spain, many in the smartest barrios in Madrid. No
doubt, those wealthy expatriates having managed to get their money out of
Caracas and safely invested in real-estate, they would be pleased by the events.
Indeed, we see on the TV a large
Venezuelan celebration being held in Madrid on Saturday afternoon ‘supported by
both the PP and Vox’. "I thought that the Americans would solve this in a
day at most, but if it's true that they captured Maduro in just three hours...
that's a whole different ballgame", said one celebrant.
…
‘An assault not seen since World
War II’ said Donald Trump in a live speech on Saturday afternoon (Spanish time)
in a babbling monologue as he veered off topic more than once to discuss things
like the National Guard presence in various US cities. Perhaps you saw it.
“They took our oil infrastructure.
We never had a president who did anything about it”, he said, with a nudge
against the former president.
“We
are going to run the country until the arrival of a proper turnover of power”,
he said.
“The
oil business – we’re going to have our large American companies fix the
infrastructure, and we are ready for a second, much larger attack if necessary”.
Mario Rubio standing beside him looked faintly embarrassed.
“National
security, just like tariffs – make our country rich” said The Donald.
“A year ago, we were a dead
country, no longer”, said Trump, unerringly alienating half of the American population
once again.
Following
his speech, we heard from his senior advisers.
Secretary of State Marco Rubio:
‘Don’t play games with this president, because it won’t turn out well’.
‘We
showed Guts, grit, gallantry and glory’, said Defence Secretary Hegseth in an
alliterative moment.
‘A rather extraordinary press
briefing’ said the BBC journalist following the event.
The
Guardian
covered the Mar-a-Lago speeches here.
…
The opposition leader (and Nobel Peace Prize winner) Maria Corina
Machado speaking from an undisclosed site (probably in Miami): “The time of freedom has arrived, and we are ready to take power”. Instead, Trump has chosen (Maduro’s vice-president) Delcy Rodríguez to take over.
However, 20Minutos reports
that Trump has ruled out María Corina Machado to lead Venezuela: "She
doesn't have the internal support or the respect of the country"
A few other reactions: The
Venezuelan Attorney General condemned
the "cowardly imperial attack" against civilians in Venezuela. He
also demanded the release of President Nicolás Maduro and his wife.
Brazil's president denounces
the "unacceptable" US attack and the capture of Maduro. Lula da Silva
warns that it paves the way for a world where "the law of the
strongest" prevails.
A Chinese Foreign Ministry
spokesperson on Saturday said China
is deeply shocked by and strongly condemns the U.S. blatant use of force
against a sovereign state and action against its president.
The far-right French
politician Marine Le Pen criticizes
US attack on Venezuela.
The pundit Chris Hedges
writes:
‘The kidnapping of Venezuelan president Nicolás Maduro and his wife solidifies
America’s role as a gangster state. Violence does not generate peace. It
generates violence. The immolation of international and humanitarian law, as
the U.S. and Israel have done in Gaza, and as took place in Caracas, generates
a world without laws, a world of failed states, warlords, rouge imperial powers
and perpetual violence and chaos…’
From The Other 98%, we read: ‘Let’s strip away the
euphemisms: this is invasion, not enforcement. There was no imminent threat to
American soil that justified the use of force under international law. Venezuela
sits on some of the largest proven oil reserves in the world, and its economic
and geopolitical position has long made it a target of U.S. political and
economic pressure’.
Finally, Trump issues a
stark warning to Colombia's Gustavo Petro: he asserts that Petro will be
the next US target after Maduro.