Venezuela, Regime Change, the Crisis of Global Morality, and the Question the World Can No Longer Avoid!
On January 3, 2026, the United States launched one of the most consequential foreign operations in recent history — a military strike on Venezuela that culminated in the capture and removal of President Nicolás Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores. According to U.S. statements and international reporting, the couple was taken into U.S. custody and transported to New York to face federal charges.

U.S. President Donald Trump publicly declared the mission a success and framed it as part of a broader campaign against narcoterrorism and authoritarianism.
Yet beyond the headlines, this episode forces a deeper question: Can a superpower like America invade a sovereign nation, arrest its leader, and claim the moral high ground in the name of justice? And what does this say about power, hypocrisy, and international norms?
Power Versus Justice and International Law
Under international law, no country has the right to invade another sovereign nation, assassinate its leader, or arrest a sitting president unless acting in self-defense or with explicit authorization from the United Nations Security Council. The United States, however, has repeatedly acted outside these constraints. Its unmatched military power, veto authority at the UN, and global financial dominance have created a system where legality often follows force, not the other way around.
When Washington labels a leader a “dictator,” “narco-terrorist,” or “threat to democracy,” it effectively signals that sovereignty is conditional.
Justice becomes selective, applied outward but rarely inward.
U.S. actions in Venezuela represent an often dramatic instance where military force was used not in direct self-defense but to execute a domestic arrest warrant. Historically, similar actions —like the 1989 U.S. invasion of Panama to detain its leader, Manuel Noriega —were widely criticized as violations of sovereignty, even if justified by U.S. policymakers on criminal or security grounds.
Yet beyond the headlines, this episode forces a deeper question: Can a superpower like America invade a sovereign nation, arrest its leader, and claim the moral high ground in the name of justice? And what does this say about power, hypocrisy, and international norms?
This raises a central tension: when does the pursuit of “justice” become a cover for exerting control? Arresting someone on criminal charges might sound legitimate in a courtroom, but seizing them through foreign military force crosses into interventionism with enormous legal and ethical implications.
History of Intervention and the Question of Hypocrisy
The United States has a long record of intervention —direct or indirect —in the internal affairs of other nations when its interests are at stake.
Afghanistan: Justice or Endless War for Geopolitical Supremacy?
The U.S. invasion of Afghanistan in 2001 followed the September 11 attacks and was justified as self-defense. Yet, after 20 years of war, trillions of dollars spent, and countless civilian deaths, the U.S. withdrew abruptly in 2021. The Taliban returned back to power, and vast quantities of military equipment were left behind. If justice was the goal, the outcome exposes a grim reality: military intervention often destroys states without building sustainable peace.
Iraq: A Cautionary Tale of Manufactured Legitimacy For Oil Control?
The 2003 invasion of Iraq was justified on the claim that Saddam Hussein possessed weapons of mass destruction—claims later proven false. The invasion lacked UN authorization and destabilized the region, leading to civil war, sectarian violence, and the rise of ISIS. Millions were displaced, and hundreds of thousands died. The outcome of Iraq demonstrates how false moral narratives can be constructed to
legitimize illegal wars, with long-term consequences borne by civilians, not policymakers.
During the Cold War, Washington backed coups and regime changes in Iran (1953), Guatemala (1954), Chile (1973), Vietnam (1965), and elsewhere —often in the name of combating communism but with long-term human costs. These episodes have bred deep skepticism about American real motives globally.
This history feeds the perception that the U.S. does not intervene purely for justice but when strategic interests —such as resources, geopolitical influence, or regional power dynamics —align with its goals.
Venezuela and the Oil Question
Venezuela holds the world’s largest proven oil reserves. This fact alone ensures geopolitical attention. While the U.S. frames its hostility toward Caracas in terms of democracy and narcotics, critics argue that economic interests—energy security, sanctions leverage, and financial dominance—cannot be separated from moral rhetoric.

The bitter short story is that Venezuela sits on the largest oil reserve in the world. Venezuela’s oil industry was largely built with U.S. capital, expertise, and technology. The threat is that when oil trades bypass the U.S. dollar, it reduces global demand for USD and weakens U.S. financial dominance. Venezuela started to sell oil through yuan, euros, barter deals, and shadow traders, bypassing USD.
This is the becoming of a threat to USD.
The invasion that America has done to overthrow Venezuela “for oil” may simplify an ambitious selfish reality, but it cannot be legitimate action. The U.S. economy is under enormous debt pressure, and control over global energy flows remains central to its strategic power. Sanctions, regime recognition games, and covert pressure have already damaged Venezuela’s economy without improving democratic conditions.
Hypocrisy and Strategic Silence
This contradiction is most visible in U.S. alliances. Pakistan, a country where the military has repeatedly dominated civilian politics, received decades of American support despite the NYC World Trade Center’s “Twin Towers” attack in the 2001 9/11 as well as the denial and sheltering of mastermind Osama Bin Laden until 2011.
Meanwhile, India despite being a strong supportive democratic partner is frequently lectured, pressured, or destabilized through selective human rights, minority narratives, and deep state involvement.

Image Courtesy : MEAIndia Statement GoI
This inconsistency sends a powerful message to the world: values are negotiable, interests are not.
Is the U.S. “Eyeing” Iran and Mexico, too?
Iran has long been a target of U.S. sanctions, covert actions, and diplomatic pressure, but a full-scale anticipated invasion is widely viewed as catastrophic and inevitable after analyzing recent developments and mass civilian unrest in Iran.
Mexico, with tensions over migration and drug trafficking cartels, is also realistically facing U.S. invasion after the Jan 4, 2026, warning by President Trump.
Such reckless actions for self -interest often reflect fear rather than evidence. Presently, the perception of American overreach itself signals a deep global distrust.
The Message to the World and to Americans
Domestically, this operation delivers a complex message: to some Americans, it may signal strength —a government taking bold action against alleged corruption and threats. To others, it represents a drift toward imperial overreach, bypassing Congress and international law in favour of unilateral action.

Internationally, the implications are profound. Allies and adversaries alike are watching whether this sets a precedent for powerful nations feeling emboldened to intervene in others’ sovereignty with impunity. Regional neighbours in Latin America have already condemned the operation, calling for respect for international norms and warning of destabilization.
The message sent by the Venezuela operation is unmistakable: international law is subordinate to American power. Institutions exist until they obstruct. For the Global South, this confirms a long-held reality. Independence does not guarantee security.
Non-alignment offers no immunity. Development outside U.S. influence invites coercion.
If every country can seize the leader of another under the banner of “justice,” sovereignty itself becomes negotiable.
Conclusion: Empire Has a Cost
The Venezuela episode will be remembered not only for what it did to one country, but also for what it revealed about the global system.
Empire no longer feels compelled to justify itself convincingly. It acts, announces, and expects compliance. But empires do not collapse from resistance alone—they collapse from overreach, moral bankruptcy, and the loss of legitimacy.
The question is no longer whether America can do this. The question is how long the world will tolerate a system where justice is enforced by cruise missiles and sovereignty is optional.
That answer will define the next era of global geopolitics.