USA

Why China and oil are behind Trump’s real motivation for capturing Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro: MARK ALMOND

As America seizes control of the capital city of a sovereign state, having spirited its president to captivity in a brutal and daring night-time raid, many will be forgiven for wondering what happened to Donald J Trump, prospective Nobel Peace Prize winner?

The US president has long boasted of the eight conflicts around the world he is supposed to have resolved, but his assault on Venezuela is a devastating demonstration of raw American power.

And one that has been months in the making. Little was made of aircraft carrier USS Gerald R Ford being moved to the Caribbean in October, and now it is apparent that the subsequent strikes on drug smuggling boats leaving Venezuela and the seizure of two oil tankers were mere preludes to the main show. 

Because all the while, the US Army’s elite Delta Force unit was rehearsing its assault using a building mocked up to resemble Venezuelan President Nicholas Maduro’s compound in Caracas – for reference, SEAL Team Six which killed Osama Bin Laden in 2011 is thought to have trained for six to eight weeks.

So what is the true motive behind Trump’s attack?

He has no desire to return the US to the status of the ‘world’s policeman’ in the manner of the neo-conservatives of the George W Bush era – Trump’s withdrawal from Ukraine is evidence of that.

Instead, Trump is a disciple of the ‘Monroe Doctrine’ – the right of the US, and no other world power, to decide what goes on in the Americas, first proclaimed by President James Monroe in 1823.

So Trump sees it as his country’s right to rid the socialist sore of Maduro from its Caribbean backyard. And much of the cocaine and other narcotics that have flooded American streets over the past decade have come from the Venezuelan gangs who are the real wielders of power in Caracas.

President Donald Trump posted an image on his Truth Social account showing him sitting next to CIA Director John Ratcliffe (left) and U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio (right) as they watched the U.S. military operation in Venezuela

But last November, Trump chose to pardon former Honduran president, Juan Orlando Hernandez, who was in a US Federal jail three years into a 45-year sentence for the same offence for which Maduro now stands indicted: drug-running.

Trump seems to believe that narcotics only pose a deadly threat to the US when pushed by Leftist Latin American rulers.

No, the real reason behind Trump’s actions is oil – and it is no secret. 

Trump has boasted of making Venezuelans rich by taking over the country’s oil production. By doing so he kills two birds with one stone. 

He feeds refineries in Louisiana hungry for a special type of heavy oil in which Venezuela specialises. And he controls the supply that China had been leaning on. 

It might be a global power ready to rival the US, but China is energy poor with not nearly enough deposits of gas and oil to keeps its factory furnaces ablaze. Now, China will have to find another source of cheap oil.

Fifty years ago this week Venezuela nationalised its oil industry, including the operations of US oil firms, which Trump recently called ‘theft’. Venezuela has used its oil revenues to poke Washington in ways that have irked successive US presidents, Obama and Biden included, not least by acting as chief supplier to Communist Cuba.

The US President shared this image of Nicolas Maduro, showing the Venezuelan leader in custody

The US President shared this image of Nicolas Maduro, showing the Venezuelan leader in custody

Few in Venezuela will shed a tear for Maduro. Many hate him as an election fraudster, having rigged his country’s poll last year, and Venezuelan refugees from Chile to the US will celebrate his downfall. That won’t stop the useful idiots of the far Left here howling at his demise, as the likes of Jeremy Corbyn and Ken Livingstone have long lionised Venezuela as a socialist paradise.

But Maduro’s enemies should be careful what they wish for. His swift removal from power does not mean that Venezuela will turn to democracy, or even benign dictatorship.

The Maduro regime has been decapitated but his henchmen remain in place, and are determined to fight to retain their power.

There is a strong likelihood that chaos could ensue as in Libya after Obama helped to depose Gaddafi but then stood back and let the country become an ungovernable wreck.

US involvement in foreign wars rarely begins with a long-term commitment. More often it opens with a minor operation that unleashes forces it hadn’t intended. Then America is sucked back into the conflict against its will.

So Trump may soon find himself involved in an extended overseas military campaign, which he was elected to oppose.

Mark Almond is director of the Crisis Research Institute in Oxford

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