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PLEASE READ: For Americans of a certain age, the snatch and grab abduction of NicolĆ”s Maduro, Venezuelaās president, brings back memories of the 2003 invasion of Iraq, in some ways with good reason.
Almost everyone now sees Iraq as a cautionary tale about the lies of the powerful: We were taken to war on false pretenses. Almost everyone also thinks of Iraq as a prime example of the power of delusional thinking on the part of the powerful themselves. Slogans of the time ā āWe will be welcomed as liberatorsā; āMission Accomplishedā ā are now routinely used ironically, to denote foolish projects doomed to catastrophic failure. And Donald Trumpās Venezuela adventure is another tale of lies and delusion.
But in other ways the Trump/Venezuela story is very different from the Bush/Iraq story.
Two days after the abduction, itās clear that Trump wasnāt seeking regime change, at least not in any fundamental way. Heās more like a mob boss trying to expand his territory, believing that if he knocks off a rival boss he can bully the guyās former capos into giving him a cut of their take.
If that sounds harsh, bear in mind that before Trump stepped in, Maduro and his fellow Chavistas ā the movement founded by Hugo Chavez ā faced strong opposition from domestic pro-democracy forces led by MarĆa Corina Machado. Edmundo GonzĆ”lez, a Machado ally, clearly won Venezuelaās 2024 election, only to have Maduro steal it. So, if Trump wanted regime change he would be supporting Machado and her movement.
But in his triumphal Saturday press conference, Trump sneeringly dismissed Machado, declaring that āitād be very tough for her to be the leader, she doesnāt have the support. She doesnāt have the respect.ā
Instead, he appeared eager to support Maduroās second-in-command, Delcy Rodriguez, implying that she was ready to cooperate with his designs. Indeed, during the press conference and afterward Trump repeatedly declared that he was already ārunningā Venezuela.
But it took only a few hours for Rodriguez to make him look like a fool: Later that day she and other leading members of the Maduro government denounced U.S. actions and declared on TV that Maduro is still president of Venezuela.
Oops. By Sunday Trump was threatening to punish Rodriguez for her defiance.
How did Trump make such a big miscalculation? Trump has surrounded himself with sycophants like Pete Hegseth, who has repeatedly described him as āthe greatest president of my lifetime.ā He lives in a self-aggrandizing fantasy world ā a world in which he has a 64 percent approval rating and is a contender for the Nobel Peace Prize.
The Washington Post reports that Trump turned on Machado because she committed the āultimate sinā of accepting her genuine Nobel prize.
Anyway, the core of Trumpās fantasy involves imagining that he really is the character he played on The Apprentice, a master of the Art of the Deal.
Given Trumpās belief that he can always out-deal, out-bully and out-cheat everyone else, itās easy to see how he interpreted some conciliatory conversations with Rodriguez as a signal that she would be his obedient puppet.
Trumpās self-image as the ultimate dealmaker explains why he was so ready to believe, falsely, that he controlled Venezuela. It also explains his insistence that by, as he imagined, seizing Venezuela, he had gained a valuable prize in the form of its oil. āWeāre going to be taking out a tremendous amount of wealth out of the ground.ā Many Trump critics share his view that thereās a lot of money to be made from Venezuelan oil and condemn his intervention as an attempt to steal that money.
But you know who doesnāt think thereās a lot of money to be made in Venezuela? Oil companies. They see a dilapidated infrastructure that would cost billions to repair. They donāt see a stable political environment above ground. And while Venezuela has large oil reserves, much of its oil is āextra heavy, making it polluting and expensive to process.ā
So, why did Trump have Maduro abducted? There were surely multiple motivations. Fantasies of dominance and control and dreams of oil-soaked riches played their part. So did ego. The snatch gave Trump an opportunity to strut, and assuage his Obama envy: Trumpās minions set up a āwar roomā at Mar-a-Lago that looks as if it was designed to let him emulate the famous photo of Obama and his officials tracking the killing of Osama bin Laden.
Obamaās team did not, however, have X/Twitter on the screen behind them.
Trump also surely hoped that abducting Maduro would help him politically. The abduction pushed the Epstein files out of the headlines for a few days. And Trump is definitely trying to wag the dog, seeking a boost in popularity as the nation rallies around the flag. However, heās almost certain to be disappointed. Before the abduction, Americans overwhelmingly opposed military action in Venezuela. Early polling since the abduction remains highly unfavorable:
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spitfire red
The Real Donroe Doctrine
Seeking cash and an ego boost, not regime change
Paul Krugman
Jan 05, 2026
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spitfire red
@Buggieboo69
1 day ago
The reason Maduro was taken out is:
- Maduro signed onto China's OBOR Initiative
- Maduro applied for BRICS membership
- Maduro was selling oil to China for YUAN!
Maduro was seen as "de-dollarizing" the Venezuelan economy, and providing China with a rich supply of heavy oil and critical minerals, while also allowing China to manage and operate large national infrastructure projects. This was an ousting of BRICS from Venezuela, with warnings sent to other prospective BRICS memberships in the western hemisphere
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spitfire red
Venezuela Is A Sovereign Country this should have played a factor of this illegal entry that the U.S. Did?
1 day ago | [YT] | 1
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spitfire red
Get OPEC To Testify on Stand they will tell the truth!
1 day ago | [YT] | 1
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spitfire red
Venezuela 'I am still president' - Maduro pleads not guilty in NYC court, Yes this is the real Truth!
1 day ago | [YT] | 1
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spitfire red
OPEC will not deal with Trump and that is what Trump Wants The Oil Deals along with the money Maduro Made! MAGA Make America Great Again, It's The Worst We Have Seen It and More Wars In One Year, Lies, Lies, Lies of This Administration! That's Right Venezuela has never Attacked The U.S., Trump Needs Mental Health!
1 day ago | [YT] | 1
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spitfire red
Trump should have taken Maduro to the Hague for International Crimes!
1 day ago | [YT] | 1
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spitfire red
"Charity Is No Part of the Government" - James Madison
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spitfire red
ŠRŠAKŠĪG: Š¢rump LAUĪŠ”ŠŠŠ AĪŠŠ¢ŠŠR ŠIDĪŠGŠT AТТAДΠOĪ VenеzuŠµŠŠ°www.youtube.com/channel/UCs9-...
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