The claim that the United States captured Nicolás Maduro and would temporarily “run the country” sent a global shock. President Trump’s blunt declaration marked a sharp shift from sanctions to open control of a sovereign state. While Maduro’s rule was widely condemned, the move raised urgent questions about legality, precedent, and responsibility, placing Washington directly in charge of Venezuela’s future.
US officials framed the operation around security and crime, citing allegations of drug trafficking and portraying it as a law enforcement action. But this clashes with airstrikes and interim governance. The lack of a UN mandate weakens legal claims, and arguments about democratic intervention remain contested. By acting unilaterally, the US risks charges of hypocrisy while condemning similar actions by rivals.
Latin America faces added strain as Venezuela’s crisis already displaced millions. Removing Maduro does not guarantee unity; early fractures among officials and security forces show the danger of a power vacuum. Neighboring governments, even those relieved by Maduro’s fall, worry about the precedent of foreign control over a sovereign state.
Globally, the intervention may be exploited by Russia and China to justify their own actions, while US allies struggle between condemnation and silence. Venezuela’s vast oil reserves loom over any transition, and hints about restoring production fuel suspicions that resources, not just democracy, shape policy.
At home, support is fragile. Critics warn of a long entanglement that contradicts anti–“forever wars” rhetoric. Ultimately, the United States will be judged by outcomes: whether it enables a real transition that returns sovereignty to Venezuelans, or becomes trapped managing the consequences of its own power.