If you’re confused about the strategic justification for the Trump administration’s policies toward Venezuela—including the recent abduction of President Nicolás Maduro—I don’t blame you because most of the rationales that have been offered up so far don’t pass the giggle test.
For starters, this isn’t about protecting the United States from “narcoterrorism.” Not only was Venezuela not a significant source of illegal drugs coming to the United States (and certainly not fentanyl), but US President Donald Trump’s recent decision to give a full pardon to former Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernández—whom a US jury had previously convicted of narcotics trafficking—shows you how much he really cares about that problem. Moreover, the US Justice Department has now admitted that the “Cartel de los Soles”—the supposedly dangerous drug cartel that the Trump administration kept bleating about last year—never actually existed. It was, in other words, a wholly fictitious bit of administration propaganda every bit as real as those Iraqi weapons of mass destruction we were repeatedly warned about and never found.
The seizure of Maduro was also not about making the United States more secure. Venezuela is a very weak country—as the ease with which Maduro was captured shows—and it’s not a close strategic ally of any powerful US rivals. China wasn’t building a military base there, and Iran wasn’t shipping it missiles with which to attack the United States. It had no substantial navy to impinge on US trade routes. Nobody was lying awake at night worrying about the dire threat the United States faced from Caracas, and none of us are sleeping more soundly now that Maduro is jailed in Brooklyn.
Nor was it about promoting democracy, given that Trump has already ruled out trying to place opposition leader María Corina Machado in power and instead intends to deal with Maduro’s deputy, who leads a regime that is still undeniably authoritarian.
If it isn’t stopping dangerous drugs, the need to confront a serious security threat, or a desire to restore democracy, then it must be the oil, right? Trump keeps saying that this is the real reason and that US companies are going to zip right in there and take the oil and make America greater. Wrong again. Trump can believe whatever he wants (and frequently does), but there’s no big oil bonanza waiting for Uncle Sam anytime soon.
On Tuesday, he boasted that Venezuela had agreed to turn over up to 50 million barrels of oil to the United States, which sounds impressive until you realise that, at most, this amounts to less than four days’ worth of US oil production. Trump said he’d control the revenue from the sale and use it to help Venezuela’s economy—if you believe that, you haven’t been paying attention to Trump’s predatory instincts. And even if the revenues from that oil were eventually available, they would barely scratch the surface of what Venezuela needs to rebuild its economy.
Read more: The problem with Venezuela's oil is technical, not political