
Nicolas Maduro (Left) and Donald Trump (Right). Photo: Shutterstock.

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From Venezuela and made by Venezuelan Chavistas

Nicolas Maduro (Left) and Donald Trump (Right). Photo: Shutterstock.
By Farrah Hassen – Dec 3, 2025
Itâs looking a lot like the run-up to the Iraq war â only this time, the allegations are even more bogus and easily disproven.
President Trump promised âno new wars,â but his aggression against Venezuela is the exact opposite.
The U.S. military has been blowing up alleged âdrug boatsâ near Venezuela that have killed at least 83 people. The UN has condemned these unprovoked strikes as unlawful extrajudicial executions. Yet President Trump has said the U.S. may âvery soonâ expand this campaign to Venezuelan territory.
Meanwhile, the USS Gerald R. Ford is stationed off the coast of Venezuela and Trump has ordered the CIA to conduct covert operations inside the country. And he declared on November 29 that the airspace âabove and surroundingâ Venezuela is âto be closed in its entirety.â
Itâs unclear if that means Trump plans to impose a no-fly zone on Venezuela. But if so, that would be an act of war â and under the Constitution, illegal without congressional authorization.
We saw this playbook before the 2003 invasion of Iraq. President George W. Bush lied about Iraqâs possession of weapons of destruction and its ties to Al Qaeda in order to sell his regime change war to the American public.
Similarly, the Trump administration is relying on unsupported allegations against Venezuela. Only this time, the allegations are even more bogus and easily disproven.
The U.S. has claimed that it attacked the small boats because they were carrying drugs, despite offering no proof. Even if the boats did carry drugs, the appropriate response would be to lawfully intercept and detain the suspects and afford them due process of law.
Under international law, force is only permitted in self-defense from an armed attack or if authorized by the UN Security Council, neither of which applies here. Congress hasnât approved military force against alleged traffickers either.
Civilian Assassinations Reach 86 in US Military’s Killing Spree
A secret Department of Justice memo has gone so far as to name fentanyl as a âchemical weapon threatâ from these âdrug boats.â But neither U.S. nor international assessments have found that Venezuela is a primary producer or international shipment point of narcotics, including fentanyl.
Trump has also accused Venezuelan President NicolĂĄs Maduro of controlling the Tren de Aragua criminal gang, a claim contradicted by a U.S. intelligence memo, as well as the âCartel of the Sunsâ â an organization many experts doubt even exists but which Trumpâs State Department now lists as a âterrorist organization.â
And while Trump alleges that Maduro is flooding the U.S. with drugs, he just pardoned one of the biggest cocaine traffickers â former Honduran president Juan Orlando HernĂĄndez, who was sentenced to 45 years last year for creating âa cocaine superhighway to the United States.â
Trumpâs pressure campaign against Venezuela isnât about countering traffickers or âbringing democracyâ to Venezuela.
Instead, itâs a continuation of treating Latin America as part of the U.S. âsphere of influenceâ to justify interventions, as seen with past CIA-orchestrated coups in Guatemala and Chile that ousted democratically elected governments in favor of more U.S.-compliant authoritarian regimes.
The U.S. has been waging economic warfare since 2005 by imposing a range of sanctions on Venezuela under the guise of âpromoting democracy.â But far from resolving the countryâs political crisis, these sanctions have devastated the economy and increased the suffering of ordinary Venezuelans, forcing nearly 8 million to flee since 2014.
Venezuela also has the worldâs largest proven oil reserves â something Trump knows well. âWhen I leftâ office in 2021, âVenezuela was ready to collapse,â Trump said in 2023. âWe would have taken it over â we would have gotten all that oil.â
Regardless of the reasons, the U.S. has no right to intervene in Venezuela. A war would unleash untold suffering on the Venezuelan people. Itâs also the last thing Americans want, as several polls have shown. A November CBS/YouGov poll found that 70 percent of Americans across party lines oppose the U.S. taking military action against Venezuela.
The evidence is clear. Thereâs no legal basis for a war and the majority of Americans donât want it.
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