A new war in Venezuela, with the same players who misled America into Iraq, is brewing. It's a familiar dance: a powerful nation steps up its military presence near a weak one, labeling the latter a "threat," and then threatens to intervene unless it complies. The script sounds like a Hollywood blockbuster, but beneath it lies a very real risk of war.
The U.S. government claims to be waging "counter-narcotics operations" in the Caribbean, while actually gathering intelligence on President Maduro's regime. This is not law enforcement; it's coercive statecraft backed by military power. By framing Venezuela as a narco-state, Washington sidesteps congressional authorization and creates an easy exit route for military intervention.
We've seen this scenario play out before, most notably in Iraq. In 2002, the Washington Post predicted that toppling Saddam Hussein would be "a cakewalk." The New York Times ran pieces urging preemptive war under the banner of American moral duty. Two decades later, we're back to the same rhetoric: a failing state with a corrupt leader is seen as an opportunity for intervention.
But what does this mean for America's future? A conflict in Venezuela could lead to irreversible instability and human suffering. The country is already on the brink of economic collapse, and the U.S. military presence only exacerbates the risk of miscalculation and escalation.
We need a more nuanced discussion about the risks we're willing to take as a nation. What do we expect these interventions to cost us in dollars, in human lives, and in national attention? We must interrogate the distance between those who greenlight military actions and those who live through their consequences.
For now, however, the familiar beats are being played: redefine the battlefield as a courtroom, label targets "terrorists," and pretend that Americans won't notice. The press must do better than repeat administration talking points; it should ask harder questions about what kind of war we're willing to inherit and whether our power can be used without consequence.
The stakes have never been higher. If we don't demand a more critical view, if we don't hold our leaders accountable for the actions they take abroad, then we'll end up paying the price when it's too late. The author of this op-ed was once wrong about Iraq; let's hope he won't be wrong again in Venezuela.
The U.S. government claims to be waging "counter-narcotics operations" in the Caribbean, while actually gathering intelligence on President Maduro's regime. This is not law enforcement; it's coercive statecraft backed by military power. By framing Venezuela as a narco-state, Washington sidesteps congressional authorization and creates an easy exit route for military intervention.
We've seen this scenario play out before, most notably in Iraq. In 2002, the Washington Post predicted that toppling Saddam Hussein would be "a cakewalk." The New York Times ran pieces urging preemptive war under the banner of American moral duty. Two decades later, we're back to the same rhetoric: a failing state with a corrupt leader is seen as an opportunity for intervention.
But what does this mean for America's future? A conflict in Venezuela could lead to irreversible instability and human suffering. The country is already on the brink of economic collapse, and the U.S. military presence only exacerbates the risk of miscalculation and escalation.
We need a more nuanced discussion about the risks we're willing to take as a nation. What do we expect these interventions to cost us in dollars, in human lives, and in national attention? We must interrogate the distance between those who greenlight military actions and those who live through their consequences.
For now, however, the familiar beats are being played: redefine the battlefield as a courtroom, label targets "terrorists," and pretend that Americans won't notice. The press must do better than repeat administration talking points; it should ask harder questions about what kind of war we're willing to inherit and whether our power can be used without consequence.
The stakes have never been higher. If we don't demand a more critical view, if we don't hold our leaders accountable for the actions they take abroad, then we'll end up paying the price when it's too late. The author of this op-ed was once wrong about Iraq; let's hope he won't be wrong again in Venezuela.