By Tom Nichols
Saturday, January 03, 2026
President Donald Trump has launched not a splendid little
war, but perhaps a splendid little operation in Venezuela. He has captured a
dictator and removed him from power. So far, Trump seems to have executed a bad
idea well: The military operation, dubbed “Operation Absolute Resolve,” seems
to have been flawless. The strategic wisdom, however, is deeply questionable.
And the legal basis, as offered by the president and his team, is absurd. Some
Americans, and some U.S. allies, are appalled.
Russia and China claim to be appalled, too, but to use a
classic diplomatic expression, the leaders in Beijing and Moscow should be
invited, with all due respect, to shut their traps.
“We firmly call on the U.S. leadership to reconsider this
position,” the Russian
foreign ministry said this morning, “and release the lawfully elected
president of a sovereign country and his wife.” The Russians then shamelessly
turned all the sanctimony knobs to supernova levels: “Venezuela must be
guaranteed the right to determine its own future without destructive external
interference, particularly of a military nature.”
You don’t say. Perhaps we might generalize that principle
to other nations, such as Ukraine, where Moscow’s forces are murdering people
every week—in part because the Russians failed to kill or capture the “lawfully
elected president of a sovereign country” four years ago.
The Chinese, too, are absolutely shocked that a
great power is menacing a small neighbor and inflicting regime change by
military force. China,
the foreign ministry in Beijing said, “is deeply shocked”—at least it wasn’t shocked and stunned—“and
strongly condemns the use of force by the U.S. against a sovereign country and
the use of force against the president of a country.”
Noble words. And then, like the Russians, the Chinese
dared the world to laugh out loud: “China firmly opposes such hegemonic
behavior by the U.S., which seriously violates international law, violates
Venezuela’s sovereignty, and threatens peace and security in Latin America and
the Caribbean. We urge the U.S. to abide by international law and the purposes
and principles of the UN Charter and stop violating the sovereignty and
security of other countries.”
Only two days ago, however, China engaged in military
exercises that included surrounding Taiwan
and then firing missiles in the waters around the island. A giant nation
regularly running war games aimed at invading its tiny neighbor—and threatening
Japan,
for good measure—counts as “hegemonic behavior” that threatens the “peace and
security” of a region, and China knows it.
The more stinging irony here is that Russian President
Vladimir Putin and Chinese President Xi Jinping probably approved these public
statements with a chuckle. The United States has now given Russia, China, and
anyone else who wants to give it a try a road map for invading countries and
capturing leaders who displease them, with a lawlessness that by comparison
makes the 2003 invasion
of Iraq seem as lawyered up as a bank merger.
Let us all stipulate that Venezuelan President Nicolás
Maduro is a bad guy. He deserved to be driven from power, perhaps with American
help. An operation rooted in support from the international community and
approved by Congress would be a tough sell because Venezuela presented no
threat to the United States or anyone else, but it would have been the right
way to go. (Drugs don’t count as an imminent danger.) Instead, the president
declared the “Donroe Doctrine,” another moment that will stand for ages as an
embarrassment to the United States and raises the question yet again of whether
the commander in chief is cognitively stable enough to be ordering the invasion
of other nations.
Trump and his team didn’t even try creating a coalition
either at home or abroad. By simply landing troops in another nation and
decapitating its leadership, Trump has done Russia and China a great service by
trashing, yet again, guardrails that limit other nations from running amok.
International law? Pointless. The United Nations? Never heard of it. The
Congress of the United States? Well, they’re good folks, but according to
Secretary of State Marco Rubio, they couldn’t be told ahead of time, for
security reasons. (He said this while standing next to Secretary of Defense Pete
Hegseth, a fountain of security violations.) Putin and Xi must have watched
Trump’s presser while nodding and taking notes.
Hypocrisy, the French nobleman François de La
Rochefoucauld once said, is the tribute vice pays to virtue. In this case,
there is little virtue to be found; the Russian and Chinese statements are vice
paying tribute to vice. They already know that the president of the United
States is helping to clear the way for their adventures—and they should keep
their faux outrage to themselves.
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