Illegality without Consequences? Venezuela, Force, and the Erosion of Legal Constraint

The new year opened to the sound of airstrikes. On January 3rd, the world woke to reports that United States forces had launched a large-scale military operation against Venezuelan territory, an act that instantly sparked public debate, diplomatic channels, and professional legal discourse. The military operation, together with the broader policy choices of the United States, carries consequences extending far beyond Caracas, with profound implications for the future of force, legality, and authority in the international order.

United States forces targeted sites identified by Washington as integral to “state-backed transnational criminal and narcotics networks,” allegedly operating under the protection of the Maduro government. Operation Absolute Resolve was presented by U.S. officials as limited in scope and effect, and described as a lawful exercise of national security powers consistent with international law. The Trump administration relied on a highly controversial 1989 Office of Legal Counsel memorandum asserting that the President is not constitutionally required to comply with the United Nations Charter as a matter of domestic law, a position long regarded as incompatible with the United States’ international obligations.

The strikes, reportedly, achieved their immediate operational objectives and concluded without further escalation. Venezuela denounced the operation as a grave violation of its sovereignty and of the prohibition on the use of force under the United Nations Charter, rejecting the characterization of the strikes as law enforcement and calling for international scrutiny. These sharply opposed official positions crystallized the legal stakes from the outset. Absolute Resolve followed years of sanctions, indictments, and public accusations that steadily reframed force as an available policy instrument, setting the stage for a confrontation in which legality was asserted rather than debated, and consequences were left conspicuously undefined (DOJ; OFAC).

Draw the line, publicly and precisely. Key allies (UK, France, Germany, Australia, Japan, EU) should state clearly whether Absolute Resolve violated Article 2(4) and why, instead of generic “we support international law” language.
Refuse legitimacy through force. Maintain strict non-recognition discipline: do not treat leadership change, “transition authorities,” or “running the country” claims as legally effective if achieved through unlawful force.
Condition cooperation, don’t grandstand. Shift from denunciation to calibrated leverage: narrow intelligence sharing, operational coordination, basing arrangements, joint tasking, or capacity support where it is connected to unlawful uses of force.
Lock in the record at the UN. Push for Security Council debate, General Assembly action if the Council stalls, and formal letters and explanations of vote to prevent normalization through silence.
Reprice risk in trade and investment. Embed legality language in trade and regulatory engagement: heightened due diligence, compliance triggers, and contractual clauses reflecting instability created by unlawful force and occupation-type administration.

Everything turns on a basic rule that the system cannot afford to lose: no State, however powerful, may act as nemo iudex in causa sua; “no one is judge in his own case”. As long as the international rules-based order continues to breathe, however laboured that breath may now be, the legality of State conduct cannot be determined unilaterally by the acting State itself. International law rests on the fundamental premise that legal assessment is external, contestable, and grounded in shared normative frameworks rather than sovereign assertion. It is objective legal analysis, not official narration, that determines whether conduct complies with the prohibition on the use of force and related Charter obligations, and it is that same analysis that exposes the broader systemic implications of violations. When States collapse legality into self-validation, the function of law shifts from authorizing conduct to measuring deviation, allocating responsibility, and structuring the political and institutional costs that follow.

That premise is strained further when a State invokes domestic constitutional authority to displace its international obligations. In the context of the American intervention, the reliance on internal executive legal reasoning to justify action underscores a familiar but consequential disjunction: under international law, a State may not invoke its internal law to justify failure to perform treaty obligations or to excuse a breach of peremptory norms (Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties Article 27; Draft Articles on Responsibility of States for Internationally Wrongful Acts, Article 3). This asymmetry reflects a foundational choice in the international legal order to prevent States from insulating themselves from external scrutiny by recharacterising international constraints as optional or subordinate. 

Error in Genere

Early official explanations from the Trump administration framed the strikes as action taken against a designated terrorist organization, invoking  U.S. national interests and the collective self-defense of other States. Parallel reporting suggested that a classified Justice Department memorandum advanced a similar logic, asserting that certain drug cartels pose an “imminent threat to Americans” sufficient to justify the use of force. This reasoning depends on a crucial legal move: recharacterizing drug trafficking as an “armed attack” within the meaning of Article 51 of the UN Charter. In its seminal judgment in the International Court of Justice (ICJ), Military and Paramilitary Activities in and against Nicaragua, the Court held:

“An armed attack must be understood as including not merely action by regular armed forces across an international border, but also the sending by or on behalf of a State of armed bands, groups, irregulars or mercenaries, which carry out acts of armed force against another State of such gravity as to amount to an armed attack.” (para. 195)

Drug trafficking, however serious and destructive, has never been recognized as an armed attack triggering the right of self-defense. It does not involve the use of force by one State (or non-state armed group) against another State in the sense required by the Charter, nor does it amount to hostilities or combat under any accepted legal framework. International law has consistently rejected such attenuated chains of causation as a basis for self-defense, particularly where the alleged “attack” lacks immediacy, direction, and military character (Oil Platforms, para. 51).

Guard in Venezuela holding a gun at a sovereign rally, posted to the Instagram of José Alejandro Terán, governor of La Guaira.

The argument weakens further when extended from cartels to members of the Venezuelan government. Even assuming the truth of allegations concerning official involvement in drug trafficking, the connection between State conduct and the harms cited remains indirect and parasitic on criminal networks whose primary function is commercial, not military. If drug trafficking by non-state actors cannot plausibly be characterized as an armed attack, the claim that derivative State involvement in such activity triggers a right of self-defense is even less credible. 

Recasting the Venezuela operation as an effort to neutralize narcotics networks by weakening the State institutions allegedly enabling them pushes the legal justification into dangerous territory. Once force is directed at the machinery of government rather than at discrete, imminent threats, it ceases to function as self-defence and begins to resemble intervention aimed at shaping another State’s political authority. The ICJ has treated similar attempts with consistent scepticism. In Armed Activities on the Territory of the Congo, the Court rejected security rationales built on preventative logic and diffuse threat narratives, stressing that the Charter’s self-defence framework does not accommodate open-ended operations designed to stabilize regions, suppress criminal ecosystems, or preempt future risks  (paras 143–147).

Sine Imperio

The strain on legality becomes most visible when the operation is recast as cross-border law enforcement. International law has long treated the extraterritorial exercise of enforcement powers as exceptional and strictly bounded, precisely because such acts cut directly into another State’s sovereign equality. This is especially true where senior State officials are concerned. Sitting heads of state benefit from personal immunity (ratione personae), which functions as a jurisdictional bar to foreign criminal process and to coercive measures such as arrest or detention for the duration of their term of office. The ICJ confirmed this protection as a structural rather than discretionary, reflecting the system’s interest in preserving the independence and equality of States rather than the merits of any particular officeholder or allegation (Arrest Warrant of 11 April 2000, para. 51).

While States may, in limited circumstances, extend their prescriptive jurisdiction beyond their territory, the physical execution of enforcement measures remains territorially confined unless the territorial State consents. This distinction between prescription and enforcement is among the oldest principles of international law. From the S.S. Lotus in 1927 onward, it has served as a bulwark against unilateral coercion disguised as legal process. The unlawfulness of enforcement without consent does not evaporate because the underlying conduct is egregious, criminal, or universally condemned (S.S. Lotus, page 18).

 President Donald Trump monitors U.S. military operations in Venezuela, from Mar-a-Lago Club in Palm Beach, Florida, on Saturday, January 3, 2026.

Historical practice reinforces the point. Israel’s abduction of Adolf Eichmann from Argentine territory in 1960 was not assessed through the lens of Eichmann’s crimes. Argentina’s complaint before the Security Council was upheld in principle, and the Council warned that repetition of such acts would undermine the foundations of international order and generate insecurity incompatible with peace. This call for reparation (legal redress) underscored a core lesson: even the most compelling enforcement objectives do not license territorial violation (SC Res 138).

As operations expand in scope and ambition, the legal tension sharpens further. Measures that predictably impair governmental functioning, constrain leadership choices, or reconfigure a State’s internal authority strain the concept of proportionality beyond recognition. At that point, the vocabulary of self-defence or law enforcement no longer describes what is occurring. In Armed Activities on the Territory of the Congo, the ICJ treated such conduct as a grave breach of the prohibition on the use of force, particularly where it aligned with efforts to undermine or replace an existing government. The legal classification is a purely objective exercise.

Against this background, the central question shifts. If the operation is unlawful, what follows in a system where judicial avenues are blocked, and coercive enforcement is neither available nor credible? International law rarely secures compliance through immediate compulsion. Its influence is exerted through secondary mechanisms: the attribution of responsibility, the restructuring of institutional relationships, and the long-term recalibration of authority and credibility. When a powerful State acts in open defiance of Charter limits, the absence of courts or sanctions does not empty legality of meaning. It alters the register in which law operates. The inquiry moves from enforcement in the narrow sense to consequence in the systemic sense, asking how illegality constrains future claims, reshapes expectations among allies and adversaries alike, and redistributes who can speak persuasively in the language of law.

Hot and Cold With the Same Breath

A State does not get to sit on two chairs, blowing hot and cold in the same breath. It cannot stretch the law when it suits and then insist on its strict observance when it no longer does. International law is not naïve about this tension, but it is also not vindictive. It is along that line that the estoppel doctrine comes into play. 

Estoppel in international law is a narrow doctrine rooted in good faith. It is not a generalized penalty for inconsistency or illegality. At its core, it operates to prevent a State from departing from a clear and specific representation of fact or law on which another actor has reasonably relied to its detriment. The doctrine is situational and relational. Whether a representation becomes legally binding depends on context and circumstances, and estoppel must be distinguished from mere fluctuations in political or legal rhetoric (Temple of Preah Vihear, pp 23–26). In Nuclear Tests, the ICJ treated unilateral public statements as capable of generating legal effects, but only because they were addressed to a defined audience, conveyed with apparent intent to be bound, and relied upon in good faith (Nuclear Tests, paras 43, 46). Estoppel, properly understood, concerns holding a State to its own word in a concrete setting, not stripping it of the ability to invoke the law because it has breached it elsewhere.

People in Venezuela attend a sovereignnty rally, posted to the Instagram of José Alejandro Terán, governor of La Guaira.

That distinction matters for assessing the systemic consequences of expansive self-defence claims. A State’s unlawful conduct does not confer legal permission on others to act unlawfully in response. The prohibition on the use of force does not operate on a reciprocal or retaliatory logic. Accordingly, another State does not acquire a legal entitlement to disregard Article 2(4) merely because prior practice has stretched or violated it. Illegality remains illegality, assessed independently against the Charter framework and the absence of a valid Article 51 predicate.

Where the analysis does shift is outside estoppel in the technical sense and into the domain of practical credibility. The Charter system depends on a shared willingness to treat the prohibition on the use of force as a genuine constraint rather than a default rule riddled with exceptions. When a leading State advances elastic justifications that reframe armed attack as long-term risk management or diffuse threat suppression, it weakens its capacity to insist on stricter readings when confronting other uses of force. This does not legalize subsequent violations by others, but it alters the terrain on which interpretive disputes unfold. Over time, repeated reliance on expansive self-defence narratives lowers the persuasive force of objections to aggression, accelerates erosion of the armed attack threshold, and complicates collective resistance to unlawful force. The cost is not paid in a single case, but cumulatively, as the language of exception becomes easier to invoke and harder to contest.  

Legal Consequences of War

Irrespective of how Washington framed Absolute Resolve, once force was used by one State against the territory of another, the situation crossed into the domain of international armed conflict as a matter of law. This classification does not depend on political labels, rhetorical minimisation, or unilateral characterisation. Under Common Article 2 of the Geneva Conventions, the existence of an international armed conflict turns on objective facts. Where armed force is employed between States, the law of international armed conflict applies, even if one party denies that a conflict exists or portrays the operation as something else.

This is not a marginal or contested threshold. While international humanitarian law does wrestle with difficult classification questions at the edges, such as indirect involvement, proxy warfare, or support to non-state armed groups, those complexities are beside the point here. The scale, directness, and State-to-State character of the U.S. operations against Venezuelan territory placed them comfortably within the core of Common Article 2. From that moment, the relationship between the two States was governed by the full corpus of the law of armed conflict, not by analogies to law enforcement or counter narcotics cooperation.

Statements by U.S. officials following the operation only reinforced this legal transformation. President Trump described the outcome in terms of administrative control, asserting that the United States would “run the country” pending a future transition. He explicitly linked that role to Venezuela’s oil infrastructure, outlining plans for U.S. companies to enter, repair, and restart production, with costs recouped from extracted resources. Such language matters legally. Where a foreign military power exercises effective control over territory, even temporarily and even without sustained resistance, international humanitarian law classifies the situation as an occupation. Occupation, per se, is neither a bad nor a good thing. It, on the other hand, is not a political designation but a legal condition triggered by facts on the ground.

Most importantly, an occupation carries its own, distinct legal regime. That makes every occupation a hard amalgamation of legal and factual realities. The Hague Regulations of 1907 establish the foundational framework, defining occupation through effective control and characterising the occupier’s authority as provisional and non-sovereign. They strictly limit the exploitation of public property and natural resources and prohibit permanent alterations to the occupied territory’s legal and economic order. The Fourth Geneva Convention complements these rules by detailing obligations toward the civilian population, confirming that its protections apply in all cases of occupation, and imposing duties related to public order, welfare, and the continued functioning of local institutions. The occupier does not acquire ownership, trusteeship, or entitlement to restructure the territory’s economy for its own benefit.

International Criminal Court 2018

The legal consequences extend well beyond questions of governance and resources. Once an international armed conflict exists, the entire targeting framework of the law of armed conflict becomes applicable. Members of the opposing State’s armed forces become lawful military objectives by virtue of their status, wherever they may be found, subject to the spatial limits of the conflict and the rules governing hostilities. At the same time, civilians and civilian objects remain protected against attack unless and for such time as they take a direct part in hostilities. These rules apply symmetrically. Venezuelan forces acquire corresponding rights and obligations vis-à-vis U.S. forces, and the conflict is regulated by the same legal constraints on both sides.

This has immediate implications for the idea that operations against drug-related targets could continue under a law enforcement logic. Once an international armed conflict exists, the permissibility of attacks is no longer assessed through domestic criminal categories or counter-narcotics frameworks. Targets must qualify as military objectives under humanitarian law, and attacks must comply with distinction, proportionality, and precautions. The recharacterization of criminal activity as “combat” does not expand the lawful scope of force; it narrows it. What began as an asserted effort to suppress transnational crime thus triggers a legal regime that imposes far stricter limits on the use of force than those invoked to justify the operation in the first place.

Credibility, Mediation, and Norm Leadership

The deeper impact of unlawful force is rarely found in immediate reactions. It unfolds over time, in the quiet redistribution of authority and influence within the international system. International law does not operate solely through adjudication or enforcement. Much of its constraining force is exercised upstream, through agenda setting, coalition building, and the ability of certain States to frame conduct as lawful or unlawful in ways that resonate with others. Credibility is the currency that enables this function. It is accumulated through consistency in legal argument and restraint in the invocation of exceptions, and it is expended when legal categories are stretched to accommodate immediate policy objectives.

This matters most in contexts where persuasion substitutes for compulsion. Mediation, facilitation, and norm leadership depend on a State’s capacity to invoke shared legal standards without appearing selective or instrumental. When a State advances expansive readings of self-defence or collapses the armed attack threshold into long-term threat management, it weakens its ability to insist on disciplined interpretations when confronting later crises. The effect is not symmetrical. The prohibition on the use of force remains binding on all States. Yet the authority to articulate what the prohibition requires in contested situations becomes more diffusely distributed and more easily challenged.

United Nations Security Council on the United Nations Headquarters in New York City (Per Krohg)

This dynamic is visible in responses to aggression more generally. When violations of Article 2(4) occur elsewhere, their wrongfulness does not hinge on the prior conduct of third States. Russia’s use of force, for example, stands or falls on its own legal merits, assessed against the Charter framework and the absence of a valid Article 51 justification. No amount of inconsistency by others converts that conduct into something lawful. What does shift, however, is the terrain on which condemnation and collective response unfold. Legal arguments grounded in restraint carry greater weight when advanced by actors perceived as having treated the prohibition as a genuine constraint rather than a flexible tool.

The consequence is cumulative. Each instance in which exceptional justifications are normalised makes subsequent invocations easier to contest and harder to police. Norm leadership erodes not because the rule disappears, but because fewer actors can defend it without qualification. In a system already strained by selective compliance, that erosion accelerates the drift from prohibition to permissibility, and from rule to rhetoric.

Signalling Costs Without Enforcement

When formal enforcement is blocked and coercive countermeasures are politically or strategically unrealistic, international law does not fall silent. It operates through indirect but consequential channels that signal costs, recalibrate expectations, and shape future behaviour. These mechanisms are often dismissed as soft or merely political, yet they perform a critical stabilising function in a system where compliance depends as much on credibility and coordination as on compulsion.

One such channel is reputational downgrading, understood not as abstract loss of standing but as a concrete shift in how a State’s legal claims are received. States that repeatedly advance expansive or elastic justifications for the use of force find that their subsequent objections to illegality elsewhere are met with greater scepticism. This does not alter the substantive law, but it affects its traction. Legal arguments that once anchored collective responses become easier to contest, fragmenting alignment among allies and partners. Over time, this erosion raises the transaction costs of coalition building and weakens the ability to mobilise shared legal positions.

A second mechanism lies in institutional distancing and conditional cooperation. Participation in international and regional frameworks often rests on assumptions of reciprocal restraint and respect for baseline norms. Where those assumptions are undermined, cooperation may continue formally while thinning substantively: reduced leadership roles, narrower mandates, greater scrutiny, or the quiet reallocation of agenda-setting authority. These shifts rarely announce themselves as sanctions, yet they register disapproval and constrain influence in ways that are difficult to reverse.

President Donald Trump delivers remarks at a press conference at Mar-a-Lago in Palm Beach, Florida, following Operation Absolute Resolve in Venezuela leading to the capture of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, Saturday, January 3, 2026. (Official White House Photo by Molly Riley)

Economic and regulatory relationships provide another vector. Even in the absence of overt retaliation, States and private actors adjust risk assessments in response to perceived legal volatility. Trade, investment, and energy cooperation are sensitive to signals about the reliability of legal commitments and the predictability of State conduct. Where national security is invoked expansively to justify the use of force, counterparties may hedge, diversify, or renegotiate terms to insulate themselves from future disruption. 

Domestic political processes also function as a signalling mechanism. Parliamentary inquiries, litigation strategies, and shifts in political rhetoric do not enforce international law directly, yet they shape how breaches are narrated and remembered. These processes matter because international legality is sustained through repetition and reference. When violations are framed as exceptional, contested, or unresolved rather than absorbed into routine practice, the normative baseline remains visible, even if temporarily displaced.

The Allies’ Burden

Great powers rarely stand alone when they breach foundational rules. What gives such breaches their systemic force is not only the act itself, but the response of those who claim to stand for the law. The United States’ actions in Venezuela arrive against a backdrop of repeated strain on the prohibition on the use of force, visible across multiple theatres and justified through increasingly elastic narratives of necessity and security. 

If the international legal order is to retain any stabilising force, responsibility does not rest with one State alone. U.S. allies with deep investments in the rules-based system, such as the United Kingdom, France, Germany, Australia, and Japan, play a decisive role in signalling whether foundational norms remain operative constraints or have become discretionary. Their reactions shape not only the diplomatic atmosphere but also the legal expectation. Silence, acquiescence, or purely instrumental alignment communicates tolerance for exceptionalism. Principled distancing, even when costly, preserves the distinction between rule and power.

That burden is particularly heavy for States whose own security depends on the integrity of the prohibition on the use of force. Against this background, remarks by Volodymyr Zelenskyy, suggesting that if the United States knows how to deal with dictators in Venezuela, it may also know where else such methods could be applied, take on significance beyond their immediate political context. Read charitably, the statement reflects frustration and a search for solidarity in a system that has often failed to deliver timely protection. Read legally, however, it gestures toward a line of reasoning international law has deliberately and repeatedly rejected: that the permissibility of force turns on judgments about regime character rather than on objective legal criteria.

Ukraine’s subsequent clarification, delivered by Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha, reanchored its position in more orthodox terms, emphasising non-recognition of the Maduro administration and support only for developments consistent with international law. That recalibration matters. It underscores the difference between opposing a government politically and endorsing the use of force against it legally. International law draws that line for a reason. Once assessments of legitimacy or authoritarianism are allowed to substitute for Charter-based limits, the system slides toward outcome-driven justification. History offers no shortage of reminders of where that path leads.

States that rely on the prohibition on the use of force for their own survival have the most to lose from its erosion. Arguments that appear expedient in one context are rarely confined to it. The distortion of the self-defence doctrine by the United States in 2003 was later echoed by Russia to rationalize its aggression against Ukraine. 

This is why demonstrating distance from unlawful uses of force, even at the price of trade friction or economic retaliation, is not an act of disloyalty. It is an investment in systemic stability. Without such signalling, the costs of illegality are externalised, the armed attack threshold continues to erode, and the incentive structure tilts toward replication. What restrains further escalation, by Russia or by others watching closely, is not rhetorical commitment to order, but visible insistence that law continues to matter when it is inconvenient.

In earlier periods, European States could perhaps afford ambiguity. Isolated violations could be treated as aberrations, absorbed with minimal damage in the expectation that equilibrium would return. That assumption no longer holds when expansive interpretations of self-defence and enforcement are not episodic, but articulated as policy. Silence in such circumstances does not preserve flexibility. It signals acceptance.

The temptation to accommodate is understandable. Close alignment with Washington offers security guarantees, economic advantages, and political leverage. Yet accommodation premised on selective legality is a fragile bargain. In a world where power defines spheres of influence and law becomes optional, middle powers cannot rely on favours without paying a price. Recent U.S. strategic documents leave little doubt that loyalty does not insulate allies from coercion when interests diverge.

When Venezuela turned to the United Nations Security Council to denounce the U.S. operation as a blatant violation of the UN Charter and territorial sovereignty, it was a reminder of the foundational promise embedded in that Charter: that no State may lawfully use force against another’s territorial integrity except in the narrowest of circumstances. António Guterres, the UN Secretary-General, underscored this obligation in his remarks to the Council, reaffirming that all States must comply with the Charter and international law, and warning that unilateral military action against a neighbouring sovereign poses grave risks to the peace and security the organisation is mandated to uphold.

NATO soldiers prepare to raise the Finnish flag at the Meeting of NATO Ministers of Foreign Affairs at NATO Headquarters in Brussels, Belgium.

Among national responses, Spain’s stance offered perhaps the clearest articulation of disciplined non-recognition. Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez made a pointed distinction between political non-recognition and legal non-recognition. Madrid has long viewed Nicolás Maduro’s government as lacking democratic legitimacy, yet Sánchez was emphatic that such illegitimacy does not translate into legal license for foreign intervention. Spain will not recognize an intervention that contravenes international law, even if it purports to challenge an undemocratic regime.

This emphasis resists a dangerous slippage common in political discourse, in which illegality is conflated with rightful intervention because the target is unpopular or repressive. Even deeply flawed governments remain objects of legal protection under the Charter; breaches of legitimacy do not erase the prohibition on force. As Spain’s diplomatic statements at the Security Council made clear, respect for sovereignty and peaceful dispute resolution must be sustained “always and everywhere,” rather than deployed selectively in response to convenient ends. Crucially, this position also demonstrated an attempt to anchor state responses in legal categories rather than in transient political alignments. 

Normalization is the Real Danger

The central danger exposed by Absolute Resolve is not confined to the operation itself. It lies in the gradual normalisation of legal exception. When the use of force is justified through elastic concepts, law enforcement reframed as self-defence, armed attack diluted into long-term threat management, and occupation redescribed as temporary administration, the prohibition on the use of force does not collapse outright. It thins. Its edges blur. Over time, what was once exceptional becomes available, and what was once prohibited becomes contestable.

International law has never relied solely on courts or coercive enforcement to survive. Its resilience has always depended on shared discipline in argument, on restraint in invoking exceptions, and on collective insistence that legality continues to matter even when it is inconvenient. That discipline is most tested when powerful States act. If their departures from Charter limits are absorbed without consequence, the system does not simply tolerate a single violation; it recalibrates its baseline.

Increase institutional friction. Reduce agenda-setting privileges, chair roles, and leadership positions in multilateral settings where credibility is the currency, while keeping channels for de-escalation open.
Defend the armed attack threshold. Reaffirm the ICJ gravity standard (Nicaragua; Oil Platforms): drug trafficking, indirect harms, and attenuated causal chains do not qualify as “armed attack” and cannot ground Article 51.
Separate law enforcement from force. Insist that cross-border arrest or “capture” operations without territorial consent breach enforcement jurisdiction rules and, where applicable, violate personal immunity of sitting leaders.
Invest in autonomous restraint capacity. Allies should strengthen independent security and diplomatic capacity, so legality-based positions are sustainable even under pressure.
Make the core warning explicit. State the systemic point: elastic self-defence today becomes someone else’s template tomorrow; normalization accelerates replication.

The effects are cumulative and asymmetric. Each expansive justification lowers the cost of the next. Each failure to signal distance accelerates erosion of the armed attack threshold. The result is not immediate anarchy, but a steady redistribution of legal authority away from rules and toward power. History suggests that once this shift takes hold, it is rarely confined to its point of origin. Arguments migrate. Precedents are repurposed. Exceptionalism travels.

What remains, then, is a choice about friction. The international legal order cannot eliminate unlawful force, but it can make it costly. That cost is not always imposed through sanctions or judgments. More often, it is imposed through credibility loss, institutional distancing, economic repricing, and the narrowing of who can speak persuasively in the name of law. These are imperfect tools, yet they are the only ones available when enforcement is blocked.

Seen in that light, the stakes of Absolute Resolve extend well beyond Venezuela. They concern whether the prohibition on the use of force remains a meaningful organising principle, or whether it becomes a rhetorical reference point invoked selectively and abandoned when inconvenient. Preserving what remains of international stability requires more than condemning violations after the fact. It requires sustained resistance to the quiet transformation of exception into norm.

Davit Khachatryan is an international lawyer and lecturer focusing on the intersection of armed conflict, emerging technologies, and international law. 


No to Wars of Conquest in Venezuela and Beyond

President Donald Trump’s military attack in Venezuela not only risks entangling the United States in a new costly war but also opens the door to a world in which interstate wars of economic conquest and expansion are common practice. In the wake of the attack, Trump previewed such as he threatened military action against Greenland, Colombia, Cuba, and even Mexico. Continuing down this path will lead to a more violent global environment and surely put Americans at greater risk – especially in an increasingly multi-polar world with unconstrained nuclear weapons. If we want to avoid that future, we must come together now, raise our collective voices, and say no to these new wars of imperial conquest. 

Trump has launched an illegal military action to kidnap Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro and has asserted that the U.S. will now “run” the country.  The intervention is supposedly a response to narco-terrorism, yet there is little indication that Maduro’s arrest will slow narcotics trafficking. Indeed, as many have pointed out, only a small amount of the most dangerous illicit drugs entering in the United States originate in or transit Venezuela. The primary purpose of this move, stated boldly in imperialist terms, is to gain access to Venezuela’s oil. Trump has ordered Venezuelan authorities to cut oil trade with Russia, China and Cuba and is seeking indefinite U.S. control over Venezuelan energy resources. 

SOLUTIONS, DISTILLED:
No to Wars of Conquest in Venezuela and Beyond

Concerned citizens and activists want lawmakers in Congress to exercise their constitutional war power to prevent new wars in Venezuela and beyond.
A new, broader peace movement is needed to counter militarism at home and abroad and assure U.S. adherence to domestic and international laws on the use of force.
The movement must put forward compelling alternatives for managing security concerns and resolving international conflicts.
Active engagement by the UN and multilateral institutions. will be important to support any peaceful transition in Venezuela.

David Cortright and Peter J. Quaranto for the International Policy Journal

Trump and Secretary of State Marco Rubio are exerting control of Venezuelan affairs with diplomatic pressures and a total embargo on oil exports, but they are prepared to use military force again if necessary. Trump made it explicit. “We are not afraid of boots on the ground if we have to.” 

Trump’s military attack in Venezuela violates the U.S. Constitution and is contrary to U.S. laws that require congressional consultation and impose limits on the use of force abroad. It is also a clear violation of the UN Charter and is contrary to core principles of international law and international humanitarian law. As Michael Hirsh explains in Foreign Policy, the attack sets a dangerous precedent that could provide a green light for other powerful countries to engage in wars of conquest and aggression. The attack – and Trump’s subsequent threats to attack more countries – threatens to accelerate the unraveling of international norms established to keep the peace after two world wars.  

The U.S. public reaction to the overthrow of Maduro so far is mixed. Few lament the removal of a repressive dictator, but many question Trump’s blatant disregard for the law and the lack of congressional oversight  An initial Washington Post poll found respondents evenly split on approving or disapproving the military capture of Maduro, 63% agreeing that the operation should have congressional approval, and 94% agreeing that the Venezuelan people should choose their own future leaders. A Reuters/Ipsos poll found 33% in favor of the operation and 72% concerned about the U.S. becoming too heavily involved in Venezuela. 

Many Venezuelan exiles have applauded Trump’s military action, understandably. They have suffered from tyranny, corruption, and economic collapse, and are hoping that Maduro’s removal will bring national renewal. It is right to acknowledge and support the democratic aspirations of the Venezuelan people. It would be naïve, however, to believe that the Trump administration is actively interested in supporting democratic rights in Venezuela. While the U.S. supported Venezuelan democracy activist Maria Corina Machado for the Nobel Peace Prize and backed the campaign of her party’s presidential nominee, Edmundo González, in last year’s stolen election, Trump has dismissed opposition leaders as “lacking respect” within Venezuela. 

Trump’s interest is oil, not democratic freedom. He seeks to give American energy companies control over Venezuela’s oil production. It’s about the money. 

For the moment the administration has indicated its willingness to work with Venezuelan Vice President, now acting President, Delcy Rodriguez. The structures of the country’s government and armed forces remain in place. Whether and how Venezuelan officials will do Trump’s bidding remains uncertain. A lot of things could go wrong in this scenario. There are many cautionary lessons from past U.S. attempts to stabilize countries following military invasions, from Afghanistan to Iraq to Libya, but it is doubtful the Trump team cares about such.

In this moment, as envisioned by the country’s founders, Congress’ role is critical. Lawmakers must exercise their constitutional war power to ensure the United States does not use force rashly without weighing the significant potential consequences for the American public in the short- and long-term. Congress has the power of the purse to halt funding for any further use of force in, over or off the shores of Venezuela, and also to prevent threatened military action against other countries. Legislative debate and votes on these issues are underway in Washington. Grassroots activists and concerned citizens can make a difference by raising their voices and demanding that legislators (and candidates for the 2026 elections) support prohibitions on further military action in Venezuela and beyond. 

We need a new American peace movement that can counter the march toward militarism at home and abroad, as we recently wrote in Waging Nonviolence. This includes developing a renewed, winning message about how the United States benefits from a rules-based international system, engaging in multilateralism, and investing in mechanisms to mitigate crises and resolve conflicts peacefully. Surely, some rules and mechanisms need updating and restructuring to meet the needs of a changing world. The U.N. system is imperfect, but could be modernized and strengthened with the support of member states.

Indeed, active engagement by the U.N. and other multilateral bodies, including the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States, will be important to support any planned transitions and foster a peaceful future in Venezuela. If new elections are planned for Venezuela in the future, they should be structured and monitored by independent observers. Strong international engagement can help Venezuela enact critical reforms, including steps to address elements of the security sector truly involved in criminal activity. Mitigating the interference of competing external forces can also reduce the risk of a civil war scenario.

The American people do not want more wars of choice or conquest. Trump was elected on a promise to end wars, not to engage in aggressive action against other countries. The U.S. attempt to take control of Venezuela threatens to repeat some of the worst moral and strategic failures of past U.S. military adventurism, for which the American people and communities around the world have paid enormous costs. By coming together and emphatically rejecting this path, we can stop this dangerous trajectory. And importantly, we can begin to chart an alternative path for global peace and security.

David Cortright is a visiting scholar at Cornell University’s Reppy Institute for Peace and Conflict Studies and professor emeritus at Notre Dame’s Kroc Institute for International Peace Studies. Peter J. Quaranto is a visiting professor of the practice and global policy fellow at the University of Notre Dame’s Keough School of Global Affairs, and served previously in senior roles at the State Department’s Bureau of Conflict and Stabilization Operations.


Trump’s Venezuela Regime Change Attempt an Illegal Act of War

January 3, 2026 – In response to the United States launching military attacks in Venezuela, Center for International Policy Executive Vice President Matt Duss issued the following statement:

“Donald Trump has launched an illegal and reckless regime change operation in Venezuela. This act of war violates both U.S. and international law, and follows nearly one hundred extrajudicial killings at sea on Trump’s orders.

“None of this use of military force has been authorized by Congress. Lawmakers must assert their constitutional war powers and force the president to remove U.S. armed forces from the hostilities with Venezuela that he has started. They should also seek other possible legislative measures to impose accountability on this administration for its lawless actions.

“Americans across the political spectrum overwhelmingly do not want to fight another war of choice. 70 percent of U.S. voters oppose taking military action in Venezuela.

“Trump was elected on a promise to end wars, not start them. His illegal aggression against Venezuela once again breaks that promise, and threatens to repeat some of the worst moral and strategic failures of past U.S. military adventurism, for which the American people and communities around the world have paid enormous costs.”


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Congress Must Stop Trump’s Covert and Military Action against Venezuela

October 16, 2025 – In response to reports that the Trump Administration has authorized covert Central Intelligence Agency action in Venezuela, Center for International Policy Executive Vice President Matt Duss issued the following statement:

“Reports that the Trump Administration has authorized covert efforts seeking to foment regime change in Venezuela are deeply concerning. These reports follow on the administration’s unlawful and unauthorized use of military force against vessels and their crews in the Caribbean – which constitute extrajudicial killings.

“Using covert or military measures to destabilize or overthrow regimes reminds us of some of the most notorious episodes in American foreign policy, which undermined the human rights and sovereignty of countries throughout Latin America and the Caribbean. We are still dealing with many of the harmful consequences of these disastrous interventions in today’s challenges with migration and the drug trade. Such interventions rarely lead to democratic or peaceful outcomes. Instead, they exacerbate internal divisions, reinforce authoritarianism, and destabilize societies for generations.

“Trump ran as an anti-war candidate and casts himself as a Nobel Prize-worthy peacemaker, yet he is conducting illegal strikes while threatening to start wars of choice across Latin America and the Caribbean. A majority of Americans oppose US military involvement in Venezuela. Lawmakers must make clear that Trump does not have the American people’s support or Congress’ authorization for the use of force against Venezuela or anywhere else in the region.”



Trump’s Wag The Dog Moment 

Michael Paarlberg is a Senior Non-Resident Fellow at CIP

On September 2, the House Oversight Committee released documents related to Jeffrey Epstein in an attempt to defuse public pressure over the sex trafficking case, and President Trump decided to blow up a boat. 

The boat was somewhere in the Caribbean Sea, and according to the Trump administration, was a drug smuggling vessel containing cocaine bound for the United States and crewed by 11 people who died in the airstrike. This strike followed weeks of a large US military buildup close to Venezuelan waters that included eight warships, an attack submarine, a Marine Expeditionary Unit, and air support. Assuming the official narrative is true, it took one of the largest naval deployments in the history of the Caribbean to take out a single four engine go-fast boat with a cargo hold of 3 tons. 

Was this a counter-narcotics operation? If it was, it wouldn’t have taken an entire fleet and millions of dollars a day to carry it out. Taking out drug vessels is something the US Coast Guard does regularly. They track boats bound for US waters, intercept them, board them – using lethal force if necessary – arrest crews and seize drugs. This is their job and they are good at it. In comparison to the perhaps 3 tons sunk last week, a single US Coast Guard vessel, CGC Hamilton, interdicted and seized 38 tons of drugs in the last two months alone. If the idea was to impose a cost, it is the US that is on the losing end of this equation, not the cartel.

Refocus Coast Guard resources toward shore defense and drug interdiction and away from personal use of Gulfstream aircraft and Coast Guard Commandant housing by DHS Secretary Noem. 

Direct diplomatic efforts at agreements with allied governments in Latin America and the Caribbean to coordinate drug interdiction efforts.

Capture traffickers and build criminal cases against cartels and corrupt government officials in Venezuela and elsewhere.

A holistic drug enforcement policy that takes consumer demand into account.

Release the Epstein files, full and unredacted.

But many things about this operation don’t add up. What cartel was this anyway? The Trump administration claims the vessel and alleged traffickers belonged to the Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua. On the face of it, this makes little sense, as TdA is not a cartel as we understand the term. It is not a transnational drug trafficking organization: members engage in street-level dealing, mostly in cities in South America, but they are not known to engage in smuggling shipments of drugs across borders or oceans. They are, fundamentally, a street gang, whose business model is human trafficking and extortion rackets targeting Venezuelan refugees who fled that country’s economic collapse to Colombia, Chile, Brazil and elsewhere, with only a minor presence in the US at best. Indeed, eleven people is a suspiciously large number for smuggling vessels of this size which are normally crewed by three or four because the more people, the more weight and the fewer drugs you can smuggle in one shipment. If it was TdA, they would be more likely to be smuggling migrants, not drugs, making the death count significantly higher. It’s also possible it was just eleven people on a boat.

Blow This Joint

Was this a pretext for regime change? In its naval mobilization, the Trump administration has made reference to another alleged cartel, the Cartel of the Suns. Unlike Tren de Aragua, which is at least a real gang, this isn’t even a formal organization at all, but rather a term used to describe various Venezuelan political and military officials who profit from money laundering and other illicit rackets – much of which are designed to get around US sanctions. Insofar as there is corruption within the Venezuelan regime, this is well known. President Nicolas Maduro has made a show of arresting one of the key figures in this network, former vice president and oil minister Tareck El Aissami, as a means of distracting from the endemic corruption throughout his regime. Most of it is pedestrian in nature: Maduro allegedly got $35 million in bribes from the Brazilian construction company Odebrecht to win Venezuelan public works contracts. Most public corruption looks like Odebrecht, not Tren de Aragua, but procurement fraud isn’t a useful pretext for military action.

But military action doesn’t serve either purpose. If you want to break up a drug cartel, blowing up a boat does little to accomplish that, unless you believe cartels only own one boat. You arrest traffickers, seize evidence, and build cases against them. If you are targeting government officials, you flip your perpetrators to get to the bigger fish at the top. This is what federal prosecutors do, and they are also good at it. The Department of Justice succeeded in putting the former president of Honduras in prison by doing exactly this.

As for stopping drugs, as I and other authors write in a new edited volume on the global cocaine trade, it makes little sense to focus on boats coming from Venezuela at all. Cocaine, famously, comes from just three countries, Colombia, Peru, and Bolivia, none of which are Venezuela. Most of it goes through Mexico, or maritime routes in the Pacific Ocean. The largest quantities are smuggled on container ships, not speedboats. Venezuela serves as a pass-through for a minor corridor in the Caribbean, but it is one of a number of way-stations starting in Colombia and continuing on to the Dominican Republic and then to Puerto Rico, from which drugs are more easily smuggled into the mainland US. It’s not even certain that the crew of the vessel were Venezuelan at all, as Dominican drug trafficking organizations partner with Colombian and Venezuelan counterparts in this supply chain. And while cocaine production is currently booming, this is being driven by a surge in demand from Europe, not the US. Today, the drug of choice for American consumers is not cocaine but fentanyl, a synthetic drug that doesn’t come from Venezuela, but largely Mexico using precursors from China, and is increasingly produced in the US.

Assassin’s Screed

The reason we don’t conduct airstrikes on China or Puerto Rico is, presumably, extrajudicially assassinating Chinese or US citizens would be a bigger deal than killing Venezuelans. To be clear, this was an illegal act, under US and international law. Assassination is against the law according to the War Crimes Act, Uniform Code of Military Justice, and Executive Order 12333, as well as the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. Not that those have stopped the US in the past, or other countries for that matter. Past administrations, Democrat and Republican, have assassinated individuals deemed national security threats, famously Osama bin Laden but also US citizens such as Anwar Al-Awlaki, both ordered by President Obama. Thus there is a precedent, legal or not, for killing accused terrorists in other countries without trial, one which President Trump put into process earlier by designating Tren de Aragua and other criminal gangs to be Foreign Terrorist Organizations. Other countries have adopted similar rationales, including Colombia, which in 2008 killed FARC commander Raul Reyes in neighboring Ecuador.

But as with the US raids in Pakistan and Yemen, and Colombia’s in Ecuador, these had severe political blowbacks that hobbled counter-terrorism efforts afterwards. Pakistan exposed the CIA station chief, and doubled down on backing the Taliban in Afghanistan as insurance. Yemen came to be dominated by the Houthis, a US opponent. Multiple countries cut ties with Colombia. One could argue, as Obama did, that assassinating key terrorist leaders such as Osama bin Laden was worth the blowback.

We may never know who these eleven people were, but it is highly doubtful that any of them were top leaders in either Tren de Aragua or the Maduro regime. Cartel bosses do not sit on boats personally escorting drug shipments, nor do government officials. So the payoff may be low, but the cost may also be low, as the Trump administration sees it: Venezuela is a pariah state already under crippling US sanctions, and Maduro is a corrupt autocrat who stole the last election. But such a strike can only be a blessing for Maduro. It turns what should be a criminal matter into a matter of national sovereignty, something he can use to rally support from neighbors who don’t like him. And those neighbors matter more to the US than Venezuela, such as Brazil. Last year, Lula had been a cautious critic of Maduro, blocking Venezuela’s accession to BRICS in response to the stolen election. It is hard to imagine him taking such a stance today.

The Big Stick-Up

The boat strike will only hasten the decline of US influence in Latin America, where China has already replaced the US as the top trade partner in most of the region even before the Trump tariffs. Countries will have few reasons to cooperate with the US on pressuring rogue actors like Maduro to respect elections or stop jailing opponents. Even Maduro had been playing ball with the US on the issue that matters to Trump the most, immigration, accepting deportation flights from the US. And despite the hostilities, the Trump administration has been quietly making deals with Maduro as well. In July of this year, Trump issued an oil license for Chevron to resume doing business in Venezuela, worth hundreds of millions of dollars a year to the Venezuelan government. It’s not hard to guess what Maduro cares about more, upwards of a billion dollars in oil revenues, or eleven guys in a boat.

In this context then, the boat strike looks more like a negotiating ploy by the Trump administration to put pressure on Maduro to continue making deals, whether to do with deportations, oil, or murkier interests represented by grifters and internet personalities. It’s beneficial to both figures: Maduro rallies his neighbors against a shared threat to the north, and Trump rallies his base with a foreign bogeyman, and shifts the media narrative away from his old friend Epstein. And with other legal cases, such as with MS-13, it’s more convenient for the Trump administration to not have them go through the courts, for fear of what corrupt deals may come out at trial. Of all the defenses of the boat strike on social media, the oddest was the refrain that due process is “woke.” Is it woke to break up cartels and put drug traffickers in prison? The enthusiasm for performative military action betrays a deep distrust in the police, prosecutors, and justice system as a whole. This is the kind of thing that leads to vigilantism, the breakdown of state institutions, and the rise of autocratic regimes like Maduro’s.

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El Salvador’s actions show Human Rights law matters

Anjali Dayal is an associate professor of international politics at Fordham University’s Lincoln Center campus. She is the author of Incredible Commitments: How UN Peacekeeping Failures Shape Peace Processes (Cambridge University Press, 2021). She can be found online at  @anjalikdayal.bsky.social on bluesky.

Under the rule of President Nayib Bukele’s personalist authoritarianism, El Salvador has publicly positioned itself as above critique. Despite this posturing, El Salvador’s government is behaving as though there might be future political, legal, and social consequences for its role in jailing migrants who were kidnapped by the Trump administration, taken to El Salvador’s notorious maximum security CECOT prison, and then returned to Venezuela in violation of their rights under international law. In recently disclosed court filings, El Salvador writes to the United Nations Working Group on Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances and tries to assign the US government sole responsibility under international law for migrants detained in CECOT.

This response, complete with El Salvador’s officials shifting blame to the US, shows us we don’t yet live in a time of inevitable impunity for human rights violations. Because fears about future accountability for violating human rights remain salient concerns for some violators, they also remain critical sites of mobilization for civil resistance against a fully fascist future. 

Pressure governments to sanction or isolate El Salvador, the US, or both
Call for investigations by multilateral human rights bodies, building a body of evidence that might later help move the levers of international justice.
Demand signatories refer El Salvador to the International Criminal Court
American opposition leaders can and should credibly signal that there will be accountability and consequences for the Trump administration’s human rights abuses
Democratic presidential contenders should promise to join the ICC if they come to power

In these reports, submitted to experts working under the UN’s High Commissioner for Human Rights and then made public as part of these detainees’ litigation against the US government, El Salvador’s government asserts its own compliance with human rights law, despite what it describes as an agreement with the Trump administration to provide detention facilities for men disappeared from the United States, and carefully specifies that El Salvador itself is upholding international laws that protect people from being snatched off the street by their governments. 

El Salvador’s argument in these documents is particularly striking since the Salvadoran president and other key officials have openly expressed their disdain for human rights law. Instead, claiming compliance with human rights law, as El Salvador’s government does, accords these laws importance and legitimacy even as the government of El Salvador’s actions flout them. We can infer from these documents, then, that the government of El Salvador is writing with an eye to a future where these laws might matter, where violating these laws might have consequences, and where there might be accountability for the crimes committed against migrants to the US. 

As autocratic breakthrough in the US reshapes domestic and international norms and arrangements, all institutions, states, and organizations that confront the Trump administration must make a practical and moral calculation: do they expect this authoritarian period in US politics to endure, or do they anticipate future legal and political accountability for the crimes and injustices now unfolding? Analysts often distinguish between those who fold to authoritarian demands and those who fight them: those betting on a lawless future where accommodating corruption and repression offers protection, and where the future prospect of accountability or reputational damage for legitimatizing lawless behavior are unlikely to matter much, versus those betting on democratic resurgence, with the attendant accountability necessary to a peaceful, pluralist future. In these documents, El Salvador is hedging a bet against the lawless future, not assuming enduring impunity for the Trump administration’s treatment of migrants, refugees, and asylum seekers. 

If the government of El Salvador believes future accountability is possible, then it sees a future world where the international laws that protect the rights of individuals matter. These laws are meaningful when people believe they matter, and they are meaningless when people don’t believe they matter. What we see in these documents, then, is the political space and possibility for other governments, for activists, for civil society groups, for international organizations, and for the families of the disappeared to help change the stakes of betting on authoritarian future—to push for accountability, to expand and reassert the norms and values that protect people from state violence, and to make it more compelling for people to behave as though the future will include justice and rights, not merely impunity and repression.

Hedging the Bet: Constructing Deniability 

As Chris Geidner reported, lawyers with the ACLU and Democracy Forward presented these documents from El Salvador as support for their argument that the US government “maintains constructive custody over the people it sent to CECOT”—that, contrary to US attorneys’ claims in court, the US government, and not El Salvador, retained ultimate authority over the detention and disposition of CECOT plaintiffs.  

The documents were entered into the court record as part of the original J.G.G. v. Trump litigation before Chief Judge James Boasberg at the D.C. federal court, which challenges the Trump administration’s use of the Alien Enemies Act to send migrants in the US to El Salvador with no due process, while the documents themselves originate from a specific request to El Salvador from the UN’s human rights experts. The UN’s Working Group on Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances asked El Salvador to provide information about specific individuals flown to CECOT after their families asked the working group for an inquiry. 

The Working Group on Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances is a special procedure of the UN’s Human Rights Council, and like many of the UN’s human rights procedures, it documents and produces information about human rights violations on behalf of victims. 

Enforced disappearance is a state crime: the state or agents acting on behalf of the state take someone, place them outside the law, and hide their whereabouts from their friends, families, and advocates. Victims of enforced disappearances, who include the family and loved ones of the disappeared, can contact the Working Group on Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances. The Working Group can in turn serve as a channel of communication between the state on the one hand, and families, civil society, and the legal community on the other, asking states to provide information about the whereabouts and status of disappeared persons.

The reports filed as part of the Alien Enemies cases emerge from this process, and we can accordingly understand them as the narrative the government of El Salvador wanted the UN’s working group and the victims of enforced disappearance in this case to have. The reports they submitted argue that, while the government of El Salvador did facilitate the use of its prison infrastructure by the US, “the jurisdiction and legal responsibility for these persons lie exclusively” with the US. In fact, El Salvador claims that ICE and the US Government are solely responsible for any arrest, detention, or transferring of persons in violation of international law—if enforced disappearance is a crime perpetrated by state agents, then those state agents, they say, are the US’s, not El Salvador’s. Instead of coauthoring these acts, they say, their government merely provided Salvadoran prisons for “the custody of persons detained within the scope of the justice system and law enforcement” of the US via bilateral agreements. 

While legal analysts have noted these bilateral agreements are mere fig leaves on illegal arrangements, El Salvador’s argument to the UN is that it can’t be held responsible for refoulement—returning migrants to a place they fled from in fear—or for violating international law on enforced disappearance since, per these agreements, it simply provided a detention facility for people the US sent them. Because, El Salvador asserts, these persons weren’t under their jurisdiction “at the time of their alleged deprivation of liberty or when they were last seen,” there’s no basis for the working group to request information from them, and the cases should be excluded from their national statistics—in other words, they may have housed the men, but they didn’t kidnap them. The government “reiterates its commitment to complying with its international human rights obligations, including the prevention of enforced disappearances,” and claims they have solid laws and regulations that protect the “rights of persons deprived of liberty, regardless of their nationality.” These documents reveal, then, that government officials in El Salvador want to avoid blame and culpability for the fates of migrants abducted from the US: El Salvador believes it’s in its best interests to say it is complying with human rights law, even when it clearly is not. 

The Purposes of Deniability 

Despite these claims, the eventual release of the detainees to Venezuela in a prisoner swap has revealed the horror of their time at CECOT—their accounts of torture, sexual abuse, and cruelty in the prison indicate the government of El Salvador’s deep disregard for their rights. There were at least two other ways for El Salvador to have approached these reports: government officials could have flouted requests from the Working Group and continued to publicly boast of the torture, pain, and fear inflicted on CECOT’s detainees, or they could have returned blanket denials to the Working Group that did not try to parse their legal responsibility. Instead, they chose to treat the requests as an opportunity to try and mitigate their liability for human rights violations. 

The attempt instead to assign the US sole legal responsibility is particularly notable because neither the US nor El Salvador are state parties to the International Convention for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearance, and accordingly neither has explicitly accepted the legal obligations that follow from that agreement. In fact, a different UN body, the Committee on Enforced Disappearances, would be taking the lead if El Salvador were a signatory to the convention. While this distinction may seem academic, the effect is substantive. The convention is a newer human rights agreement—adopted in 2006 and ratified in 2010, it specifically defines enforced disappearance as a crime and a crime against humanity, and today it is one of the nine core human rights instruments under the UN umbrella, with 116 signatories and 77 ratifications. It is binding on all states who have ratified it, meaning that they treat it as law. Each of the nine core instruments also has a treaty body associated with it: committees of experts who consider state parties’ reports, consider individual complaints of violations, and conduct site visits and inquiries, among other tasks. The Committee on Enforced Disappearances serves this task for states that have signed the International Convention for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearance and agreed to accord the agreement the status of law.

The body involved in the El Salvador case, the UN’s Working Group on Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances, on the other hand, was established in 1980, and is one of the older procedures of the Human Rights Council. Its origins date to a time when disappearing people was a calling card of modern dictatorship, but before the adoption of a formal agreement defined explicit state obligations for protecting people against enforced disappearance. Instead, the Working Group has a monitoring and humanitarian mandate anchored in the Declaration on the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearance, which the UN General Assembly adopted in 1992. This makes the Working Group part of an apparatus of “soft law”—it provides guidance to states without the necessity of formal ratification or accession to a treaty. In the specific case of the Working Group, its humanitarian mandate means it assists families in “determining the fate and whereabouts of disappeared relatives” by serving as a channel between victims and states, while its monitoring mandate means it may  send urgent appeals to the relevant minister of foreign affairs when they receive credible allegations that someone has been “arrested, detained, abducted, or otherwise deprived of liberty and has been forcibly disappeared or is at risk of being disappeared,” or whenever it deems it necessary.

Put another way, the Working Group can involve itself in the affairs of any state primarily by offering guidance, or by appealing to states for information on behalf of victims; it has taken the lead in this case because neither El Salvador nor the US have signed the International Convention for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearance.

But the Convention, like many human rights agreements, is to some extent redundant—it defines a crime that was already prohibited by broader and overlapping treaties, agreements, and shared norms, and establishes more specific obligations for the states that ratify it. In the case of enforced disappearance, the three core elements of the crime—the deprivation of a person’s liberty, the involvement of the state, and the concealment of the person’s fate and whereabouts—are also prohibited by other bodies of international law. 

Under the Rome Statute that underpins the International Criminal Court, and to which El Salvador is a party, enforced disappearance qualifies as a crime against humanity. The cruel treatment of the disappeared is barred under the Convention Against Torture, which specifies torture as a crime that can be prosecuted with universal jurisdiction. And under customary international law, as embodied in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and understood as a baseline for state behavior, no state can abrogate a person’s right to enjoy liberty, security, legal representation, a fair trial, and equal protection under the law, and every person should enjoy freedom from torture. The Refugee Convention’s prohibition against refoulement—returning refugees and asylum seekers to the place they are fleeing from—also applies to the CECOT detainees. With its efforts to minimize its own transgressions of these laws, agreements, and norms, El Salvador is therefore behaving as though it is bound by the nested, overlapping web of norms, laws, and obligations that regulate state treatment of individuals, even as it is clearly violating these norms, laws, and obligations. 

El Salvador is far from the first state to comply with the formal procedures of human rights law while flagrantly violating its core principles. Human rights law is practically weak but rhetorically powerful: it’s enforced by states via their domestic legal codes, and if states violate the rights of people living under their jurisdiction—as they often do—then other states, organizations, groups, and individuals can mostly only try to make them stop via indirect mechanisms, like sanctions, social pressure, boycotts, or slow-moving international litigation. States adopt all international legal obligations voluntarily, and there are no direct or automatic penalties for non-compliance with human rights law; there are also few easy ways to stop a state committed to violating the rights of people who live within its border. But the prevailing norms of the post-WWII international order have framed human rights violations as moral and legal atrocities; the investigative and information-producing powers of multilateral and non-governmental organizations have subjected abusive states to historically unprecedented levels of international scrutiny; and states have until very recently been reluctant to openly own their human rights violations—preferring instead to cloak their deeds in the language of counterterrorism, or issuing denials. This duality incentivizes states to pay lip service to the underlying values of human rights law while facing few consequences for transgressing them, and these efforts have often been understood as a strategy of buying political cover for human rights violations—a strategy that allows allies to frame box-checking as actual compliance. But lip service is still an acknowledgement that the law is meaningful in some way, and that acknowledgment is also an opportunity.

Changing the Stakes 

In this case, El Salvador is voluntarily claiming it’s in compliance with international laws, even though, technically speaking, nothing will happen to El Salvador if it isn’t in compliance with international law, absent significant effort from other states. Paradoxically, this means international law can serve as a critical tool in confronting the global wave of far-right autocracies bent on breaking already-fragile human rights norms: it can serve as a way to change the stakes of violating human rights. 

Pointing to international law as an aide can seem naive at best and maliciously impotent at worst, particularly when stacked against the horror of human rights violations. And framing international law as a pathway to redress harms can seem particularly obtuse when the misplaced faith that legal institutions would serve as the primary bulwark against authoritarianism is, after all, one way we got to the point where an open authoritarian could win the US presidency a second time and build a lawless government. In the domestic context, law is backed by the enforcement of state power, and people often view the existence of laws as automatically regulating behavior or guarding against impunity—but international law is very clearly a specific set of arguments about appropriate, tolerable behavior, with no expectation of automaticity attached to it. In this context, human rights law is a tool, not a weapon—not the sole sword of restitution, but a way to change the calculus people make when they weigh future consequences.

Without the backing of state power or any straightforward paths to enforcement, ironically, human rights law shows us how all law has to be backed by political power and pressure to be meaningful—less an ideal than a straightforward deal.  

El Salvador’s effort to minimize its culpability will not necessarily help its government officials avoid legal culpability for enforced disappearance (since accomplices to enforced disappearance can still be legally responsible for the crime), nor for its crimes against humanity, its torture of detainees, or its refoulment of refugees—if there is political will to hold them accountable. Human rights have usually been indirectly enforced by social mechanisms; prosecutions or threatened prosecutions; and, rarely and at the extreme, military action.  Social mechanisms work by trying to place countries outside the community of “good” states via naming-and-shaming tactics, grassroots pressure and activism from groups inside and outside the offending state. They can escalate to boycotts and sanctions—more coercive measures that strive to cut states off from economic and military benefits in order to shape their behavior. 

These mechanisms work hand-in-hand with the international legal working groups and committees that produce knowledge about human rights violations and direct international scrutiny at violators. International justice can proceed via prosecutions in domestic courts that have ratified human rights agreements; regional courts, like the European Court of Justice or the Inter-American Court of Justice; or via international courts including the International Court of Justice, where states attempt to hold other states to account for violations of international law, and the International Criminal Court, where individuals can be prosecuted for genocide, war crimes, crimes against humanity, and the crime of aggression. And rarely and controversially, human rights violations can produce joint military action under the Responsibility to Protect. Each one of these responses requires sustained political pressure and mobilization to hold violators accountable. In this context, there are political pathways forward for people who want to uphold human rights, reject impunity, and build accountability—not just for El Salvador’s government (which thinks it might experience consequences), but also for the Trump administration, which is proceeding as though there will never be justice for its crimes against refugees, migrants, and dissidents. International advocates for human rights can build social pressure by building and sustaining pressure on their own governments to sanction or isolate El Salvador, the US, or both. They can work with international experts to open investigations in multilateral human rights bodies, building a body of evidence that might later help move the levers of international justice. And states that believe in human rights can refer El Salvador to the International Criminal Court—El Salvador is a member, so the court has jurisdiction over its crimes against humanity. 

US domestic opposition to the Trump administration can also work to build grassroots pressure on the government via activism—indeed, both the administration’s move to return Kilmar Abrego Garcia to the US and the prisoner swap that ultimately sent the CECOT detainees to Venezuela reveal that the administration is susceptible to domestic political pressure. Critically, American opposition leaders can and should credibly signal that there will be accountability and consequences for the Trump administration’s human rights abuses—that, should they ever return to power, they will not paper over past abuses, as the Obama administration did despite their evidence that the Bush administration “tortured some folks”. One way for leaders to make these promises of accountability credible is to promise they will join the ICC if they come to power, following the lead of other states that have joined the ICC after a period of violence as a way to externalize punishment for abuses, reassuring both international allies and nervous domestic populations that there will be justice even if domestic courts aren’t up to the task. 

None of these measures would be a guarantee, but each one of them would help make a future commitment to justice more plausible, changing the stakes of the decisions that other states, groups, and individuals make in the face of autocratic breakthrough. Actors looking at the current landscape and foreseeing a future of impunity for the Trump administration’s crimes may be tempted to throw their lot in with the administration’s abuses, or at least to implicitly legitimize them. Actors looking at a landscape where pressure for future accountability comes from many directions may instead look at this period in American history as a chapter with an eventual end that will require an answer and an account for abuse. In this sense, El Salvador’s hedged bet shows us how we can stack the deck toward justice. 

Venezuela’s people, not government, deserve solidarity

Michael Paarlberg is an associate professor of political science at Virginia Commonwealth University and associate fellow at the Institute for Policy Studies. Follow him on X: @MPaarlberg

Voters in Venezuela were greeted at midnight Sunday with the least surprising outcome to the latest in a string of dubious elections: the incumbent president, Nicolás Maduro was declared winner in a race that he was projected to lose in a landslide. The state election body, the CNE (Consejo Nacional Electoral), did not produce the evidence which they are required by law to post under an electoral system set up by Maduro’s predecessor and mentor, Hugo Chávez – the actas, or printed vote tallies. Instead, the CNE simply announced Maduro the winner. Give the regime credit, at least, for declaring he won with just 51% of the vote, rather than 80 or 90%; officials clearly thought they were being subtle.

Since Sunday, the opposition  – the coalition of Maduro’s opponent and likely winner, Edmundo González, and led by banned candidate María Corina Machado  – announced that they have collected 73% of the vote tallies, which show González winning by a 70-30 margin. This is consistent with pre-election polls that showed him leading Maduro by at least a 35 point margin, and exit polls on Sunday showing a similar blowout. Polls are not always correct, and have been hampered in recent years by nonresponse bias – the tendency of voters on one side or another to be more likely to refuse to answer polls. In an authoritarian context like Venezuela’s however, nonresponse would actually underestimate the opposition’s support. But with nearly three-quarters of vote tallies collected as of the time of writing, the margins reported make it mathematically impossible for Maduro to have won.

As testified by the Carter Center, which has monitored Venezuelan elections since 1998, the fault lies not with the Venezuelan people, polling staff, party witnesses, or citizen observers, all of whom contributed to a fair election. “However,” the Center declared in a statement, “their efforts were undermined by the CNE’s complete lack of transparency in announcing the results.”

Thus it is clear that Maduro stole the election. The question remains what happens next. Events on the ground are moving fast, with mass protests breaking out throughout the country. This, too, is unsurprising, and a scenario for which the regime had clearly prepared. In the run-up to the election, Maduro had bolstered his standing with the military to ensure their loyalty in the face of inevitable unrest and warned of a “bloodbath.” It has been the government’s response to those protests that has made this bloodbath a reality; as of the time of this writing, at least 20 protesters have been killed and over 700 jailed. Venezuela’s political future is being decided on the streets, but at the moment, the government and its security forces – both police and paramilitary colectivos – have the upper hand.
 

Lessons for the US

That Maduro would not accept the results of the election was always a highly likely outcome. None should be less prepared for this than the US government, the longtime antagonist to the chavista regime. Successive administrations, Democrats and Republicans, have been open about their desire for regime change, though not necessarily an Iraq-style approach. In 2019, the US and much of the rest of the world recognized a shadow presidency of Juan Guaidó, who never consolidated domestic support nor threatened Maduro’s grip on power. Trump hinted at military action before losing interest and imposed “maximum pressure” sanctions on Venezuela’s oil sector, crippling the economy and contributing to the migrant exodus.

Biden pushed hard for a negotiated settlement under which the regime agreed to hold elections in exchange for a gradual lifting of the Trump-era sectoral sanctions, resulting in 2023’s Barbados Agreement. The July election was thus a major Biden foreign policy objective, one that was hoped to lower both oil prices and migration flows – an incredible 7.7 million Venezuelans, 20% percent of the population, have left the country in the past decade – ahead of the US election in November. Had it resulted in a peaceful transfer of power, it would be a crowning achievement. That it did not should have been anticipated, with contingency plans in place to protect those now being targeted by the regime.

What went wrong? Diplomacy is fundamentally about meeting the leaders of nations where they are, but that must be the starting point, not the end, and Maduro’s declaration of victory despite evidence to the contrary violates the existing agreement. As a result, the Biden administration appears naïve, or at least too eager to reach a deal to curb migration and inflation with a strongman who never intended to bargain in good faith. To confront this blatant theft and state violence, the US and the world community need to have a smarter strategy. The condition for noncompliance with the Barbados Agreement, a clawback to status quo ante sanctions, is no disincentive to a regime that has weathered them so far.

 

Venezuelan civil society needs to call the shots, and be empowered to negotiate an end to an untenable situation that even the regime knows cannot last forever.

One way out of the present crisis would be a negotiated exit using both carrots and sticks, which would require giving Maduro and his cronies and the generals who really decide his fate, immunity from prosecution for their many crimes against the Venezuelan people and considerable corruption – a deal that was similarly unsatisfying but successful in hastening the exit of right-wing dictatorships in the 1980s. This seems unlikely. With multiple indictments against him in US courts, and Republicans calling for Maduro to serve prison time, he is making the same calculation as other dictators with their backs to the wall: to spill as much blood as necessary to stay in power.

This is not to say sanctions relief was a mistake. Broad-based sanctions have done nothing to dislodge Maduro; rather, they have exacerbated the suffering of ordinary Venezuelans while government elites remained insulated. Targeted relief aimed at improving the lives of everyday Venezuelans is both humane and strategic: it is one of the best ways to reduce irregular migration while empowering Venezuelan civil society. Free and fair elections are vital, but making them the condition for targeted relief hurts as much as helps. Ultimately, Venezuelan civil society, not the US, China or Russia, needs to call the shots, and be empowered to negotiate an end to an untenable situation that even the regime knows cannot last forever.
 

Lessons for progressives

For an uncomfortably long time, criticism of Venezuela’s chavista regime has been taboo for the global left. In large part a legacy of Chávez’s personal charisma and eagerness to confront the US at a low point in its global reputation – the Iraq War – and partly also due to Venezuela’s financial largesse at a time when its treasury was overflowing under a global oil price boom, many center- to far-left parties reflexively defended Maduro even as he tanked the economy and ramped up repression.

This residual support is fading. Venezuela’s longtime allies such as Brazil’s Lula and Colombia’s Petro have voiced skepticism about Maduro’s purported victory, demanding to see the vote tallies. Other, newer leaders of Latin America’s left, Chile’s Gabriel Boric and Guatemala’s Bernardo Arévalo, have been more forceful in their criticisms. The Maduro regime has reacted by expelling diplomats of critical countries, left or right, an unprecedented move signaling its growing self-isolation. The few countries to unquestionably accept the cooked results have been Bolivia, Cuba, Honduras, and Nicaragua, and outside the region, Russia, Iran and China. The divides don’t line up neatly by ideology, unless one considers Putin to be a better arbiter of the progressive position than Boric. Even Venezuela’s Communist Party is in opposition to the Maduro regime, in stark contrast to left parties in other countries who lazily view the world through a campist lens.

If the global left seeks to show solidarity with the Venezuelan people, it should listen to voices within civil society rather than the regime: NGOs, human rights advocates, labor unions, and groups like the Foro Cívico that have articulated reforms necessary for true representation. And if the left seeks to play the long game and cares about its prospects in the future, it should recognize the Maduro regime for what it is: the worst model of the left with which to be associated. Throughout Latin America, far right candidates win office by running against the chavista bogeyman, and for millions of voters, “socialism” means what it means in Venezuela: authoritarianism, state terror, hunger and insecurity. The 7-plus million Venezuelans who have fled the country bring with them stories of what made them leave, and as this crisis escalates, more will follow. At the same time, it is a model other strongmen (not on the left) find useful. Even Trump praised Maduro for supposedly lowering Venezuela’s crime rate, and according to his former national security advisor, privately expressed admiration for Maduro for being “too smart and too tough” to be overthrown, as well as for “all those good-looking generals” who stood beside him. Should Maduro succeed in crushing the protests, it would likely only make those in the global authoritarian axis admire him more.

EDITOR’S NOTE: you can watch Paarlberg discuss Venezuela’s election, and the reaction to it, with CIP fellow María José Espinosa and Executive Vice President Matt Duss.
 

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Lawmakers, Progressive Leaders Urge Reorientation of Foreign Policy as a 2024 Imperative

On February 6, Members of Congress and progressive movement leaders gathered at a conference hosted by the Center for International Policy (CIP), demanding changes to US foreign policy decisions as a necessity in a consequential year that will determine the trajectory of the US both at home and globally.

In a keynote address seen by over 60,000 people, Senator Bernie Sanders (I-VT) argued that the concentration of wealth and power foments war, violence and mass insecurity for everyday people globally, benefiting billionaires at the expense of whole families, nations, peoples and regions and declared that, “For many decades we have seen a ‘bipartisan consensus’ on foreign policy—a consensus which, sadly, has almost always been wrong.”

Pointing to the distorting influence of moneyed forces ranging from AIPAC, super PACs, big defense contractors, fossil fuel companies, pharmaceutical companies, oligarchs supporting Putin, Trump and other autocrats, and other multi-billionaires and multinational corporations; as well as the growth of right-wing extremism, tax havens and economic inequality, Senator Sanders declared, “It’s hard to overstate just how fundamentally this broken global financial system undermines faith in democracy and saps our ability to deal with the pressing crises we face today.”

“​​We live in a world where a small number of multi-billionaires and multinational corporations exert enormous economic and political power over virtually every country on earth,” added Sanders. “That reality has a huge impact on all aspects of our foreign policy and whether or not we will be able to effectively address the major crises we face.”

In a “Congress and Progressive Foreign Policy” session, Members of Congress discussed their personal pathways to foreign policy and outlined key challenges and opportunities for a “people-centered national security” that delivers for people in the US and the Global South, recognizes the interdependence of domestic and foreign policy on issues like migration and climate change, and allows the outside world to interact with the US in positive ways like refugee resettlement rather than negative, militarized interactions.

“Nowadays, most people are interacting with the United States through drones, through weapons that are made in the US that are in the hands of dictators, police or their military, or they’re interacting with us in regards to sanctions that are making it hard for them to have necessary medication and food. And that creates a national security problem for us,” said Representative Ilhan Omar (D-MN).

“We’ve spent more on border security since 2013 than was in the immigration reform bill of 2013. And we’ve seen no improvement in anything because we haven’t fundamentally shifted the system. So we have to think about, how do we invest in other countries? Our foreign policy is directly tied to this,” added Representative Pramila Jayapal (D-WA).

“What I would like to see is a people-centered security, where the United States can actually engage with people of a nation, and help empower them, help them pursue freedom and dignity on their terms, not necessarily our terms,” concluded Representative Jason Crow (D-CO).

In “Prioritizing a Progressive Foreign Policy Agenda,” regional experts discussed strategies for the US to reorient its relations to better serve the people and address the realities and needs on the ground. Speaking to the pitfalls of Great Power Competition and the Cold War as frameworks for US-China relations, China expert Ali Wyne declared, “Diplomacy is not something that you do out of kindness to competitors. It’s something that you do to advance your own national interest.” “We can’t support a progressive movement in Ukraine if they’re dead,” emphasized Terrell Jermaine Starr. Speaking on Latin America, María José Espinosa Carillo stressed, “We have deep connections with the region, not only through our borders, but also through funding and economic ties. But what’s more important, there is a renewed vision of the region.”

In “The Political Necessity of a New Foreign Policy,” movement leaders from MoveOn, Center for American Progress, AFL-CIO and Win Without War explored the intersection of domestic and foreign affairs, offering their analysis of policy tradeoffs and highlighting how they see these issues moving the progressive base.

“That [progressive foreign policy] actually is not just a morally and ethical position, but it is an electorally salient one, one that is a winning position in elections,” declared MoveOn executive director Rahna Epting. “With Biden, he campaigned in 2020 promising to end endless wars, and that helped him win. That was one of the reasons I believe helped him win in that election cycle. And now we see Donald Trump poised to exploit the current situation in Israel Gaza and how that’s going to show up in November.” 

Center for American Progress president and CEO Patrick Gaspard described the threat of antidemocratic forces at home and abroad, and said, “We’re now in a place of the world where you win votes by arguing that you build a moat around yourselves and pull up the drawbridge, our progressive transnationalism, internationalism is not actually ascendant. We should recognize that and we should fight fiercely.”

This fight for democracy at home and abroad takes place not just at the ballot box but in workplaces too. Cathy Feingold, International Director for the AFL-CIO, argued we must recast our priorities in favor of “ worker-centered security,” explaining, “It sends a very specific message to people in this country and around the world who are working day in and day out and want to make sure that they can live with dignity. I have found that workers here and workers around the world are interconnected.”

Win Without War executive director Sara Haghdoosti added, “We talk about foreign policy like there are not people in this country who have family connections, and deep commitment to what happens around the world. And it’s just not okay. That’s not how people work.”

View all the key moments from the conference on YouTube here and read opening remarks from CIP president and CEO Nancy Okail here.