Dear Editor,
The emergency meeting of the United Nations Security Council on Monday exposed the raw nerves of a fractured international system. At the center of the storm stood the United States’ forcible rendition of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro — an extraordinary action that, for many, marks the most brazen assault on state sovereignty in modern times.
UN Secretary-General António Guterres was unflinching in his warning: the mission jeopardizes “the very foundations of the international system” built on respect for national sovereignty, political independence, and territorial integrity.
What happened in Caracas is more than a high-stakes political maneuver; it is a deliberate act that redefines the boundaries of force, diplomacy, and international law. The message was unmistakable — Washington under Donald Trump is prepared to bypass diplomacy and multilateral processes in favor of unilateral assertiveness reminiscent of 19th‑century imperial ambitions.
By the UN’s own conventions, ratified by the US, an unprovoked incursion into a sovereign territory without a declaration of war violates the principles enshrined in the UN Charter and customary international law. Guterres’ reference to “a dangerous precedent” was not mere rhetoric — it underscored the legal vacuum now emerging when a superpower decides that its domestic political ambitions outweigh global norms.
The question is not simply about Venezuela. If this forced removal of a sitting head of state is allowed to stand, what stops similar actions elsewhere? Are smaller nations once again at the mercy of power politics disguised as “law enforcement” missions? Should the world brace for an age where justice is defined not by law, but by might?
Trump’s defenders, both within and outside Washington, have hailed the operation as a triumph of “Western resolve.” Yet, even traditional allies have voiced unease. Guterres’ statements echo concerns from the European Union, several African leaders, and Latin American blocs wary of an emerging pattern: the reassertion of American interventionism under a populist nationalist banner.
The possible targeting of other nations — including Colombia and Mexico — sends tremors through the hemisphere. Trump’s accusations that Colombia’s President Gustavo Petro oversees “drug-manufacturing factories” and that Mexico’s anti-cartel war has “failed completely” suggest pretexts that could justify further extraterritorial ventures. That Colombia, one of Washington’s oldest partners in Latin America and recipient of the hemisphere’s largest U.S. aid package after Israel, could be publicly humiliated as a “narco-state” reveals the fragility of political loyalty when filtered through the lens of Trumpian geopolitics.
For Latin American nations — from resource-rich Argentina ,Bolivia and Chile with 60% of the world lithium deposits, the oil and gas reserves between Venezuela, Guyana and Trinidad, to vulnerable Caribbean economies — the message could not be clearer: the old Monroe Doctrine is back, only this time dressed in transactional populism and backed by military bravado. Maduro’s abduction may embolden hardliners in neighboring states, erode trust in cross-border cooperation, and ignite nationalist backlash across the region.
Regional organizations such as CELAC and the OAS now face a test of legitimacy. Will they merely condemn and move on, or coalesce around a joint legal response? Quiet diplomatic conversations in Brasília, Buenos Aires, and Mexico City already hint at the possibility of an emergency Latin American summit to recalibrate collective defense against external threats.
In New York, the UN Security Council remains paralyzed by deep ideological rifts — China and Russia condemning Washington’s “state kidnapping,” Western capitals cautious but reluctant to rebuke the United States outright. Meanwhile, Guterres’ implicit appeal for a reaffirmation of the international rule of law speaks to a deeper anxiety: the fading relevance of the very multilateral order the UN was built to uphold.
How this crisis unfolds will determine much more than the fate of Nicolás Maduro. It will test whether the principles of sovereignty and non-intervention still hold meaning in a world where superpowers act with impunity. If the United States proceeds down this path, it risks not only plunging the Americas into instability, but also legitimizing the same tactics it condemns when practiced by Russia, China, or Israel.
What began in Caracas could, in hindsight, mark the birth of a new imperial age — one in which power wears the mask of justice, and democracy becomes a shield for domination.
Sincerely
Hemdutt Kumar
