Nicolás Maduro gets captured by the United States under Trump and suddenly the world wakes up with opinions. UN emergency meetings, global outrage, and people acting shocked like this is the first time power has behaved like power.
Let us start with the boring but necessary part. Maduro was a dictator. That is not an insult, it is a description. Elections were hollowed out, institutions bent into shape, dissent managed rather than tolerated, and an economy driven into the ground. Venezuela did not collapse by accident.
Now comes the part where people lose the plot.
Was the United States right to capture him. Honestly, it is neither cleanly right nor cleanly wrong. And pretending otherwise is intellectual laziness.
Morally, many Venezuelans will feel relief. If you have lived through economic decay, repression, and constant instability, you do not sit around debating international law. You want the person responsible gone. That reaction is human and understandable.
But unless you are very naive, you also understand this was not a Disney movie about saving Venezuelans.
This was about oil.
Venezuela sits on one of the largest proven oil reserves on the planet. Everyone knows that. The United States knows that. And frankly, any American would expect their government to prioritise American interests. Energy security, regional leverage, and strategic positioning are legitimate concerns. That part is not immoral. States exist to serve their own people.
The problem begins when that interest is dressed up as moral superiority.
The United States did not act like an international court. It acted like a superpower exercising reach. That in itself is not shocking. What is troubling is the performance afterwards. The speeches about protecting the Venezuelan people and restoring democracy, as if oil just happened to be lying around by coincidence.
This is where the precedent matters.
Today the target is a man few are willing to defend. Tomorrow the definition of who deserves this treatment becomes flexible. Once you normalise unilateral capture under the banner of morality, sovereignty becomes conditional.
Yes, some people will be happy in the short term. That does not make the method sound. Public relief is not the same thing as legitimacy. History is full of moments that felt good initially and aged terribly.
Maduro can be a dictator and this operation can still be troubling. These ideas are not mutually exclusive. Anyone insisting otherwise is simplifying the world to avoid thinking.
This is not about defending Maduro. It is about refusing to confuse power with virtue. Because once you start pretending those two things are the same, the rules stop existing at all.