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Home»Military & Defence»America’s Venezuela Campaign: Unraveling International Law
Military & Defence

America’s Venezuela Campaign: Unraveling International Law

adminBy adminJanuary 3, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read
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America’s Venezuela Campaign: Unraveling International Law
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The Legal and Ethical Quagmire of U.S. Military Actions Against Venezuela

In recent months, the United States has escalated its military campaign against Venezuela, deploying various forms of force including lethal maritime strikes, naval blockades, and drone strikes on Venezuelan soil. Central to this ongoing conflict is the U.S. administration’s claim that these military actions are justified under the guise of combating narcoterrorism. However, a closer examination reveals substantial legal and ethical issues surrounding these operations.

The Legal Fault Lines

Use of Force Without UN Security Council Authorization

The framework of international law that governs the use of military force is primarily established in the UN Charter. According to this charter, nations can only engage in military actions under two specific circumstances:

  1. Authorization from the UN Security Council.
  2. Legitimate self-defense in response to an armed attack.

The military actions taken by the U.S. against Venezuela do not meet these criteria. Notably, UN human rights experts have condemned the U.S. naval blockade, categorizing it as an armed attack. They emphasize that there is no legal basis for imposing unilateral sanctions via an armed blockade, which fundamentally constitutes a use of force.

No Valid Claim of Self-Defense

For a country to invoke self-defense under Article 51 of the UN Charter, it must demonstrate that an armed attack has occurred or is imminent. The U.S. has failed to substantiate claims that Venezuela launched, or was preparing to launch, such an attack. Allegations that vessels might be carrying drugs, or that Venezuelan gangs could have tenuous links to the Maduro government, do not meet the high legal standards for imminent self-defense. The evolving justifications from the U.S. administration, which have morphed from terrorist designations to assertions that vessels are “headed toward the United States,” fall remarkably short of legal rigor.

Extrajudicial Killings in International Waters

One of the most troubling aspects of the U.S. military operations has been the reported extrajudicial killings in international waters. Allegations suggest that U.S. strikes on boats have resulted in the deaths of at least 83 individuals, raising serious concerns surrounding international human rights law. Such law strictly prohibits arbitrary deprivation of life and dictates that lethal force is only permissible in the face of immediate threats—criteria that, in many instances, have not been met.

Cross-Border Drone Strike on a Sovereign State

Notably, the drone strike on a Venezuelan dock marks the first confirmed U.S. land attack within Venezuela. According to principles of international law, the sovereignty of states is inviolable. A nation cannot use force within another nation’s borders without obtaining consent, Security Council approval, or possessing a valid self-defense claim, none of which appears to apply in this context.

The Strategic and Moral Costs

The United States, by ignoring the legal boundaries surrounding the use of force, actively undermines the global norms it has traditionally relied upon to call out aggression in other contexts. The credibility of U.S. arguments denouncing Russia’s invasion of Ukraine becomes compromised when the U.S. itself engages in actions that bear a resemblance to the very narratives it condemns—justifying aggression through flawed self-defense claims against perceived threats.

Furthermore, normalizing unilateral military action potentially signals to authoritarian regimes around the globe that aggression may once again be deemed acceptable in international affairs. This disintegration of the UN Charter’s foundational principles—that disputes should be settled peacefully and that the use of force should always remain a last resort—poses significant risks. The post-war legal architecture that the United States played a crucial role in constructing cannot be selectively abandoned without dire consequences.

A Call to Recommit to the Rule of Law

The path toward aggression is not inevitable. The United States has the opportunity—and the obligation—to reaffirm its commitment to the international legal standards that it helped to establish. Emphasizing the sovereignty of nations and the principle that legality, rather than expediency, must govern the use of force remains paramount.

America’s power is not derived solely from its military might; it is rooted in its keen willingness to uphold the law, even under challenging circumstances. This adherence not only fortifies its legitimacy but also serves as a sustainable approach to navigating a global landscape where the specter of aggression looms once more.

As we examine the aggressive foreign policy that characterized the Trump administration, it becomes clear that such an approach twists the principles of a rule-of-law-based international order, pulling the world into uncertain and precarious territories. For a just global community, nation-states—especially those part of the United Nations—must possess the moral fortitude to confront and challenge U.S. actions against Venezuela.

[David M. Crane, an esteemed figure in international criminal justice, emphasizes the importance of adhering to the legal norms established in the international system as a means of sustaining moral authority and achieving a just world order.]

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