The United States is ramping up its military presence off the coast of Venezuela, with warships, marines, and surveillance aircraft pouring into the Caribbean under a "counter-narcotics operations" banner. The Trump administration is tying Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro to narco-terror networks and cartel structures, threatening both military action and diplomatic talks. This setup has eerily familiar echoes of America's last intervention in Iraq.
Critics are warning that this setup amounts to coercive statecraft backed by military power rather than legitimate law enforcement. The US media is repeating the Trump administration's framing uncritically, which sets the stage for escalation.
The argument being made here reminds one of the Bush-era justification for invading Iraq - Saddam Hussein was supposedly driven by "hatred intensified by a tribal culture of blood feuds" and preemptive war was America's moral duty. By 2003, The New York Times was profiling “Liberals for War”, laundering the idea that even longtime doves were ready to get on board.
The same playbook is being played out now in Venezuela. There are many differences between these countries, including Trump’s reluctance to put U.S boots on the ground for extended periods and past mistakes that should be learned from. But there's nothing limited about deploying an aircraft carrier strike group to a country which has been sanctioned, isolated, and politically dislodged.
It's also worth noting that "limited war" is just a euphemism. The press needs to ask harder questions - not just about the Pentagon's talking points but what kind of wars we're willing to inherit. What do we expect these campaigns to become once they outlast the news cycle and the political administration?
Critics are warning that this setup amounts to coercive statecraft backed by military power rather than legitimate law enforcement. The US media is repeating the Trump administration's framing uncritically, which sets the stage for escalation.
The argument being made here reminds one of the Bush-era justification for invading Iraq - Saddam Hussein was supposedly driven by "hatred intensified by a tribal culture of blood feuds" and preemptive war was America's moral duty. By 2003, The New York Times was profiling “Liberals for War”, laundering the idea that even longtime doves were ready to get on board.
The same playbook is being played out now in Venezuela. There are many differences between these countries, including Trump’s reluctance to put U.S boots on the ground for extended periods and past mistakes that should be learned from. But there's nothing limited about deploying an aircraft carrier strike group to a country which has been sanctioned, isolated, and politically dislodged.
It's also worth noting that "limited war" is just a euphemism. The press needs to ask harder questions - not just about the Pentagon's talking points but what kind of wars we're willing to inherit. What do we expect these campaigns to become once they outlast the news cycle and the political administration?