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2025 U.S. - Venezuela conflict

FYI it was the CIA that tossed Allende in Chile in 1973.

I would not want to be the judge overseeing that trial that will be held.

Nor would I want to be the prosecutor. Who will Maduro hire as a defence attorney?
 
Hence the need to just move away as much as we can from them. Keep diversifying.
I've been told we must buy their jets.
FYI it was the CIA that tossed Allende in Chile in 1973.

I would not want to be the judge overseeing that trial that will be held.

Nor would I want to be the prosecutor. Who will Maduro hire as a defence attorney?
Hahaha...trial.
 
Do we have the stomach for that ? Or will we just keep trying to press the easy button ?
Except it isn’t easy but it is happening and it is likely the reason Canada has been able to minimize what it can from the US actions against our economy. More is required to create some balance. Exports to other countries are up, imports from the US are down. We’ll never be able to break off economically but diversification will help.
Alberta's financial fortunes just became less clear (Sunny), unless we can move their product offshore.
Assuming the US allows that. It might just not want that.
And if Alberta's financial fortunes are in jeopardy Canada's is too.
Of course. But Alberta probably still thinks the US wants their oil…
 
Except it isn’t easy but it is happening and it is likely the reason Canada has been able to minimize what it can from the US actions against our economy. More is required to create some balance. Exports to other countries are up, imports from the US are down. We’ll never be able to break off economically but diversification will help.

Assuming the US allows that. It might just not want that.

Of course. But Alberta probably still thinks the US wants their oil…

Happy New Year

No Problem Yes GIF by Vevo
 
So if China does this to Lai Ching-te, legal or not legal?
 
The U.S. has committed aggression against a sovereign country, has militarily invaded it, and has kidnapped their leader and his wife. Those facts are not in dispute. In practical terms, the U.S. enjoys impunity from this sort of illegality. Maduro is a piece of shit. He was also the head of government of a sovereign state, resident within that state. There’s no legal path for what the U.S. has just unilaterally done. However, it’s a fait accomplit. The bar is now lowered for other countries to do this to their regional neighbours.

The legal prosecution of Maduro in U.S. courts has obvious potential to go hilariously awry. I’ll nerd out on that when the time comes.

Trump has said he is “making the decisions on what’s next for Venezuela’s leadership”. That is also wholly illegitimate. He nor the U.S. government have zero place picking the leadership for a country capable of its own democratic choices. Who leads Venezuela must be left to the Venezuelans.

We will have to watch and see whether this kidnapping also becomes armed robbery. The question of Venezuela’s oil industry, the removal of sanctions, the permitting of development and export, all remain to be seen. Over today, as Venezuelans start stepping out of their homes, we’ll get a sense of what U.S. presence remains in the ground and what political and economic institutions they may assert military control over.

Other nations need to take U.S. threats to sovereignty much more seriously. There was zero legal legitimacy to the U.S. killing any Venezuelans last night, or going forward.

We can safely assume from the scale of the strikes and the videos of Chinooks openly flying over Caracas that the Venezuelan air defence was quickly and decisively defanged. Their Air Force, such as it is, was not in play. If there’s remaining U.S. ground presence, we will soon see if Venezuela made any preparations and has any will for insurgency.

I’ll wait for some informed analysis of what this means for oil markets; probably it’ll take a while to see what happens there, because we won’t know the new rules or players for a while. But nothing good for Canada. Whether or not the separatists realize it, 160th SOAR effectively did some gun runs on the economic viability of an independent Alberta last night.

Quite the start to the day.

EDIT TO ADD: Looks like as I was digesting this, Trump and Vance have both made the picture more clear with regards to Venezuelan oil. So this was an armed robbery as well.
 
The U.S. has committed aggression against a sovereign country, has militarily invaded it, and has kidnapped their leader and his wife. Those facts are not in dispute. In practical terms, the U.S. enjoys impunity from this sort of illegality. Maduro is a piece of shit. He was also the head of government of a sovereign state, resident within that state. There’s no legal path for what the U.S. has just unilaterally done. However, it’s a fait accomplit. The bar is now lowered for other countries to do this to their regional neighbours.

The legal prosecution of Maduro in U.S. courts has obvious potential to go hilariously awry. I’ll nerd out on that when the time comes.

Trump has said he is “making the decisions on what’s next for Venezuela’s leadership”. That is also wholly illegitimate. He nor the U.S. government have zero place picking the leadership for a country capable of its own democratic choices. Who leads Venezuela must be left to the Venezuelans.

We will have to watch and see whether this kidnapping also becomes armed robbery. The question of Venezuela’s oil industry, the removal of sanctions, the permitting of development and export, all remain to be seen. Over today, as Venezuelans start stepping out of their homes, we’ll get a sense of what U.S. presence remains in the ground and what political and economic institutions they may assert military control over.

Other nations need to take U.S. threats to sovereignty much more seriously. There was zero legal legitimacy to the U.S. killing any Venezuelans last night, or going forward.

We can safely assume from the scale of the strikes and the videos of Chinooks openly flying over Caracas that the Venezuelan air defence was quickly and decisively defanged. Their Air Force, such as it is, was not in play. If there’s remaining U.S. ground presence, we will soon see if Venezuela made any preparations and has any will for insurgency.

I’ll wait for some informed analysis of what this means for oil markets; probably it’ll take a while to see what happens there, because we won’t know the new rules or players for a while. But nothing good for Canada. Whether or not the separatists realize it, 160th SOAR effectively did some gun runs on the economic viability of an independent Alberta last night.

Quite the start to the day.
I think the USA just gave China the green light to do this to Lai Ching-te


If China is looking for examples, the Russian special military operation just took a back seat to the American special military operation.
 
Setting aside the illegality and rank dishonour of the whole thing, the actual military execution of this will be interesting to look at once those facts all emerge. At first glance, quite cleanly accomplished, and they’ve had a few weeks of deception ops to ‘white noise’ the ‘night of’ tactical signals.

Tough to find a more profound military overmatch than U.S. versus Venezuela in a raid scenario.
 
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