What the US intervention reveals about power, order, and deterrence
Introduction – What this analysis offers
The US military operation against Venezuela on 3 January 2026 was widely framed as a regional security event: drugs, cartels, Maduro.
This analysis takes a different approach.
Rather than focusing on the operation itself, it examines what the event reveals about how power is exercised, legitimised, and structured today – across legal frameworks, geographic spaces, economic foundations, and alliance systems.
The four parts deliberately move from the visible to the structural:
from public staging, to legal normalisation, to geopolitical ordering, and finally to systemic consequences for Europe and beyond.
Venezuela is not treated as an endpoint, but as a signal.
Executive Brief (≈ 90 seconds)
On 3 January 2026, the United States carried out a military operation against Venezuela. Publicly, the justification centred on drug trafficking, terrorism, and national security. This analysis argues that the operation carries a broader strategic meaning.
The intervention was carefully staged, deliberately avoided the language of war, and relied on post-9/11 legal frameworks that allow military force to be framed as executive security action. In doing so, it further normalised the use of force outside traditional declarations of war.
Geopolitically, the operation fits into a wider pattern of hemispheric consolidation. Venezuela functions less as a target than as a signal – including towards external actors such as China. At the same time, the United States is reinforcing its northern strategic spaces, particularly in the Arctic, in coordination with partners such as Canada.
Beyond politics, the analysis highlights the role of resources, supply chains, and industrial capacity as foundations of modern power. International reactions have so far remained largely rhetorical, increasing the precedent-setting nature of the operation.
The central question is therefore not what happened in Venezuela, but what this approach makes possible next.
Part I
Venezuela Is Not Venezuela
Why this military strike is more than a regional escalation
What this section covers:
This part examines how the Venezuela operation was publicly staged and narrated. It focuses on timing, media choreography, language choices, and the deliberate framing of military action as controlled, technical, and inevitable. The aim is to understand how power is performed before it is politically debated.
The 3rd of January 2026 will likely appear in future historical timelines as a date of consequence. At 17:39 CET, the media stage opened for the President of the United States.
For more than thirty minutes beforehand, cameras broadcast an empty podium. The press waited. Viewers waited. Those who stayed accepted the hierarchy. Those who left removed themselves from the moment.
When Donald Trump finally appeared, the narrative was already fixed. Success, precision, professionalism. No hesitation. No ambiguity. The operation was framed as accomplished fact.
Visual language reinforced the message. Images of Venezuela’s leadership changed rapidly on screen, while Trump himself remained constant and centred. Venezuela appeared not as a sovereign state, but as a problem space – a locus of disorder requiring correction.
Language mattered. This was not a war. It was an operation. Not escalation, but enforcement. Military action was presented as a technical necessity rather than a political decision.
As senior officials and generals followed, speaking of preparation, coordination, and operational conditions, the political dimension receded behind procedural detail. Once repetition set in, news channels cut away. The spectacle had fulfilled its purpose.
What remained was not resolution, but a question:
Why now?
Part II
From War to “Operation”
How military force is legally normalised
What this section covers:
This section examines the legal and procedural frameworks that made the operation possible. It explains how post-9/11 security doctrines allow military force to be normalised without formal war declarations, and how law shifts from a limiting boundary to an enabling infrastructure.
The avoidance of the word “war” was neither accidental nor cosmetic.
Since 9/11, US legal frameworks have expanded executive authority to use military force against entities defined not as states, but as networks. Terrorism and organised crime blur legal categories and dissolve traditional thresholds.
Venezuela was inserted into this logic. The state itself faded behind labels of security threat, cartel infrastructure, and transnational criminality.
Operational transparency reinforced this shift. The more technical the explanations became, the less political the decision appeared. Violence was proceduralised. Force was transformed into administration.
This is not merely a linguistic manoeuvre. It reflects a structural transformation: law no longer primarily constrains power; it increasingly formats it.
Understanding how such operations are executed explains the how.
Understanding why they are framed this way requires a wider lens.
Interim Orientation
At this point, three elements are clear:
The intervention was as much staged as it was executed.
Legal language enabled the normalisation of force.
Venezuela functioned as a test case, not an exception.
The next section deliberately shifts perspective – from event to structure.
Part III
The Larger Stage
Spatial order, resources, and strategic signalling
What this section covers:
This part widens the analytical frame. It moves from the operation itself to global spatial order, resource dependencies, and strategic signalling. Venezuela is examined as part of a broader hemispheric logic, including timing, geopolitical messaging, and parallels to earlier, smaller-scale operations.
Seen from above, the Venezuela operation aligns with a long-standing pattern: hemispheric consolidation.
Often associated with the Monroe Doctrine, this logic now manifests less as doctrine than as practice. Influence is asserted not through proclamations, but through action.
Resources are central to this pattern. Modern power rests not only on military reach, but on access to energy, raw materials, logistics, and industrial capacity. Venezuela’s relevance lies as much in its resource position as in its political alignment.
Timing is revealing. The operation occurred amid heightened Chinese diplomatic and economic activity in Latin America. Proceeding despite less-than-ideal operational conditions suggests that signalling outweighed optimisation. Initiative mattered more than perfection.
This approach is not new. Earlier, more limited actions – for example against Iranian targets – followed similar patterns: calibrated force, legal reframing, strategic messaging. Venezuela extends this logic to a broader spatial and symbolic scale.
Simultaneously, the northern flank is being reinforced. Canada is expanding Arctic surveillance, early-warning systems, and maritime monitoring, aligned with its own security interests and long-standing cooperation frameworks with the United States. Greenland has re-emerged as a logistical and strategic node within this northern architecture.
Taken together, these developments form a coherent picture:
order demonstrated in the south, resilience secured in the north.
Part IV
When Rules Become Optional
Alliances, deterrence, and systemic consequences
What this section covers:
This section explores the longer-term consequences. It examines alliance dynamics, international reactions, deterrence logic, and the gradual erosion of shared rules when violations carry limited consequences. The focus shifts from immediate events to systemic effects.
Alliances depend on predictability – not only in treaties, but in expectations.
International reactions to the Venezuela operation have so far remained largely rhetorical. Criticism without consequence weakens norms not through dramatic rupture, but through repetition without cost.
This recalibrates risk inside alliances. Commitments become conditional. Trust erodes incrementally.
In this context, the establishment of the US Space Force gains relevance. Created during Trump’s first presidency, it reflects a shift towards controlling foundational systems: satellites, communication, navigation, information. Power increasingly operates where it is least visible, yet most decisive.
Deterrence moves away from balance and towards asymmetry. Control replaces escalation.
EU & UK – A Light Cone from Orbit onto Europe
What this section covers:
This subsection applies the analysis specifically to Europe and the United Kingdom. It examines how strategic decisions made elsewhere reshape Europe’s security environment, economic exposure, and political options – even when Europe is not the primary actor.
From a European perspective, the central question is not what the United States intends, but how global power dynamics pass through Europe.
Europe is not the primary actor in this configuration, but a resonance space. Security is mediated. Economic exposure is high. Strategic autonomy remains constrained.
Actions in the southern hemisphere affect migration routes, energy markets, and political stability. Developments in the Arctic reshape Europe’s northern security environment. US strategic choices redefine European risk calculations – irrespective of European preferences.
This is not a moral judgement. It is a structural observation.
Conclusion – Multiple Layers, One Pattern
Across different analytical layers, the same pattern emerges:
Surface level: controlled staging and narrative discipline
Legal level: normalisation of force through security framing
Geopolitical level: spatial consolidation and strategic signalling
Systemic level: erosion of rules through consequence-free action
The Venezuela operation was not an endpoint. It was a rehearsal.
The decisive question is not whether it was justified, but what it enables next.
In an international order where power is demonstrated rather than negotiated, silence does not equal neutrality.

