Aliran
condemns the US large-scale attack on Venezuela and the kidnapping of
President Nicolás Maduro and his wife Cilia Flores – a blatantly illegal
attempt at regime change.
The military assault on 3
January and the abduction of the country’s leaders breach international
law, specifically Article 2 of the UN Charter, constituting an act of
aggression against a sovereign nation.
The earlier killing of
innocent fisherfolk in Caribbean waters, the seizure of oil tankers and
violation of regional territorial waters reveal a pattern of state
terrorism in the tradition of imperial violence.
All this amounts
to a brazen transgression of Venezuelan sovereignty, international law,
democracy and human rights, which must be fully condemned.
This
aggression forms part of a decades-long campaign against Venezuela. It
has involved sanctions, attempted coups, economic warfare and the
seizure of Venezuelan assets. This is all designed to control the
country’s vast oil reserves.
These actions also represent the
behaviour of a global menace that has been responsible for the suffering
and deaths of millions of people through ideological proxy wars and
competition for influence.
The US flexes its muscles simply
because it can, acting as little more than a bandit driven by greed for
others’ resources, as seen in its recent designs on Canada and
Greenland.
Such
military aggression cannot be dressed up as a deep concern for
democracy, especially in Venezuela, which has 303 billion barrels of
oil, the world’s largest reserve. The US has consistently cloaked
illegal interventions with justifications such as spreading democracy or
combating drug cartels, when the real aim is to control oil flows and
to access reserves.
History
shows a similar pattern: the allegations of weapons of mass destruction
in Iraq, which proved to be a bogus pretext for invasion. Western
invasions in Iraq, Afghanistan, Libya and elsewhere in West Asia caused
over a million direct deaths and a few million more indirect deaths.
Some
believe the invasion of Venezuela aims to protect the petrodollar
system, which has allowed the US to wield global economic dominance.
Venezuela’s move since 2018 to sell oil in currencies other than the
dollar poses a direct threat to this system.
We see a disturbing
pattern emerging from history: Iraq switched oil sales to euros in 2000
before the illegal 2003 US invasion. Libya’s Muammar Gaddafi proposed a
gold-backed pan-African currency before the 2011 Nato intervention.
Venezuela itself has sought Brics membership and has provided priority
oil access to Brics nations while moving away from dollar-based
transactions.
We condemn the US’ latest unlawful action, as
President Donald Trump tries to bring Latin America under the US sphere
of influence with his version of the Monroe Doctrine.
The
international community must not allow the powerful to bully weak and
small nations – for this would be tantamount to the rule of the jungle.
This
direct invasion of a sovereign nation crosses international red lines
and demands severe condemnation. No nation has the right to invade
another country simply because it dislikes its leader or covets its
resources.
This display of aggression now threatens developing
nations in the Global South seeking political and economic independence.
What has taken place in Venezuela could one day undermine the hard-won
self-determination by formerly colonised peoples across the world.
Many
well-meaning governments have fallen for US pretexts for aggression,
which have enabled violations of international law to proceed
unchallenged. This is unacceptable.
Aliran is thus happy to note
that the Malaysian government has called for the immediate release of
President Maduro and adherence to international law.
Regional
organisations in the South, including the Caribbean Community (Caricom),
the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States (Celac), the
African Union and Asean – apart from the United Nations – must speak out
louder against these international crimes.
Otherwise, they will
have failed to defend Venezuelan sovereignty in the face of a
neo-colonial act of war, which might strike closer to home next time.
Finally,
we call on the Nobel Committee and the world football federation, Fifa,
to withdraw their peace prizes to the laureates implicated or who have
supported this aggression.
Aliran executive committee
4 January 2026
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