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Home»POLICY & ISSUES»Oh, PLEASE: Democrats’ New Complaint About Capturing Maduro Is ‘Trump Broke International Law’

Oh, PLEASE: Democrats’ New Complaint About Capturing Maduro Is ‘Trump Broke International Law’

Jonathan DavisJanuary 5, 2026Updated:January 5, 2026 POLICY & ISSUES
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You have to hand it to the Democrat left. Their schtick never changes, and that’s especially true when it comes to their untreated and worsening Trump Derangement Syndrome.

I keep seeing people wringing their hands over President Donald Trump’s supposed “kidnapping” of Nicolás Maduro, warning that it sets some dire precedent that will inevitably come back to haunt us. According to this crowd, it’s a blatant violation of international law that will embolden China or Russia to suddenly abandon “international norms” and start behaving aggressively—as if they’ve been patiently restrained all this time out of respect for polite paperwork.

.@antonioguterres deeply alarmed by escalation in Venezuela, culminating with US military action today.

He’s concerned that international law hasn't been respected.

He calls on all actors in Venezuela to engage in inclusive dialogue, in respect of human rights & rule of law.

— United Nations (@UN) January 3, 2026

Oh, for the love…get real.

If Xi Jinping invaded Taiwan right now, and toppled the president there, on what grounds would the United States object? Or have any credibility to say anything?

— Mehdi Hasan (@mehdirhasan) January 3, 2026

Okay, well, Mehdi, we didn’t invade Venezuela and, as of now, President Trump has no reason or plans to do it, so there’s that huge glaring difference.

There’s also this inconvenient reality: does anyone seriously believe Vladimir Putin just now realized he might ignore international “norms” or “law” because President Donald Trump sent troops to capture Nicolás Maduro?


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Or that Xi Jinping is sitting on his hands, respectfully restraining himself from challenging Taiwan’s sovereignty—right up until this supposed “horrific violation” of international law gave him ideas?

Starmer must convene the UN security council to hold Trump to account. pic.twitter.com/saOGwKKFmi

— Liberal Democrats (@LibDems) January 3, 2026

No fan of Maduro, nor of the repressive leftist movement he represents. But seizing him is a rogue action. If Russia & China now go around kidnapping leaders of nations they find inconvenient, the United States will have no principled basis for objection https://t.co/HWSj2PwVpR

— Jonathan Kay (@jonkay) January 3, 2026

Come on. That’s not how the world works. Strongmen don’t consult law reviews or wait for moral permission slips. They act based on strength, weakness, opportunity, and cost. Pretending that Putin or Xi are guided by Western notions of “norms” is comforting fiction for people who don’t want to grapple with power realities.

If anything, decisive action does the opposite of what the hand-wringers fear. It clarifies red lines. It raises the cost of aggression. And it reminds adversaries that American resolve isn’t a debating society—it’s a capability. The idea that enforcing consequences causes authoritarian adventurism isn’t just wrong; history shows it’s usually the lack of consequences that invites it.

Xi/Putin aren't afraid of a UN Resolution, or the ICJ, or a stern Presidential address. They're afraid that if they invade Europe or Taiwan, the US will punch back. That's it. That's all it ever has been, all it is, and all it ever will be, and that hasn't changed.

— Sean T at RCP (@SeanTrende) January 4, 2026

International law isn’t really law in the way people pretend it is. We like to act as though it exists, and in some circumstances the pretense is useful to maintain, but that doesn’t make it real in any meaningful, enforceable sense.

When civilized nations want a basic framework to manage relations among themselves, they sign treaties, set up rules, and create bureaucracies whose decisions they agree—voluntarily—to respect. That arrangement can be practical. It can even promote stability. But it isn’t law.

All the bleating about "international law" shows just how completely deluded some of our elites have become.

International law was a pleasant fiction that lasted for a few decades. It was never real and now the world has reverted to its default setting: Great Power politics.…

— Konstantin Kisin (@KonstantinKisin) January 4, 2026

Look at it this way: If “international law” was really a thing, then the United Nations would be a useful organization instead of the expensive sick joke that it actually is.

This genre of lefty concern-trolling is so funny.

After years of hand-wringing about Russia's lack of respect for international law, they now have to seamlessly pivot to pretending that Trump's alleged violation of international law is going to somehow embolden Russia. https://t.co/xBolLvF7Js

— Nate Hochman (@njhochman) January 4, 2026

Law, by definition, requires enforcement—force. And there is no overarching international sovereign with the authority or capability to enforce anything resembling real law across the globe. No world police. No global sheriff. Just agreements that powerful nations follow when it suits them and ignore when it doesn’t.

Which makes the performative wailing about “international law” even more hollow. It’s usually coming from the same people who insist that slapping a “gun-free zone” sign on a wall magically prevents murder.

This is the funniest possible response from the left-wing commentariat.

If you legitimately believe that China's respect for "international law" is what's preventing them from invading Taiwan, I have a bridge in Shanghai to sell you. https://t.co/LVUMXwAHqd pic.twitter.com/DArfC08hGx

— Eric Schmitt (@Eric_Schmitt) January 4, 2026

If they even believe what they’re saying—which is an open question. Some probably do. Many clearly don’t. After all, a fair number of the same voices now hyperventilating about President Donald Trump’s supposed “kidnapping” of Nicolás Maduro were perfectly fine excusing—or outright justifying—the atrocities committed by Hamas against Israelis.

When Hamas raped and murdered civilians, it was waved away as “resistance,” “context,” or some fashionable decolonization slogan. International law? Human rights? Suddenly optional.

Or who knows, Putin might even invade Ukraine. https://t.co/YgN7JOuY3o

— Ari Fleischer (@AriFleischer) January 4, 2026

Let’s be honest here: The Democrat left’s real concern here is that they’re losing a friend and ideological ally in Maduro.

Democrats have settled on the position that they think Maduro was a terrible and illegitimate dictator who was severely undermining American interests and promoting the drug trade, but it’s completely unacceptable for anyone to do anything about it.

— AG (@AGHamilton29) January 4, 2026

Some may argue that the effort isn’t worth the payoff in situations like this, but I don’t want to hear any more about “international law.” We live in a world where SOMALIA currently holds the presidency of the United Nations Security Council.

You really can’t make this stuff up. A Somali diplomat stepping forward to scold the United States and lecture Americans about “international law” is rich enough on its own.

But it gets even more absurd. According to reporting and public records, this same individual is also tied to operating a health care business in Ohio—which has raised serious questions and allegations about potential improprieties.

It’s pure idiocracy—and liberals expect anyone to take it seriously? They want people not to laugh in their faces?

The only questions that actually matter are simple ones: does removing Maduro make the world a better place? And more importantly, does it make the United States of America safer and stronger?

If the answer to either—or both—is yes, then the debate is over. Everything else is noise, posturing, and bad-faith outrage from people who wouldn’t recognize a net positive if it handcuffed a dictator and put him on a plane.

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