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Sparkly

(24,827 posts)
Sun Jan 4, 2026, 06:27 PM Sunday

M. Gessen: Maduro's Ouster Plays Right Into Putin's Hands

Jan. 4, 2026, 5:03 p.m. ET
New York Times

In the initial rush of news on Saturday morning, many commentators speculated that the abduction of President Nicolás Maduro of Venezuela was also a blow to President Vladimir Putin of Russia, since Venezuela and Russia are allies. To the contrary, it is a victory for Putin, because it is a blow — quite likely fatal — to the new world order of law, justice and human rights that was heralded in the wake of World War II.

That order was never as robust as its champions made it out to be. Many of the multilateral institutions created to foster cooperation and enforce international law have been dysfunctional, often because they were sabotaged by their most powerful members. And yet, some mechanisms worked; some laws were enforced; some crimes were punished and many more were probably prevented; millions of people had their freedom and dignity affirmed; and a reasonable hope persisted that a law-based, humanistic world order would be built. No longer.

When he addressed the public in a news conference on Saturday, President Trump announced that U.S. forces had abducted the president of Venezuela and his wife in the name of democracy, justice, freedom for the Venezuelan people and the safety of Americans. It was a mockery: Despite what the hoodlums running our country may actually believe, abduction — whether on a street in Boston, in an apartment building in New York or Chicago, or in Maduro’s compound in Caracas — never serves the cause of justice.

Illegality does not uphold the law. Starting wars of aggression does not make anyone safer. Colonization does not bring freedom. And colonization is what Trump promised when he dismissed María Corina Machado, a Nobel laureate with a credible claim of a popular mandate and international recognition, as lacking leadership qualities and said, in various ways, no fewer than four times, “We are going to run the country.”


More: https://www.nytimes.com/2026/01/04/opinion/putin-maduro-venezuela.html?unlocked_article_code=1.B1A.EvXA.T3kRXEZjll1m&smid=url-share

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M. Gessen: Maduro's Ouster Plays Right Into Putin's Hands (Original Post) Sparkly Sunday OP
Heather Cox Richardson made same point about the "new world order of law, justice, and human rights" being overturned Timeflyer Sunday #1
It is obvious to me that Putin benefits bigly. lostnfound Monday #2

Timeflyer

(3,684 posts)
1. Heather Cox Richardson made same point about the "new world order of law, justice, and human rights" being overturned
Sun Jan 4, 2026, 08:56 PM
Sunday

by Trump, Putin, and gives historical background on the concept. It grew out of the fact that Eisenhower et al realized that, with atomic bombs, the next world war would be the last.

"Heather Cox Richardson on the Venezuela attack," post on DU.

lostnfound

(17,411 posts)
2. It is obvious to me that Putin benefits bigly.
Mon Jan 5, 2026, 11:39 AM
Monday

Yes, Venezuela and Russia are allies. The chance that the US and Venezuela will ever be allies has probably now dropped to zero. In fact, all of South America is probably resolved against us.
Putin is strategic and knows that the US focuses on short term gain while he can see two steps ahead to what happens next.

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