President Donald Trump’s invasion of Venezuela is
generating fresh calls for his impeachment and
removal from office. Shortly after the US military bombed
the Venezuelan capital of Caracas and abducted Venezuelan President Nicolás
Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores, many experts on international law argued
that the president’s actions were completely illegal.
In an interview with the New Yorker’s Isaac
Chotiner, Yale Law School professor Oona Hathaway said that she didn’t believe
there “is a legal basis for what we’re seeing in Venezuela,” while adding that
the arguments the Trump
administration will likely make simply “don’t hold water.”
For instance, Hathaway noted that while the United Nations charter
allows nations to use military force in self-defense against military
aggression, the administration’s claims that attacking Maduro was a defensive
measure intended to stop the flow of illegal drugs into the US was completely
outside the scope of traditional self-defense.
“If drug trafficking is a reasonable justification, then
a whole range of possible arguments can be made that basically mean that
self-defense is no longer a real exception,” she argued. “It’s the new rule.
Why couldn’t you make the same argument about communicable diseases? There’s
bird flu coming from a country, and therefore we have a legal justification for
the use of military force. Once we start going down that road, the idea that
there’s any limit evaporates.”
Hathaway also said that Trump’s militaristic ambitions
seem to have grown throughout his second term, and she warned they could lead
to a long and bloody US military occupation of Venezuela.
“In his press conference, Trump said that the United States would
‘run the country,’” she said. “And he made it clear that he was not ‘afraid’ to
put boots on the ground—for years, if necessary... it’s nothing like anything
Trump has done before today. His previous illegal uses of force were all over
shortly after they began. The scale of the operation that will be required is
massive, and it means putting US soldiers at long-term risk.”
Harvard Law School professor Jack Goldsmith wrote a
lengthy analysis after the attack on Venezuela and also concluded that it
violated the UN charter. What’s more, Goldsmith argued that Trump’s state plan
to seize Venezuela’s oil would
likely run afoul of the Fourth Geneva Convention, which limits actions that
occupying powers can take on the countries they are overseeing.
“There are a lot of international law
rules and restrictions that purport to govern what the United States can do as
an occupying power,” he explained. “I don’t have space here to review them but suffice it to say that these rules will touch on President Trump’s stated aim of ‘tak[ing] back the oil’ and ‘get[ting]
reimbursed.’ We will see if the administration takes these rules seriously.”
Many Trump critics also argued that, legality aside,
toppling a foreign head of state and vowing to seize their nation’s natural
resources was morally wrong and deserving of impeachment.
“This is the behavior of a mob boss—but with nuclear weapons and
the world’s strongest military,” argued Zeteo editor-in-chief
Medhi Hassan. “None of this is legal. Trump should be impeached by Congress and
indicted at The Hague.”
Leah Greenberg, co-founder and co-executive director of
Indivisible, denounced Trump’s attack on Venezuela as “wildly
illegal, immoral, and irresponsible,” and urged the US Congress to
exercise its powers to stop the president from further escalation.
“The power to declare war belongs to Congress and the
American people,” Greenberg said. “Trump has once again taken power that’s not
his. He is attempting to drag the country into war by decree, all while
treating the presidency like a throne. Congress must act immediately to stop
these illegal strikes and hold the Trump regime accountable. No Kings, No War.”
Cavan Kharrazian, senior policy adviser for Demand
Progress, demanded congressional action to “stop this reckless,
unconstitutional act of war.” “We have seen what happens when the White House invents
a pretext to launch a regime change war with an oil-rich nation: disaster and
suffering for innocent civilians, our troops and their families, all while
costing the American taxpayer a fortune as well,” said Kharrazian. “Congress
must do the right thing by voting to stop this obvious catastrophe.”
Kat Abughazaleh, a Democratic candidate for US Congress
in Illinois, wrote on Bluesky that the time for Democratic politicians to issue
mealy-mouthed statements about Trump’s actions was over. “Democrats need to
grow a fucking spine,” she wrote. “No more strongly worded letters. It’s time to draft
articles of impeachment. Impeach. Convict. Remove.”
Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.)
also demanded that members of his party take a strong stance against Trump’s
illegal Venezuela attack. “The silence from many media-hyped 2028 contenders
today is shocking,” he wrote on
X. “If you cannot oppose this regime change war for oil, you don’t have the
moral clarity or guts to lead our party or nation.”
-Brad Reed, Common Dreams

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