How the Monroe Doctrine factors into US arrest of Venezuela’s Nicolás Maduro
U.S. forces captured Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro in Caracas, citing a new Monroe Doctrine corollary to restore American dominance and combat narcotics trafficking, officials said.
- On Saturday, President Donald Trump referenced the Monroe Doctrine during a Mar-a-Lago event while detailing U.S. military action that led to Nicolás Maduro's arrest.
- Articulated in 1823, the Monroe Doctrine aimed to oppose European meddling and ward off colonization in the Western Hemisphere and has been repeatedly invoked to justify U.S. interventions in Latin America.
- The White House national security strategy labeled a `Trump Corollary` to restore American preeminence and outlined military measures to combat narcotics and control migration.
- Officials described the move as reasserting American power in the hemisphere; the Trump administration said it would `run` Venezuela until a replacement for Nicolás Maduro was found, while the White House national security strategy portrayed European allies as weak.
- Historians note Venezuela has historically triggered Monroe corollaries, with Jay Sexton saying the Maduro capture could split Trump supporters as past strikes did.
199 Articles
199 Articles
The Trump Administration defended before the Organization of American States (OAS) the incursion of its Armed Forces into Caracas, which resulted in the arrest of Nicolás Maduro and his wife, as an action for the application of the U.S. Law and ruled it out as an invasion. In contrast to many of the countries that see it as a violation of international law, the U.S. delegation repeated Monday at the OAS its arguments before the Security Council …
2026 Venezuela crisis - Trump’s Monroe Doctrine claim contradicts its history
President Donald Trump displays an ignorance of history when he cites the 1823 Monroe Doctrine as justification for abducting Venezuela’s president. According to the State Department’s official historical office, the Monroe Doctrine’s purpose was solely to prevent European countries from meddling in the internal affairs of Latin American countries. It did not give the United States permission to do so.Perhaps President James Monroe just assumed …
The ‘Donroe doctrine’: Maduro is the guinea pig for Donald Trump’s new world order
Shortly after US special forces captured and extracted Nicolás Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores, on November 3, Donald Trump said that the US would now “run” Venezuela. Whatever Washington’s plans for the future of Venezuelan governance, this show of US force in Latin America looks like the first manifestation of a more assertive American foreign policy outlined in the national security strategy published in November 2025. This plainly asserted…
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