Venezuela and Trump in historical context

The new year got off to a shocking start, with US bombs falling on Caracas and the de facto president Nicolás Maduro being abducted. He soon reappeared in a Brooklyn jail. I was just across the river in Manhattan, which somehow made it all seem even more surreal.

The spectacle of it all–its made-for-TV, Jack Ryan-quality–was doubtlessly part of what made the operation attractive to Trump. That it was in operational terms a resounding success has dampened criticism. Even the anti-forever war part of the Trump coalition tends to be reverent of, and wowed by, the sophisticated capabilities of the US military at first. Criticism elsewhere in Latin America has also been muted by that factor and by fears of falling afoul of an unmoored U.S. unilateralism. However, the region’s responses have been tepid, perhaps especially, because Maduro was a deeply despised figure. The consequences of late-stage chavista rule in Venezuela have scrambled politics in Central and South America. Early polls suggested that intervention was pretty popular among the broader public in much of South America. Maduro was blamed for Venezuelan emigration (in large part correctly); those migrants were often blamed for insecurity (typically an exaggeration). Meanwhile, incumbents scramble to avoid being next, prompting unusual caution from Colombia’s Gustavo Petro and a delicate balancing act from Mexico’s Claudia Sheinbaum.

And yet, like most interventions, I do not think this one is likely to age well. I wrote an article in Foreign Policy discussing the historical parallels, written with Carsten-Andreas Schulz. Echoes of US interventions a century ago, we argue, suggest that the idea of “running” Venezuela from offshore will quickly become fraught. Marco Rubio’s appearance on Capitol Hill suggested as much, again making demands and levelling threats.

I also participated in a panel organized by the European International Studies Association, “After Venezuela: Regional and Global Consequences of U.S. Intervention.” Reflecting the unstinting pace of the news cycle, much of the discussion had already shifted to threats against Greenland and the consequences for NATO.

There’s a great deal more to say about this intervention and its consequences. The attack was an evident violation of international law and affront to the UN Charter. There’s been a lot of discussion of this, although I’m not sure to what end. The Trump administration–unlike in the 2003 invasion of Iraq–barely made an effort to cook up international legal justifications. Instead, they appealed to the extra-territorial enforcement of US law. The US has done this in some ways (sanctions, prosecutions) for a long time, but the idea that the enforcement of US law justifies the US of military force is quite different. (In some respects, the 1989 invasion of Panama and arrest of Manuel Noriega shared this notion, but there was also an argument made about democracy, human rights, etc.)

Few tears will be shed for Nicolás Maduro. The justifications offered for his removal (the quasi-fictional ‘Cartel de los Soles’) are dubious, but Maduro was an autocrat who presided over the impoverishment of his people and the destruction of democracy through violent repression and stunning corruption. But the regime that he helped consolidate essentially remains in place. There’s little evidence so far that the intervention will materially improve conditions for people in Venezuela. Indeed, it’s quite clear that this wasn’t the point. If anyone had any doubt, then the Trump administration’s removal of protected status for Venezuelan migrants and attempts to dramatically escalate non-criminal deportations to a country in crisis should make that clear. This creates quite a political challenge for the Venezuelan opposition, like Maria Corina Machado, who have cozied up to Trump during the past year and since the intervention.

What was the point, then? What drove this decision? On the one hand, Trump’s own declarations make it seem obvious: it was about the oil. That explanation has proved popular with those who see the intervention as nothing more than a continuation of resource imperialism, now with the mask off.

I don’t think this is an adequate explanation, however. Maduro was eager to make a deal on oil, if it kept him in power. The problem was that making such a deal with Maduro was unacceptable to a slice of Trump’s coalition, especially Cuban and Venezuelan exiles centered around Marco Rubio. The pressure on Cuba, then, was a central goal. Trump’s idea of cashing in on these oil fields clashes with limited interest from major oil companies in sinking major investments there. For others, like Stephen Miller, forcing Venezuela to accept more deportees was the point. At least at first glance, the intervention gave something to many elements of the Trump coalition. But with the rest of the regime in place, little prospect of aid, and no respite for Venezuelan migrants, what it has given to the people of that country is far from evident.

2024 in review

Happy holidays! It has been a busy year professionally and personally; given my recurring failure to write Christmas cards or a holiday letter, ever, I will share here a few highlights from 2024 and hopes/plans for 2025.

In the major bit of professional news this year, I was promoted to Professor at the University of Warwick’s Department of Politics and International Studies. Coming after seven years at Warwick, it was a great honor to receive this recognition from my colleagues and the university. I do miss the confusion caused by telling my US-based counterparts that I was a “Reader” of International Relations…but it simplifies the matter of translating my title quite a bit.

In terms of publications, it was great to see the efforts of several collaborations make their way through the long process of research, (re)writing, peer-review, and editing. I spent most of the year working collaboratively, and that has been a pleasure. Most of the things that came out in 2024 were years in the making. Several are products of my ongoing AHRC-funded research with Carsten-Andreas Schulz on Latin America and the formation of international order. The biggest highlight was making my debut in the flagship journal for political science, the American Political Science Review, with an examination of how Mexican Liberals shaped their own anti-imperial liberal internationalism in response to the French Intervention (1861-67).

In addition to those pieces with Carsten, I returned to collaborating with American University PhD alum and friend Sebastián Bitar, and finally saw a piece published with Warwick historian and my running partner Benjamin T. Smith. Ben and I first started discussing that paper while jogging down the canal paths during our government-approved pandemic exercise hour. That it came out in top-shelf history journal Past & Present was icing on the cake. Finally, a translated edition of an collaborative volume with Eric Hershberg was published in Spanish with El Colegio de México. That really served as the culmination of the Robert A. Pastor North American Research Initiative, which I’d chaired for about eight years. Given the more intense interest in North America in Mexico, we were very pleased to see this come to fruition with a prominent Mexican press. (The English version was published by University of New Mexico Press in December 2023.) Visual round-up below, and links after that.

Travel and talks

In addition to writing and teaching, I was lucky to visit and meet colleagues from the UK, Europe, and across the Americas to share work and swap ideas. I started 2024 with a trip back to my alma mater, American University, for the presentation of our book, North America Regionalism. It was also a fitting and moving tribute to our friend and my PhD supervisor, Robert Pastor, ten years after his passing.

In April, I visited San Francisco for the annual International Studies Association conference, always a wonderful opportunity to catch up with old friends, renew connections, and meet new and interesting folks. April was a busy month; Carsten and I also presented a new paper on the 1884-85 Berlin Conference and Latin America at the Oxford University Latin America Centre. I presented new iterations of that paper at the UK Latin American Historians Network meeting at Sheffield University and at a global diplomatic history workshop at Warwick in May.

Also in May, I caught the Eurostar through the channel tunnel for a trip to Paris, where I had the opportunity to make my first visit to the Maison de l’Amérique latine, discussing US relations with Latin America, in May. It was a great daylong discussion with largely French diplomats and scholars.

In July, I had the chance to get back to Buenos Aires for the first time since the pandemic. It’s one of my favorite cities anywhere, with tremendouse theater, arts, and literary scenes–not to mention some of the world’s most fascinating politics. I spent a lot of time trawling the foreign ministry archives, but I also had the chance to present my work in progress at FLACSO and to see brilliant friends and colleagues. After a break in Spain during August, it was back to teaching at Warwick for the fall term. Amidst that, I had the opportunity to join a postdoctoral development workshop at William & Mary in November, while also presenting Carsten and my book-in-progress at London’s Westminster University and at W&M in the same busy week.

Plans for 2025

The year to come promises to be a busy one, even as I try to focus on doing fewer but bigger projects. Carsten and I have a full joint agenda, starting with shepherding a few articles with R&Rs through the review process. We’re also working on getting a contract for our book-in-progress … hopefully news to come in the first months of 2025. And I’m also applying to an ERC Consolidator grant–always a long-shot but hopefully one worth taking.

I’m looking forward to making my first trip to Norway to meet colleagues at NUPI and present in their seminar series. There are many luminaries of historical International Relations there, as well as experts on small states, so it is a visit that I am really looking forward to.

In early March, I’ll be at the annual International Studies Association conference in Chicago. Carsten and I have co-organized a workshop and series of panels on how ideas and practices of international politics have moved from the Latin American region to the global level. We’re excited to be working with a diverse group of scholars on that theme. I will also be participating in roundtables on grand strategy and territorial conflict, and on liberalism beyond the west.

Hopefully, I’ll make it back to Mexico in April–I got sick and missed a long-awaited trip to Guadalajara in December. Plans for the second half of the year are still pretty much wide open…other than setting aside plenty of time for writing a book!

That’s my work-life year in review. Wishing you a very happy 2025!