Can the US 'run' Venezuela? Military force can topple a dictator, but it cannot create political authority or legitimacy [View all]
Can the US run Venezuela? Military force can topple a dictator, but it cannot create political authority or legitimacy
Published: January 4, 2026 7:48pm EST
Monica Duffy Toft
Professor of International Politics and Director of the Center for Strategic Studies, The Fletcher School, Tufts University
(
The Conversation) An image circulated over media the weekend of Jan. 3 and 4 was meant to convey dominance: Venezuelas president, Nicolás Maduro, blindfolded and handcuffed aboard a U.S. naval vessel. Shortly after the operation that seized Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores, President Donald Trump announced that the United States would now run Venezuela until a safe, proper and judicious transition could be arranged.
The Trump administrations move is not an aberration; it reflects a broader trend in U.S. foreign policy I described here some six years ago as America the Bully.
Washington increasingly relies on coercion military, economic and political not only to deter adversaries but to compel compliance from weaker nations. This may deliver short-term obedience, but it is counterproductive as a strategy for building durable power, which depends on legitimacy and capacity. When coercion is applied to governance, it can harden resistance, narrow diplomatic options and transform local political failures into contests of national pride.
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But removing a leader even a brutal and incompetent one is not the same as advancing a legitimate political order.
Force doesnt equal legitimacy
By declaring its intent to govern Venezuela, the United States is creating a governance trap of its own making one in which external force is mistakenly treated as a substitute for domestic legitimacy. ................(more)
https://theconversation.com/can-the-us-run-venezuela-military-force-can-topple-a-dictator-but-it-cannot-create-political-authority-or-legitimacy-272683