WASHINGTON: It is a case of geopolitical déjà vu. 36 years ago, troops sent by President George H.W. Bush detained Panamanian strongman Manuel Noriega. On Saturday, it was troops sent by President Trump who captured Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro. By contrast, President Trump declared the United States would “run” Venezuela for now in advance of what he called a “safe, proper and judicious transition.” Trump said Venezuela’s vice president, Delcy Rodríguez, had been sworn in as the new president. But speaking to Venezuelans in a televised address, Rodríguez pushed back against Trump, saying what the U.S. had done to her homeland was “a barbarity.” Trump seemed to dismiss the notion that Venezuelan opposition leader and 2025 Nobel Peace Prize winner María Corina Machado could lead the country, saying she didn't have enough support or respect inside Venezuela. In 2019, Farah worked with Trump administration officials running war games to determine what a post-Maduro Venezuela might look like. The group looked at several scenarios. “How do we talk about taking over a country when we have no functional presence there?” Farah asked. But Farah said occupying Venezuela would be far more difficult than the intervention in Panama. Panama is widely seen as a bright spot in a history of U.S. operations in Latin America that have included CIA-backed coups in Guatemala and Chile. “She’s essentially willing to do what we think is necessary to make Venezuela great again,” Trump told reporters. “We’ll be selling oil,” President Trump said at a news conference Saturday, “probably in much larger doses because they couldn't produce very much because their infrastructure was so bad.” Despite some similarities, analysts and former diplomats also see big differences between the interventions in Panama and Venezuela and worry about where the latter could be headed. In both instances, analysts said the United States was using force to secure strategic assets in the Western hemisphere, namely the Panama Canal and Venezuela’s oil fields. On the same day 36 years apart, U.S. forces seized a deeply unpopular, Latin American dictator and brought him to the United States to face drug charges. “In Venezuela, you have mountains, you have jungles, you have ocean fronts,” Farah said. “The major result was a democratic system with self-determination, peaceful transfer of governance, and an economy that actually took off and did very, very well,” said Feeley. One reason the Panama operation worked, said Feeley, is because a political opposition there was ready to take over and American troops, thousands of whom were already stationed in the Canal Zone, were quickly in and out of Panama-proper. During his news conference, President Trump declined to rule out deploying American troops to Venezuelan soil. John Feeley, a career diplomat who served as U.S. ambassador to Panama during the second Obama administration, said the U.S. invasion in 1989 had a positive impact on the country. Bush detained Panamanian strongman Manuel Noriega. On Saturday, it was troops sent by President Trump who captured Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro. What there does not seem to be, in my view so far, is any kind of transition plan.” The failure to map out a transition so far also worries Douglas Farah, the president of IBI Consultants who spent a decade advising the Pentagon. That risks a power vacuum that Farah said various armed groups — including guerrillas from Colombia — would swiftly move to fill, leading to more violence. Interventions and Why or Why Not appeared first on Newsroom Panama.
A Tale of 2 U.S. Interventions
The article analyzes geopolitical parallels between U.S. military operations in Panama in 1989 and the current situation in Venezuela. Experts compare the goals, methods, and potential consequences of these interventions, noting both similarities and key differences, such as the size of the countries, the readiness of the local opposition, and the risk of a power vacuum.