Beautiful Virgin Islands

Friday, Jan 09, 2026

0:00
0:00

The Claim That Maduro’s Capture and Trial Violate International Law Is Either Legally Illiterate—or Deliberately Deceptive

The seizure, detention, and prosecution of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro by the United States is undoubtedly an international sensation. It breaks long-standing conventions. And at first glance, it appears to violate international law and the UN Charter.

But the attempt to portray this act as a global scandal or a collapse of the world order—particularly by critics casting President Donald Trump as the villain—reflects, at best, profound legal ignorance and, at worst, deliberate, interest-driven media bias rather than a concern for justice or law.

The charges against Nicolás Maduro are not symbolic or ideological. They are concrete and grave: the systematic facilitation and export of massive quantities of dangerous narcotics into the United States. These allegations are now before a federal court in New York, where they will be tested under full judicial scrutiny. The court—not pundits, not activists, not foreign governments—will determine their truth.

If these allegations are supported by credible evidence, then it is not merely the right of the President of the United States to act—it is his duty.

The primary obligation of the U.S. President is not to broker peace in Ukraine, Israel, or Cambodia. Those may be noble endeavors. But they are secondary. The foremost responsibility of the President of the United States is to do whatever it takes to protect American citizens.

Those who claim this action violates international law rely on a shallow, slogan-level understanding of law and exploit public ignorance. No law—domestic or international—is absolute. Every legal system recognizes the doctrine of necessity and self-defense. Legal obligations dissolve when compliance enables greater harm than their violation prevents.

The most basic example is homicide. Murder is illegal everywhere. Yet no legal system disputes that killing an active shooter to save innocent lives is not a crime, but a heroic moral and legal imperative. The same logic applies here.

A person who commits crimes against the citizens of the United States cannot hide behind international law, diplomatic formalisms, or sovereign immunity. The same principle applies universally: anyone who commits mass crimes against British, French, Russian, Israeli, or Chinese civilians is accountable. Immunity does not shield mass criminality. anywhere, or anyone.

European states openly assist Ukraine in targeting Vladimir Putin. No one would have condemned President Zelensky had he succeeded, just as no one would treat Putin’s successful assassination of Zelensky as a legal anomaly—it would be recognized as a brutal but inevitable component of a blood-soaked conflict. Eliminating a leader to end mass slaughter is not scandalous; it is often decisive.

Nor is this the first—or the tenth—time the United States has removed foreign leaders, directly or indirectly. Whether those actions were justified or not, they were carried out by multiple administrations over decades. The sudden outrage directed at Trump is therefore performative hypocrisy, nothing more.

A president is not obligated to plunge his nation into full-scale war to save his citizens. On the contrary, global interests favor precision. If neutralizing a single individual prevents the deaths of hundreds of thousands of civilians and soldiers on both sides, then choosing one target over mass bloodshed is not only pragmatic—it is morally superior.

This case is not even an assassination. It is the lawful apprehension of an accused criminal and his presentation before a legitimate court, with due process, transparency, and judicial oversight.

Let this be unequivocally clear: absent credible evidence that Maduro orchestrated or facilitated large-scale drug trafficking into the United States, his detention would constitute a serious violation of international law. Under such circumstances, he would be entitled to immediate release and repatriation to Venezuela, and the United States would be legally obligated to provide substantial compensation for such an unlawful act.

But as long as public evidence indicates that Venezuela’s former leader was a central actor in the systematic poisoning of millions of Americans with lethal narcotics, no legal commentator with intellectual integrity has the right to shed crocodile tears or masquerade as a defender of justice. There is no such thing as a legal right to mass-harm immunity.

If the evidence proves that Maduro functioned as a drug baron who poisoned an entire nation, then President Trump did not merely act within his authority—he fulfilled his obligation. And the world should applaud the fact that he did so cleanly, precisely, and with minimal harm to innocents, rather than launching a full-scale war that would have slaughtered Venezuelans and Americans alike.

The sole purpose of law—any law—is to protect citizens, not elites. Any law that obstructs that purpose loses its binding force on those it fails to protect. This is the foundational principle of international law, whether explicitly written or self-evident to anyone not willfully obtuse.

Did Venezuela’s oil and mineral wealth factor into Trump’s decision? Probably. So what? Criminal assets are seized every day worldwide, and states profit from them routinely. The existence of secondary benefits does not invalidate an otherwise justified act.

The issue is not whether one supports or opposes Trump or Maduro; the issue is whether one supports or opposes the poisoning of American citizens with narcotic drugs. And if Trump saved the lives of millions of Americans by successfully neutralizing a drug lord, that act stands above any personal like or dislike.

If President Trump captured a man responsible for mass narcotics trafficking and global poisoning, then he did not violate international law—he enforced, in creative and effective way its only legitimate purpose: the protection of the people that law claims to serve.

Newsletter

Related Articles

Beautiful Virgin Islands
0:00
0:00
Close
UK Prime Minister Starmer Reaffirms Support for Danish Sovereignty Over Greenland Amid U.S. Pressure
UK Support Bolsters U.S. Seizure of Russian-Flagged Tanker Marinera in Atlantic Strike on Sanctions Evasion
The Claim That Maduro’s Capture and Trial Violate International Law Is Either Legally Illiterate—or Deliberately Deceptive
UK Data Watchdog Probes Elon Musk’s X Over AI-Generated Grok Images Amid Surge in Non-Consensual Outputs
Prince Harry to Return to UK for Court Hearing Without Plans to Meet King Charles III
UK Confirms Support for US Seizure of Russian-Flagged Oil Tanker in North Atlantic
Béla Tarr, Visionary Hungarian Filmmaker, Dies at Seventy After Long Illness
UK and France Pledge Military Hubs Across Ukraine in Post-Ceasefire Security Plan
Prince Harry Poised to Regain UK Security Cover, Clearing Way for Family Visits
UK Junk Food Advertising Ban Faces Major Loophole Allowing Brand-Only Promotions
Maduro’s Arrest Without The Hague Tests International Law—and Trump’s Willingness to Break It
German Intelligence Secretly Intercepted Obama’s Air Force One Communications
The U.S. State Department’s account in Persian: “President Trump is a man of action. If you didn’t know it until now, now you do—do not play games with President Trump.”
Fake Mainstream Media Double Standard: Elon Musk Versus Mamdani
HSBC Leads 2026 Mortgage Rate Cuts as UK Lending Costs Ease
US Joint Chiefs Chairman Outlines How Operation Absolute Resolve Was Carried Out in Venezuela
Starmer Welcomes End of Maduro Era While Stressing International Law and UK Non-Involvement
Korean Beauty Turns Viral Skincare Into a Global Export Engine
UK Confirms Non-Involvement in U.S. Military Action Against Venezuela
UK Terror Watchdog Calls for Australian-Style Social Media Ban to Protect Teenagers
Iranian Protests Intensify as Another Revolutionary Guard Member Is Killed and Khamenei Blames the West
Delta Force Identified as Unit Behind U.S. Operation That Captured Venezuela’s President
Europe’s Luxury Sanctions Punish Russian Consumers While a Sanctions-Circumvention Industry Thrives
Berkshire’s Buffett-to-Abel Transition Tests Whether a One-Man Trust Model Can Survive as a System
Fraud in European Central Bank: Lagarde’s Hidden Pay Premium Exposes a Transparency Crisis at the European Central Bank
Trump Announces U.S. Large-Scale Strike on Venezuela, Declares President Maduro and Wife Captured
Tesla Loses EV Crown to China’s BYD After Annual Deliveries Decline in 2025
UK Manufacturing Growth Reaches 15-Month Peak as Output and Orders Improve in December
Beijing Threatened to Scrap UK–China Trade Talks After British Minister’s Taiwan Visit
Newly Released Files Reveal Tony Blair Pressured Officials Over Iraq Death Case Involving UK Soldiers
Top Stocks and Themes to Watch in 2026 as Markets Enter New Year with Fresh Momentum
No UK Curfew Ordered as Deepfake TikTok Falsely Attributes Decree to Prime Minister Starmer
Europe’s Largest Defence Groups Set to Return Nearly Five Billion Dollars to Shareholders in Twenty Twenty-Five
Abu Dhabi ‘Capital of Capital’: How Abu Dhabi Rose as a Sovereign Wealth Power
Diamonds Are Powering a New Quantum Revolution
Trump Threatens Strikes Against Iran if Nuclear Programme Is Restarted
Apple Escalates Legal Fight by Appealing £1.5 Billion UK Ruling Over App Store Fees
UK Debt Levels Sit Mid-Range Among Advanced Economies Despite Rising Pressures
UK Plans Royal Diplomacy with King Charles and Prince William to Reinvigorate Trade Talks with US
King Charles and Prince William Poised for Separate 2026 US Visits to Reinforce UK-US Trade and Diplomatic Ties
Apple Moves to Appeal UK Ruling Ordering £1.5 Billion in Customer Overcharge Damages
King Charles’s 2025 Christmas Message Tops UK Television Ratings on Christmas Day
The Battle Over the Internet Explodes: The United States Bars European Officials and Ignites a Diplomatic Crisis
Princesses Beatrice and Eugenie Join Royal Family at Sandringham Christmas Service
Fine Wine Investors Find Little Cheer in Third Year of Falls
UK Mortgage Rates Edge Lower as Bank of England Base Rate Cut Filters Through Lending Market
U.S. Supermarket Gives Customers Free Groceries for Christmas After Computer Glitch
Air India ‘Finds’ a Plane That Vanished 13 Years Ago
Caviar and Foie Gras? China Is Becoming a Luxury Food Powerhouse
Hong Kong Climbs to Second Globally in 2025 Tourism Rankings Behind Bangkok
×