I read President Trump’s claim that Venezuela will hand over up to 50 million barrels of oil to the United States with disbelief and alarm. Framed as a deal, it sounds far more like a shakedown. When a powerful country uses pressure, force, or regime change and then announces control over another nation’s primary resource, the language of “agreement” rings hollow.
I have watched this pattern before. We saw it in Iraq, where talk of liberation masked a war driven by oil, chaos, and lies that cost millions of lives. We saw it in Iran in 1953, when the CIA and MI6 overthrew a democratically elected leader for nationalizing oil—an act that helped set the stage for decades of hostility and a theocracy that still brutalizes Iranian women today.
Now Venezuela appears to be next. Oil presented as payment, controlled by Washington, is not partnership; it is coercion. It undermines international law, fuels resentment, and confirms the worst fears many nations hold about U.S. intentions.
America should stand for sovereignty, fairness, and diplomacy—not extraction at gunpoint. History shows where this road leads, and it is never to peace.