By Inderjit Badhwar
This week’s cover story is not about Venezuela alone. It is about a moment when the architecture of restraint—legal, constitutional, moral—gave way to raw assertion of power.
Kenneth Tiven documents what may become one of the most consequential acts of this US presidency: the extrajudicial seizure of a foreign leader without Congressional authorization, international mandate, or articulated endgame. History will debate its legality. The present must confront its meaning.
For generations, American power—however imperfectly exercised—was bound by procedure. War powers required debate. Treaties required consensus. The law imposed friction. That friction mattered. What we are witnessing now is governance without friction.
The Donald Trump administration’s Venezuela operation was not preceded by public justification, legal rationale, or diplomatic groundwork. It relied instead on immunity doctrines, partisan silence, and executive momentum. This is not decisiveness; it is erosion.
Why should India care?
Because global order is not dismantled only by adversaries—it is weakened when its architects abandon it. When the United States normalizes unilateral force, smaller nations lose the protective value of law. When NATO is treated as expendable, collective security frays. When Congress becomes ornamental, democracy becomes performative.
India, Brazil, South Africa—nations navigating strategic autonomy within BRICS—are watching closely. If American commitments become transactional, if law yields to personality, alliances will realign not out of ideology, but necessity.
The Venezuela episode also underscores a dangerous domestic feedback loop. Lawlessness abroad does not stay abroad. The same disregard for process fuels extremism at home, as seen in Minnesota and elsewhere. When leadership models impunity, society imitates it.
This magazine has long argued that power without accountability is instability disguised as strength. Tiven’s analysis compels us to ask uncomfortable questions: What replaces order when law is sidelined? Who fills the vacuum when institutions are hollowed out? And how long before the exception becomes the norm?
The answers will not come from slogans or speeches. They will come from whether citizens, courts, and legislatures reclaim their roles—or surrender them entirely.
This is why this story matters. Not because Maduro was taken—but because restraint was left behind.
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