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Home Local news Maduro’s Arrest and US Leadership Ambitions in Venezuela: Unpacking the Legal Implications
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Maduro’s Arrest and US Leadership Ambitions in Venezuela: Unpacking the Legal Implications

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Capture of Maduro and US claim it will run Venezuela raise new legal questions
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Published on 03 January 2026
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WASHINGTON – The recent capture of Venezuela’s president by the Trump administration and the subsequent intention to oversee the country have sparked intense debate over the legality of such actions as part of the broader U.S. strategy against the South American nation.

The dramatic arrest of Nicolás Maduro, who is now being transported to New York on a U.S. warship to face charges of narcoterrorism conspiracy, stands out as one of the most aggressive American maneuvers against an autocratic regime, drawing comparisons to historical actions in Panama and Iraq. Legal experts highlight the unprecedented nature of this operation, which followed a surprise U.S. military incursion into Caracas marked by overnight explosions.

“This is an overtly illegal and criminal action,” commented Jimmy Gurule, a professor at Notre Dame Law School and a former assistant U.S. attorney.

Mark Nevitt, a former Navy attorney and current law professor at Emory University, remarked, “There is no legal foundation for entering a foreign country to apprehend its leader without an extradition treaty in place.”

This bold move concludes a period of heightened U.S. military activities in the region, including the targeting of boats alleged to be involved in drug trafficking and the seizure of oil tankers near Venezuela. The administration has reportedly conducted 35 maritime strikes, resulting in over 115 casualties since September.

Michael Schmitt, a former Air Force lawyer and professor emeritus at the U.S. Naval War College, emphasized that both the boat strikes and the capture of Maduro represent clear breaches of international law.

Maduro’s arrest on anniversary of Noriega’s surrender

Maduro’s arrest came 36 years to the date of the surrender of Panama’s strongman Manuel Noriega, a notable milestone in American involvement in the Western Hemisphere. The U.S. invaded Panama in 1989 to arrest Noriega on drug trafficking charges.

In Panama, however, U.S. national security interests were directly at stake in the form of the Panama Canal as well as the safety of American citizens and U.S. military installations in the country.

By contrast, Congress has not authorized any American military strike or law enforcement move against Venezuela.

While U.S. agents have a long history of snatching defendants abroad to execute arrest warrants without authorization, federal courts have long deferred to the White House in foreign policy and national security matters.

For example, U.S. bounty hunters, working under the direction of the Drug Enforcement Administration, in 1990 abducted in Mexico a doctor accused of killing DEA agent Enrique “Kiki” Camarena.

“Courts give great deference to the president on issues related to national security,” said Gurule, who led the prosecution against Camarena’s killers. “But great deference does not mean absolute deference and unfettered authority to do anything.”

Congress has yet to authorize or ban US actions

Trump’s administration has declared the drug cartels operating from Venezuela to be unlawful combatants and has said the United States is now in an “armed conflict” with them, according to an administration memo obtained in October by The Associated Press.

The memo appears to represent an extraordinary assertion of presidential war powers, with Trump effectively declaring that trafficking of drugs into the U.S. amounts to armed conflict requiring the use of military force. That is a new rationale for past and future actions.

Congress, which has broad authority to authorize or prohibit the president’s war powers, has failed to do either, even as lawmakers from both political parties grow increasingly uneasy with the military actions in the region, particularly after it was revealed that U.S. forces killed two survivors of a boat attack with a follow-up strike.

Schmitt said there is no other way to characterize what has happened other than “as a state of war between the United States and Venezuela.”

“Lawyers call it international armed conflict,” Schmitt said. “Lay people call it war. So as a matter of law, we are now at war with Venezuela because the use of hostilities between two states clearly triggers an internal armed conflict.”

War powers vote ahead

Congressional leaders of the “gang of eight,” which includes House and Senate leaders from both political parties as well as lawmakers leading on the Intelligence committees, were notified early Saturday after operations began, according to a person who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the sensitive matter.

House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., said the administration “is working to schedule briefings” for lawmakers when they return to Washington next week.

But Democratic lawmakers warned that in veering from the rule of law, the administration is potentially greenlighting other countries such as China or Russia to do the same.

“Once this line is crossed, the rules that restrain global chaos begin to collapse, and authoritarian regimes will be the first to exploit it,” said Sen. Mark Warner of Virginia, the top Democrat on the Senate Intelligence Committee.

“America’s strength comes from our commitment to the rule of law, democratic norms, and constitutional restraint,” he said. “When we abandon those principles, even in the name of confronting bad actors, we weaken our credibility, endanger global stability, and invite abuses of power that will long outlast any single presidency.”

Next week, the Senate is expected to try again to curtail Trump’s actions, with a vote expected on a bipartisan war powers resolution that would block the use of U.S. forces against Venezuela unless authorized by Congress.

Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., said he is grateful for the armed forces “who carried out this necessary action.” He said he spoke to Secretary of State Marco Rubio and wants more information.

“I look forward to receiving further briefings from the administration on this operation as part of its comprehensive counternarcotics strategy when the Senate returns to Washington next week,” Thune said.

Rubio said at a briefing Saturday with Trump that because of the nature of the surprise operation, it was not something that could be shared beforehand with the lawmakers.

___

Goodman reported from Miami.

Copyright 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.

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