Sorry Ferdia but this is too much wall of text. As I see right now, the matter is rather simple, Trump wants the war to end but to not be blamed for by stopping all support. He wants to be regarded as deal maker for a peace deal. I don't think he is aware of cares much about much of the content in that wall of text of yours. If it is what I think Europe + Ukraine will be at a huge loss.
im away for a few days so here is my final wall of text XD
The U.S. conflict with Venezuela is often presented as a fight against drugs or “narco-terrorism,” but that is a story, not the substance. At a structural level, this is a struggle over oil, sovereignty, and hemispheric control — a modern test of the Monroe Doctrine. The crisis did not appear suddenly; it has been building for more than a century. Venezuela’s enormous oil reserves have long been a source of wealth and leverage, but for decades that wealth was extracted primarily by foreign companies, especially U.S. firms like Standard Oil and Gulf Oil. Early contracts and concessions allowed these companies to profit massively while Venezuela received only a fraction of the value of its resources. From the Venezuelan perspective, this was exploitation: the country’s natural wealth was removed for the benefit of outsiders, while domestic development lagged. Political leverage accompanied economic extraction, as U.S. involvement shaped infrastructure, oil policy, and even domestic governance. This history of resource exploitation and external interference created deep-seated resentment toward the United States — a historical memory that still drives hostility today.
The Monroe Doctrine, announced in 1823, established the principle that the entire Western Hemisphere — North, Central, and South America, plus the Caribbean — was considered a U.S. sphere of influence. European powers were warned against interference, and over time the doctrine evolved to justify U.S. intervention whenever it deemed regional independence or sovereignty a challenge to its strategic interests. In practice, it became a framework through which the United States asserts that no major power may establish a foothold anywhere in the Americas without Washington’s approval. Venezuela, by aligning with Russia, China, and Iran while controlling vast oil reserves, represents exactly the kind of challenge the Monroe Doctrine was designed to prevent — a strategically independent state in the hemisphere operating outside U.S. control.
For decades, Venezuela was a reliable supplier of oil and a relatively quiet partner in the hemisphere. But Chávez’s rise changed the dynamic. He used oil wealth to project influence, fund regional allies, and resist U.S. dominance. The United States responded not with diplomacy alone, but with sanctions, economic pressure, political support for opposition forces, and selective military action. Every measure is designed to enforce compliance — not to eradicate narcotics. The “drug narrative” is a convenient frame for domestic audiences and international justification, but the real leverage comes from oil, geography, and Venezuela’s ability to resist the U.S.-led order in the Americas. Historical exploitation is the root of Venezuela’s hostility: decades of resource extraction, political interference, and U.S. dominance created a memory of intervention and dispossession that Chávez and Maduro have invoked to consolidate domestic support and resist Washington’s pressure.
This is a conflict rooted in the Monroe Doctrine. A large, oil-rich country openly aligned with rival powers is not merely inconvenient; it is a challenge to the U.S.’s historic sphere of influence. Every strike, every sanctions package, every seizure of oil shipments is intended to remind Caracas that sovereignty has limits when it clashes with U.S. strategic interests. Coercion, not persuasion, is the tactic, and it punishes both the government and the population, making the state lean further on allies like Russia and China to survive.
Economically and politically, Venezuela is under tremendous strain, yet the country endures. Oil — the true lifeblood of this struggle — is both a target and a shield. The U.S. seeks to control access, shape contracts, and deny rivals strategic leverage, while Venezuela uses it to sustain itself and resist domination. This is not a battle over narcotics; it is a battle over who sets the rules in the Americas — the entire hemisphere — who controls resources, and who can act independently without Washington’s permission.
Venezuela remains firm. Its leadership will not bow to U.S. pressure easily. Any temporary concessions would not resolve the fundamental conflict: a U.S.-dominated hemisphere versus a Venezuela asserting autonomy through oil wealth and historical resistance to foreign exploitation. Like Korea, Ukraine, or other protracted conflicts, any settlement would be a pause, not a resolution. The strategic tide continues rising, and the U.S. is navigating waters defined not by drugs, but by decades of power, oil, historical grievance, and hemispheric politics, all under the shadow of the Monroe Doctrine.
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the TLDR here is: If we want to condemn Russia, lets condemn the US as well.