Operation Absolute Resolve: Unilateral US Military Intervention in Venezuela

The United States launched a unilateral military intervention in Venezuela, bombing infrastructure and capturing the sitting head of state, without Congressional authorization, UN Security Council mandate, or self-defense justification. International legal experts, the UN Secretary-General, and governments worldwide condemned the operation as a violation of the UN Charter.

On January 3, 2026, the US Armed Forces launched Operation Absolute Resolve — bombing infrastructure across northern Venezuela, suppressing air defenses, and conducting a special operations raid on Maduro's compound in Caracas to capture President Nicolas Maduro and his wife. The operation was conducted without Congressional authorization or UN Security Council mandate.

Executive summary

What this record documents

  • The US launched Operation Absolute Resolve on January 3, 2026, bombing Venezuelan infrastructure and capturing President Nicolas Maduro without UN Security Council authorization, Congressional authorization, or self-defense justification.
  • The operation included bombing to suppress air defenses across northern Venezuela followed by a special operations raid on Maduro's compound in Caracas.
  • Chatham House concluded the intervention 'has no justification in international law.' The UN Secretary-General called it 'a dangerous precedent.' The New York City Bar Association called on Congress to halt the violations.
  • The forcible capture and extraction of a sitting head of state violates the sovereignty of nations and has no precedent in modern international law outside of Security Council-authorized interventions.
  • The operation preceded by a naval blockade of Venezuela in December 2025, itself condemned by UN experts as an act of war violating international law.

Timeline

Sequence of events

  1. Naval blockade of Venezuela announced

    President Trump announces a 'TOTAL AND COMPLETE BLOCKADE' of Venezuelan oil tankers. The US Navy begins seizing vessels. UN experts condemn the blockade as a violation of international law. A blockade is traditionally considered an act of war.

  2. Operation Absolute Resolve launched

    At approximately 2:00 AM local time, the US Armed Forces launch Operation Absolute Resolve. Bombing campaigns target air defense infrastructure across northern Venezuela. A special operations team raids Maduro's compound in Caracas.

  3. Maduro and wife captured and extracted

    President Nicolas Maduro and his wife Cilia Flores are captured during the special operations raid and extracted from Venezuela to US custody.

  4. UN Secretary-General condemns the intervention

    UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres calls the US action a 'dangerous precedent' and convenes an emergency Security Council session.

  5. UN Security Council emergency session

    The UN Security Council holds an emergency session on the Venezuela intervention. Broad international condemnation from African, Asian, and Latin American governments. Most NATO states express support for the US action.

  6. Chatham House publishes legal analysis

    Chatham House, a leading international affairs think tank, publishes analysis concluding that the US capture of President Maduro and attacks on Venezuela have no justification in international law.

Analysis

Reporting, legal context, and impact

What Happened

On January 3, 2026, at approximately 2:00 AM local time, the United States Armed Forces launched "Operation Absolute Resolve" against Venezuela. The operation had two phases:

  1. Air campaign: Bombing runs targeting air defense infrastructure across northern Venezuela to suppress Venezuelan air defenses.
  2. Special operations raid: A raid on the compound of President Nicolas Maduro in Caracas.

President Maduro and his wife Cilia Flores were captured during the raid and extracted to US custody.

The operation was conducted:

  • Without a UN Security Council resolution authorizing the use of force
  • Without Congressional authorization under the War Powers Resolution
  • Without any claim of self-defense — Venezuela had not attacked the United States

Preceding Naval Blockade

The military intervention was preceded by a naval blockade announced in mid-December 2025. President Trump declared a "TOTAL AND COMPLETE BLOCKADE OF ALL SANCTIONED OIL TANKERS going into, and out of, Venezuela." The US Navy began seizing vessels near Venezuela. UN experts condemned the blockade as a violation of "fundamental rules of international law." A blockade is traditionally considered an act of war under international law.

The Center for International Policy described the blockade as "an act of war" and called on Congress to act.

Legal Analysis

The Foundational Prohibition: UN Charter Article 2(4)

The UN Charter, to which the United States is a party and which the United States helped draft, contains the foundational prohibition of modern international law at Article 2(4): "All Members shall refrain in their international relations from the threat or use of force against the territorial integrity or political independence of any state."

There are only two exceptions to this prohibition:

  1. Self-defense (Article 51) — which requires an armed attack. Venezuela had not attacked the United States.
  2. Security Council authorization (Chapter VII) — which was not sought or obtained.

Neither exception applies. The intervention therefore violates the most fundamental rule of the post-World War II international order.

Crime of Aggression: Rome Statute Article 8bis

The Rome Statute defines the crime of aggression as "the use of armed force by a State against the sovereignty, territorial integrity or political independence of another State." The definition encompasses invasion, military occupation, bombardment, and blockade.

Operation Absolute Resolve involved bombardment of Venezuelan infrastructure, invasion by special operations forces, and the forcible capture and extraction of the head of state. It satisfies multiple elements of the crime of aggression.

OAS Charter: Regional Non-Intervention Norm

The Charter of the Organization of American States, Article 19, provides: "No State or group of States has the right to intervene, directly or indirectly, for any reason whatever, in the internal or external affairs of any other State." This norm has particular force in the Western Hemisphere given the history of US interventions in Latin America.

Domestic Law: War Powers Resolution

Under US domestic law, the War Powers Resolution requires Congressional authorization for the introduction of US Armed Forces into hostilities. No such authorization was obtained. While this is a domestic law violation rather than an international law violation, it compounds the illegality of the operation by demonstrating that even the US government's own constitutional framework was circumvented.

Expert Consensus

The international legal consensus against the intervention is overwhelming:

  • Chatham House concluded the intervention "has no justification in international law."
  • The UN Secretary-General called it "a dangerous precedent."
  • Just Security published detailed analysis concluding the operation violates international law.
  • WOLA stated the intervention "violates international law."
  • The New York City Bar Association called on "Congress to act to halt the President's violations of U.S. and international law in Venezuela."
  • FactCheck.org reviewed the legal questions and found no credible legal justification.

Why This Is Classified Extreme

  • Violation of the foundational norm of international law: The prohibition on the use of force against the territorial integrity of another state is the cornerstone of the post-WWII international order. The United States helped establish this norm.
  • Forcible regime change: The capture and extraction of a sitting head of state by military force has no precedent in modern international law outside of Security Council-authorized actions.
  • No legal justification: Neither self-defense nor Security Council authorization — the only recognized exceptions to the prohibition on force — applies.
  • Crime of aggression: The operation satisfies the elements of the crime of aggression under the Rome Statute.
  • Broad international condemnation: Governments across Africa, Asia, and Latin America, as well as the UN Secretary-General, major think tanks, and bar associations condemned the intervention.
  • Dangerous precedent: If one state may unilaterally invade another, bomb its infrastructure, and capture its head of state without Security Council authorization or self-defense justification, the prohibition on the use of force is effectively nullified.

International Law Violations

  1. UN Charter Article 2(4): Prohibition on the use of force against the territorial integrity or political independence of any state. Violated by the bombing campaign, ground raid, and capture of the head of state.
  2. UN Charter Article 51: Self-defense exception inapplicable — Venezuela had not attacked the United States.
  3. Rome Statute Article 8bis: Crime of aggression — use of armed force against the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Venezuela.
  4. OAS Charter Article 19: Non-intervention obligation — no state has the right to intervene in the internal or external affairs of any other state.
  5. US War Powers Resolution: No Congressional authorization for the introduction of armed forces into hostilities.
  6. UN Charter Article 39: Only the Security Council may determine the existence of a threat to peace and decide on enforcement measures. No Security Council resolution was sought.

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