70% of US Public Opposes Military Attack on Venezuela
Jake Johnson for Common Dreams

New survey results show that Americans strongly oppose US military action against Venezuela as the Trump administration privately weighs options for land strikes against the South American country—as well as possible covert action targeting the government of President Nicolás Maduro.
The CBS News/YouGov survey, published on Sunday, found that 70% of
Americans—including 91% of Democrats and 42% of Republicans—are against the “US
taking military action in Venezuela,” and a majority don’t believe a direct
attack on Venezuela would even achieve the Trump administration’s stated goal
of reducing the flow of drugs to the United States.

The survey data came amid reports that the Trump
administration is set to launch “a potentially deadly new phase” of its campaign
against Maduro’s government, which has responded to the US president’s threats
and military buildup in the Caribbean with a large
mobilization of troops and weaponry.
Citing two unnamed US officials, Reuters reported on Sunday that “covert operations
would likely be the first part of the new action against Maduro.” The outlet
quoted one anonymous official as saying Trump is “prepared to use every element
of American power” to achieve his stated goals in the region.
On Monday, as the New York Times reported, the chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of
Staff is set to visit “Puerto Rico and one of the several Navy warships
dispatched to the Caribbean Sea to combat drug trafficking as the Trump
administration weighs the possibility of a broader military campaign against
Venezuela.”
Gen. Dan Caine, the top US military officer, has “been a
major architect of what the Pentagon calls
Operation Southern Spear, the largest buildup of American naval forces in the
Caribbean since the Cuban Missile Crisis and the blockade of Cuba in 1962,”
the Times added.
Also on Monday, the Trump administration formally designated Maduro and top officials in
his government members of a foreign terrorist organization, a move that
the White House believes
expands US military options in Venezuela.
While polling
data has consistently shown that the US public opposes military
intervention in Venezuela by significant margins, Republicans in Congress have
thus far blocked action to prevent the Trump
administration from attacking the country and bombing vessels in international
waters without lawmakers’ approval.
Al Jazeera columnist Belén Fernández wrote Sunday that “it should come as no
surprise by now that the president who campaigned on keeping the US out of wars
and then promptly bombed Iran has now found another conflict in
which to embroil the country.”
“And as is par for the course in US imperial belligerence,
the rationale for aggression against Venezuela doesn’t hold water,” Fernández
added. “For example, the Trump administration has strived to pin the blame for
the fentanyl crisis in the US on Maduro. But there’s a slight problem—which is
that Venezuela doesn’t even produce the synthetic opioid in question.”
Late last week, a group of House Democrats led
by Seth Moulton of Massachusetts announced a new legislative effort aimed at
preventing the Trump administration from attacking Venezuela without
congressional authorization.
The bill, titled the No Unauthorized Force in Venezuela Act,
would bar the White House from spending federal funds on military action
against Venezuela absent specific congressional approval.
“We owe our service members clarity, legality, and
leadership—not threats, not chaos, and not another unnecessary conflict,” said
Moulton. “This legislation draws the line the president refuses to draw. It
protects our troops, reasserts Congress’ constitutional role, and ensures we do
not sleepwalk into another ill-advised war.”