https://arab.news/yr4du

By attacking Venezuela, seizing its president and promising to “run” the country indefinitely — all without any congressional or UN authorization — US President Donald Trump may well have shredded what little is left of international norms and opened the way to new acts of aggression from US rivals China and Russia on the world stage, some experts say.

In return, Trump probably achieved little in the way of stopping narcotics flows into the US, even as he asserts what he calls the “Trump corollary” to the Monroe Doctrine in his new National Security Strategy, which aims “to restore American preeminence in the Western Hemisphere.”

While it is true that much of the world and, by most accounts, a majority of Venezuelans did not see President Nicolas Maduro as legitimate — and Maduro has been indicted in the US on charges of being a drug trafficker — Trump has now set a potentially devastating precedent, some critics and experts say. Beijing and Moscow could decide to act in similar fashion against regional leaders whom they deem to be threats — especially in Ukraine and Taiwan — all without worrying about the legitimacy of such actions.

“If the United States asserts the right to use military force to invade and capture foreign leaders it accuses of criminal conduct, what prevents China from claiming the same authority over Taiwan’s leadership?” Democratic US Sen. Mark Warner, the vice chairman of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, said in a statement. “What stops Russian President Vladimir Putin from asserting a similar justification to abduct Ukraine’s president? Once this line is crossed, the rules that restrain global chaos begin to collapse, and authoritarian regimes will be the first to exploit it.”