רוביא זאגט אז עקספערטן זענען קלאונס
U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio pushed back against analysts comparing the U.S. operation in Venezuela to past interventions in Iraq, Libya, or Afghanistan. In a January 3, 2026, Meet the Press interview, Rubio stated, “The 'experts' are clowns. Venezuela looks nothing like Libya, Iraq, Afghanistan, or the Middle East — other than the Iranian agents running through there plotting against America. These are Western countries. People need to stop ascribing apples to oranges.”
Rubio’s remarks were made in the context of the U.S. military’s capture of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro earlier that day, executed in a swift strike targeting Maduro and his inner circle. The operation was framed as a precision action against drug cartels and Iranian-linked operatives, rather than a full-scale invasion.
Maduro is now in U.S. custody, facing federal charges related to narco-terrorism, drug trafficking, and weapons possession, with authorities planning a transitional administration to stabilize the country. Rubio emphasized that regional context, geographic proximity, and the presence of Iranian-backed criminal networks distinguish Venezuela from the conflicts often cited by critics.
The Secretary argued that dismissing these differences overlooks the operation’s limited scope and strategic intent. By highlighting the contrast, Rubio aimed to clarify that the intervention was narrowly focused, operationally precise, and designed to neutralize immediate threats to U.S. security and regional stability.