The U.S. attack on Venezuela
The U.S. attack on Venezuela is not about drugs, not about terrorism,
and not about democracy.
This attack is about one thing.
The survival of the U.S. dollar.
The real story begins in 1974.
An agreement was made between Henry Kissinger and Saudi Arabia.
Every barrel of oil sold in the world would be priced only in U.S. dollars.
In return, the United States would provide military protection.
That single agreement turned the dollar into the center of the global economy.
Every country needed dollars to buy oil.
America kept printing money.
The world kept working.
This is the “petrodollar system.”
This is the real foundation of U.S. power.
Not aircraft carriers.
Not military bases.
But this system.
Now the problem is Venezuela.
Venezuela has 303 billion barrels of oil.
The largest reserves in the world.
More than Saudi Arabia.
About 20 percent of global oil.
What did Venezuela do?
It stopped selling oil in dollars.
It began selling in yuan, euros, and rubles.
It bypassed SWIFT.
It tried to join BRICS.
It created direct payment systems with China.
In simple terms, it challenged the dollar.
And history tells us what happens next.
In 2000, Saddam Hussein announced that Iraq would sell oil in euros.
In 2003, Iraq was invaded.
Saddam was killed.
Oil returned to the dollar.
In 2009, Gaddafi talked about a gold-backed African currency, the “gold dinar.”
In 2011, NATO destroyed Libya.
Gaddafi was killed.
The gold dinar was buried.
And now Maduro.
He controls five times more oil than Saddam and Gaddafi combined.
Active de-dollarization.
Partnerships with China, Russia, and Iran.
This is not coincidence.
This is a clear pattern.
Challenge the petrodollar,
face regime change.
U.S. officials openly say that Venezuela’s oil really belongs to America,
because U.S. companies operated there a century ago.
But the real issue goes deeper than that.
The petrodollar is already weakening.
After Ukraine, Russia is selling oil in rubles and yuan.
Iran has traded without dollars for years.
Saudi Arabia is talking about yuan.
China has built a SWIFT alternative called CIPS.
BRICS is building its own financial system.
If Venezuela, with its 303 billion barrels of oil,
joins BRICS,
this process accelerates many times over.
That is why this attack exists.
The message is simple.
Challenge the dollar, and we will bomb you.
But the problem is this message is not stopping de-dollarization.
It is speeding it up.
Because the Global South now understands that the dollar is not maintained by economic strength,
but by violence.
And when a currency needs bombs to survive,
it is already dead.
Venezuela is not the beginning.
This is the final stage of panic.
Now the question is not whether the world will bow.
The question is when the world will call this bluff.
The American bully operates above the global order. It is free to attack any country and overthrow governments that go against its interests. There is no rule of international law for the United States.
Venezuela is the country with the largest oil reserves in the world, with 303 billion barrels of proven oil. The United States considers any oil-rich country as its own. Through conspiracy and brute force, it removes anyone who stands in its way. At the end of the year, U.S. President Donald Trump said about Venezuela, “Our oil rights were taken away and our companies were expelled, and we want them back.”
For months, the U.S. kept accusing Venezuela of drug trafficking. The Venezuelan government also offered serious negotiations. But violating the global order, the American bully entered Venezuela’s capital, Caracas, carried out an operation, and took President Nicolás Maduro along with his wife to New York.
U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio says that Nicolás Maduro is not the legitimate president. Amazing. Now the American bully will decide who is fit to rule a country, who must be removed, and who they want to place in power. Is it legal for the American bully to enter a country and carry out an operation to kidnap its president? One thing is absolutely clear. On a global level, talk of human rights or democracy has become nothing more than a fashion statement, something the U.S. uses for regime change.
The U.S. military entered Venezuela with ease and carried out the operation. The local security forces showed no resistance. This clearly shows that the CIA had already controlled them before the operation, and that Venezuelan military generals compromised the country’s sovereignty. The vice president and defense minister of Venezuela are issuing harmless statements, but in reality they appear to have completely surrendered. Regime change operations have happened before, but kidnapping a president and his wife from a country’s capital is an extremely shocking incident.
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