The Venezuela Playbook: How Australian Media Sold Us Another War

Helicopters, explosions, oil pump, and corporate logos.

Part One: The Anatomy of an Imperial Project

“Venezuelan strongman Maduro seized in daring US operation.”

That’s how our ABC led its coverage when American forces stormed Caracas in January. Over at The Australian, it was “Narcoterrorist-in-chief finally brought to justice,” a newly-minted international crime, ingeniously linking two scourges, drugs and terror.

The Sydney Morning Herald went with the risible “Democracy’s long-delayed victory in Venezuela.”

Not one dare say that what we’d just witnessed was an illegal military invasion of a sovereign nation. Dear SMH, how is the invasion democratic? Not one asked why Australian media were suddenly experts on Venezuelan “narcoterrorism”, a freshly-pressed grape of wrath? Or brand-new imperial panic button.

And not a soul bothered to note that we’ve seen this movie before, frame for frame, lie for lie.

Welcome to the second level of contempt: not just the violence itself, in which we all through our membership of various organisations failed the people of Venezuela, but the propaganda about the propaganda, served up by our own trusted news sources.

It’s as if we’re too dim to remember Iraq’s WMDs or Libya’s “humanitarian intervention.” They’re counting on our goldfish memories, our inability to hold a pattern in our heads long enough to shout: “Hang about, haven’t we been down this path before?”

Narcoterrorism: The Empire’s Latest New Designer Label

Every imperial adventure needs its signature scare. Saddam had (invisible) WMDs that could strike London in 45 minutes. John Howard, hadn’t actually seen them but he was prepared to lie that proof existed. Gaddafi was about to massacre Benghazi. Assad gassed his own people (some of which was true, conveniently omitting our backing of jihadists fighting him). Now Maduro runs a “narcoterrorist state”, a portmanteau phrase that fuses two reliable panic buttons into one handy package.

If he could remember his earlier phrase, Trump would doubtless call Venezuela a shithole country.

But let’s be clear, we are being sold a smash and grab raid. Cool. Maduro had it coming. It’s Marketing 101 for illegal invasion. Drugs? Terrifying. Terrorism? Even worse. Mash them up and you’ve got a villain so vile that international law is just a mere technicality. Far-fetched? It’s a hoot. The United States; the world’s largest consumer of cocaine, its biggest market and architect of the catastrophic “War on Drugs”, now poses as global sheriff, with just a whiff of the crusader against narcotics? Hilarious.

But the crusader copy writes itself. And our media newshounds are selling it with a straight face.

It’s not the drugs. It’s the oil. Venezuela sits atop the world’s largest heavy sour crude oil reserves. Bigger than Saudi Arabia. Bigger than Iraq. And unlike those compliant petrostates, Venezuela has had the temerity to suggest that its oil might benefit Venezuelans rather than Exxon-Mobil shareholders.

That’s the real crime. The drugs are just the marketing.

Our media know this. They’re not stupid, just complicit. When The Australianquotes “Western intelligence sources” on Maduro’s drug empire, they’re parroting CIA talking points. When the ABC describes Venezuela as a “failed state,” they skip over how it got that way. And when they mention sanctions at all, it’s as a footnote, “pressure for reform”, not as the economic siege warfare it actually is.

But always check your oil. A reality check: Venezuela’s Orinoco Belt contains extra‑heavy, sulphur‑laden crude that’s expensive and technically finicky to extract and refine. CNN reports that gulf refineries in Texas and Louisiana are already tooled up for this dirty work—cheaper than retro-fitting to deal with local shale oil.

Despite Venezuela needing $58 billion for infrastructure upgrades, refining Venezuelan oil remains cheaper long-term due to low production costs and refinery optimisation. This could stabilise US diesel amid tight global supply, potentially dropping American refining costs 10-20% versus Saudi or Canadian alternatives.

Economic Strangulation as Prelude to Invasion

Since 2017, Washington has waged silent war on Venezuela, strangling its economy with a sadistic deliberation that would make any medieval besiegers green with envy. To be fair, corruption in Caracas and mismanagement helped. But billions in Venezuelan funds were frozen. Oil exports blocked. Access to global financial markets cut. Ships intercepted. Assets seized. The whole machinery of dollar dominance weaponised against a country whose real offence is daring to chart its own course.

The arithmetic of empire is written in bodies. Forty thousand preventable deaths from sanctions-induced medicine shortages by 2024, according to Physicians for Human Rights. Three hundred thousand Venezuelans with cancer, diabetes, HIV at risk of death because medical supplies can’t get through the blockade. Maternal mortality at 125 deaths per 100,000 live births. A population where 75% collectively lost an average of over 8 kilograms to hunger. Seven point six million people, nearly a quarter of the population, driven into exile, generating the largest displacement crisis in Latin American history.

UN human rights experts have condemned these sanctions as collective punishment, noting that unilateral coercive measures enforced through armed blockades violate international law. Human Rights Watch criticised the sanctions for lacking humanitarian exemptions. In 2025, UN rapporteurs called US actions “collective punishment,” violating international law by inducing suffering without UN Security Council approval. They are, in plain English, economic warfare against civilians.

Now Australian media perform their best trick: they report the humanitarian crisis while erasing its primary cause. Venezuela is “collapsing under Maduro’s mismanagement,” we’re told. True enough; the man couldn’t run a chook raffle. But the sanctions turbo-charged a crisis into a catastrophe, and that’s the bit that gets memory-holed. It’s like reporting on a bushfire while forgetting to mention the arsonist.

It’s America’s classic neocon playbook. Throttle the economy. Wait for the suffering to mount. Blame the government. Present military intervention as mercy. Rinse and repeat. We did this to Iraq. We did this to Libya. We did this to Syria. And now, with barely a change in script, we’re doing it to Venezuela while the ABC and its fellow travellers play their assigned role: cheerleaders for the latest passage in a very old US game play.

From Sanctions to Shock and Awe: The Long Con

The January military assault isn’t some sudden eruption. It is the logical endpoint of a strategy perfected over generations. The USA has been toppling Latin American governments since before most of us were born.

Guatemala’s Jacobo Árbenz in 1954, was overthrown for daring to redistribute land owned by United Fruit Company. Chile’s Allende was sent packing in 1973, because socialism and copper don’t mix (from Washington’s perspective). Panama’s Manuel Noriega in 1989.

Yes it’s the same narcotics pretext, when a former CIA asset outlived his usefulness. Nicaragua, Honduras, El Salvador, Haiti: the list reads like a greatest hits of manufactured regime change.

Each time, the script is identical. Step one: demonise the target government. (Check: Maduro’s been “dictator” and “strongman” in our papers for years, never mind that he’s been elected multiple times under international observation.) Step two: manufacture or exploit a crisis. (Check: sanctions created the crisis, now presented as evidence of governmental failure.) Step three: present military action as the only solution. (Check: “No choice but to act,” as the Pentagon spokesman put it, parroted faithfully by our lot.)

The “kidnapping” of Maduro; let’s call it what it is, not “arrest”, represents peak imperial theatre. A sitting president of a sovereign nation, indicted by a US court on charges of narcoterrorism and having guns and stuff, (the real charge sheet is preposterous), seized in a military raid that violated every principle of international law, paraded before cameras like a trophy buck.

Legal scholars and a UN Secretary-General have warned this sets a catastrophic precedent. Without Security Council authorisation, without credible self-defence claims, this is simply illegal. An act of war.

But watch how Australian media runs with it: as if it were a police procedural, not an invasion. “Wanted man captured.” “Fugitive seized.” The language of law enforcement, not the language of international aggression. This is propaganda by omission, the most insidious kind.

Australian Complicity: Our Shame

Australia isn’t some innocent bystander tutting from the sidelines. We’re up to our necks in this.

Check our UN voting record on Venezuela: lockstep with Washington, backing every condemnatory resolution, every sanctions package, every diplomatic manoeuvre designed to isolate Caracas. We’ve imposed our own sanctions; targeting oil, gold, and individual officials, all while the Australian press trumpet this as righteous punishment of corruption rather than a lethal punching-down in economic warfare.

Not spelled out: Through Five Eyes intelligence sharing, we’re part of the machinery that provided targeting data for the Caracas raid. Our Pine Gap facility, that polite lie of “joint defence,” played a role in communications and surveillance. We’re not just cheer-leading; we’re materially enabling the US.

And the media? They’re the propaganda arm of this operation, whether they admit it or not. When The Australian runs pieces about Venezuela’s “criminal regime” sourced entirely to the US State Department and the CIA-backed opposition, that’s just stenography, not journalism.

When the ABC describes Maduro as “widely regarded as illegitimate” without noting that “widely” means “by Western governments who want his oil,” that’s editorialising posing as fact.

Compare the coverage to Saudi Arabia, for example, a real autocracy that dismembers journalists, starves Yemen, and funds extremism globally. The press might tut occasionally, but there’s no drumbeat for regime change, no breathless coverage of Saudi “crimes against humanity,” no earnest panels discussing whether we have a “responsibility to protect” Yemeni children from starvation.

Why? Because the Saudis play ball with Western oil interests. Venezuela doesn’t. That’s the difference, and our media know it.

This is the second level of contempt I feel: they think we’re mugs. They think we won’t notice the pattern. They think we can’t hold two ideas together long enough to ask: “Hang on, didn’t they sell us this same pig in a poke before?”

The Oil They’re Not Talking About

Let’s cut through the smoke: this is about oil. Always has been, always will be.

Venezuela holds roughly 300 billion barrels of reserves; the largest in the world. After years of sanctions crippled Russian oil exports following Ukraine, and with OPEC playing hard to get on production increases, those reserves are irresistible to Washington. Add China’s deepening energy partnerships with Venezuela; Belt and Road investments, oil-for-loans deals, and you get the strategic picture.

Maduro’s great sin isn’t drugs or authoritarianism (Washington has backed far worse). It’s keeping Venezuela’s oil revenues at home instead of letting them flow north to Houston. It’s partnering with Beijing instead of bowing to the Monroe Doctrine. It’s being an example, however flawed, of resource nationalism in a region where the US prefers compliant client states.

The press mention the oil in passing, if at all. It’s treated as context, not cause. But follow the money, follow the barrels, and the whole “narcoterrorism” narrative reveals itself as window dressing for a very old-fashioned resource grab.

Chevron, notably, got a sanctions exemption in 2022 to restart Venezuelan operations. Funny how the “criminal narco-state” is fine for doing business with when it suits corporate interests, but requires military intervention when it doesn’t play ball politically.

The Human Cost: What They Won’t Count

And now, in the January strikes: at least 40 dead in the initial assault, Venezuelan and Cuban military personnel alongside civilians. An apartment block in Catia La Mar with its exterior wall blown off, one confirmed dead, others seriously injured. “Unspecified” casualties—that bureaucratic language that erases individual lives. The Venezuelan government is still counting bodies while the American press celebrates “liberation.”

Add to that the 115 people killed in the boat strikes from August through December 2025, fishermen and alleged traffickers alike, all part of the same operation. Governments and families of those killed say many were civilians, primarily fishers. The Pentagon insists they were all “narco-terrorists.” The bodies can’t argue back.

But this is developing information, casualties still being tallied. What we know for certain: Venezuelan Vice President Delcy Rodríguez confirmed deaths among both military and civilians. Trump confirmed two US soldiers injured. One US helicopter was hit but remained flyable. The 30-minute assault involved over 150 aircraft striking military bases, ports, communication facilities, and yes, civilian areas too.

Resistance: The Story They’re Burying

Here’s what should terrify the Pentagon but won’t make the ABC news: Venezuela isn’t collapsing in grateful relief. The Bolivarian militia, whether 1.6 million or government claims of eight million, represents a genuine popular defence force. Millions of Venezuelans, whatever they think of Maduro’s economic management, won’t thank the Americans for bombing their capital and kidnapping their president.

Across Latin America, governments from Mexico to Argentina have condemned the invasion. Not because they love Maduro; many don’t, but because they recognise the precedent: if Washington can do this to Venezuela, it can do it to anyone. Regional solidarity isn’t about personality; it’s about sovereignty.

China and Russia have issued sharp condemnations. They’ve got skin in the game: billions in loans and infrastructure investments that a US-installed puppet government might default on. This isn’t ideological—it’s the emerging reality of a multi-polar world where US military adventurism faces actual push-back.

And in the streets, from Caracas to Mexico City, from Barcelona to Sydney; protests are building. Not because protesters are Maduro fans, but because they’re sick of watching the same imperial playbook run again and again while their media gaslight them about “liberation” and “democracy promotion.”

The press is busting a gut to ignore or minimise this resistance.

Can’t have the narrative complicated by inconvenient facts like Latin American solidarity or popular opposition to invasion. Better to focus on the “drama” of Maduro’s capture, the “terrorism” charges, the grateful (CIA-vetted) Venezuelan exiles welcoming “freedom.”

Lest We Forget

What ought to enrage us: the utter contempt for our minds. They genuinely believe we won’t remember.

Colin Powell’s vial of “anthrax” at the UN, the aluminium tubes, the mobile weapons labs lies. Or Libya, where “protecting civilians” became regime change and now boasts open-air slave markets. Syria’s Assad was gassing his people (true) so we’d better arm the jihadists (catastrophic).

Won’t remember that every single time, the pattern is identical: demonisation, sanctions, crisis, intervention. And every single time, our media play their part in manufacturing consent.

The difference now? They’re not even trying that hard. The “narcoterrorism” frame is lazy; transparently so. But they’re banking on our scattered attention being too fragmented to notice. They’re counting on the dopamine hit of outrage at the “dictator” overwhelming any critical thought about whether invading a sovereign nation might be, you know, illegal and catastrophic.

This is what I mean by the second level of contempt. The violence itself is bad enough. But being propagandised about it by our own media, who know better but do it anyway? That’s the deepest cut.

What Comes Next

The US may have captured Maduro, but they haven’t captured Venezuela. Guerrilla resistance, regional backlash, and international condemnation are already brewing. This may not be the clean victory our media are selling. It could be messy, bloody, protracted; another forever war to add to the collection.

But then our media could “both-sides” Gaza. Australia is complicit. Our government will back it. Our media will sell it. And most of us will scroll past, troubled but not troubled enough to actually do anything.

Unless we start holding the pattern in our heads. Unless we start asking the questions our media won’t: Who benefits? What’s being omitted? Where have we seen this before?

The anatomy of an imperial project isn’t complicated. It’s the same operation, over and over. The only variable is whether we’re awake enough to recognise it.

Time to wake up.

[To be continued in Part Two: The Media’s Role in Manufacturing Consent]

This article was originally published on URBAN WRONSKI WRITES


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About David Tyler 183 Articles
David Tyler – (AKA Urban Wronski) was born in England, raised in New Zealand and an Australian resident since 1979. Urban Wronski grew up conflicted about his own national identity and continues to be deeply mistrustful of all nationalism, chauvinism, flags, politicians and everything else which divides and obscures our common humanity. He has always been enchanted by nature and by the extraordinary brilliance of ordinary men and women and the genius, the power and the poetry that is their vernacular. Wronski is now a full-time freelance writer who lives with his partner and editor Shay and their chooks, near the Grampians in rural Victoria and he counts himself the luckiest man alive. A former teacher of all ages and stages, from Tertiary to Primary, for nearly forty years, he enjoyed contesting the corporatisation of schooling to follow his own natural instinct for undifferentiated affection, approval and compassion for the young.

19 Comments

  1. Well, Trump is leading a narcissist terrorist state.

    It’s all about stealing the oil that belongs to the Venezuelans.

  2. Ian Joyner,

    It’s more than just stealing the oil. It’s about blockading China, which Australian governments have always indicated they are prepared to assist the US to do. Attacking oil tankers to prevent them from supplying China with Venezuelan oil was too messy, so they’ve seized the country and its oil wells instead.

  3. “Don’t you worry about that” all will be peace and tranquility when Trump rules the world.

  4. It’s always about the oil or other USAnian economic interests. Always. They’ve never really given a rat’s about anything else.

  5. Trump has repeated that he still intends to take Greenland and Panama although I note from today’s news that Marco Rubio says that he is not running Venezuela…..so who is?

    Major oil companies say that they need thirty to fifty years guarantee of security to make their investment worthwhile so it seems that Venezuela may be the 51st state!

  6. I wonder why successive LABOR feral governments have rationalised the actions of foreign owned multinational corporations greed for fresh natural resources in Australia by bending over in forelock touching subservience to the international corporate executives expert in all the skills of corruption for their own benefit.

    Rex Connor was correct; Australians should mine, process and manufacture their own natural resources and invest those profits in Australian public infrastructure across the nation, in regional & remote locations as well as digging up cities to facilitate over-crowding.

    The current Venezuelan invasion authorised by the demented POTUS to ”steal” the world’s largest proven & potential oil reserves is a stark warning that any military alliance is unlikely to prevent the same ”gun boat diplomacy” for any rare earth minerals, or indeed anything else.

    Remember, the 1975 overthrow of the democratically elected Whitlam LABOR government was ”encouraged” by comments from Whitlam that Australians should control the Pine Creek Spy Station, and executed with Royal assent and CIA support, all in the best interests of US foreign owned multinational corporations.

    This was only one of 80+ such interventions by US government interests since 1945, according to John Bolton, once US Secretary of State.

  7. Recall the American invasion of Iraq, initially named Operation OIL, until someone suggested that the name was a bit too suggestive of the real reason for the incursion, Operation Iraqi Liberation notwithstanding.

    With the majority of the planet’s oil cartels headquartered in the USA, and with the incessant lobbying by oil people for access to reserves, everywhere and always, it’s somewhat unsurprising that Dumbo sent in the troops to snaffle the Venezuelan black gold.

  8. America has a long history of coup d’états pre and post 22 November 1963….

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_coups_and_coup_attempts_by_country

    Of course, who happens to occupy THW and the Chair also makes a lot of difference.

    More so now with the 250th Anniversary of Independence of the American experiment, so 250 years is proof of the pudding, so to speak.

    All the rest is just stuff and noise to play politics as the Republicans, Democrats et al have always done.

    That’s a long time to play obvious musical chairs, and time for the game of FOG (fear, obligation & guilt) to change, globally.

  9. Sadly, you are correct, Australia has never stood on it’s own two feet!! Two hundred years of clutching the skirts of Britain and America, will we never learn?

  10. So much material for a strategic analysis: what would Don Vito do ?

    First the boss says, do something (make him an offer he can’t refuse) so the drones (in the bee sense) do it but the boss has no further plans and the drones are not authorised to do anything further – result : chaos [no disrespect to bees who are much better organised].

    Marco Rubio says that he is Secretary of State and it’s not up to him to run Venezuela.
    Pete Hegseth says that he is the War Supremo and this is not a war (definitely, definitely not a war !) so it’s not up to him to run Venezuela.

    Trump has three sons, call them “Sonny”, “Fredo” and “Mikey”.
    The question is, which one would the Don (Vito Corleone) select to run Venezuela? The youngest shows the greatest promise but is not yet ready; then there is the son-in-law!!!

    Of the enforcers, Luca Brasi is the most effective and as Trump follows closely the Godfather series and author Mario Puzo he will undoubtedly take his lead from there – perhaps ‘give this to Clemenza’.

    Sorry if you’re not familiar with the Godfather series, it is instructive in everything Trump does.

  11. So the worlds leading shithole country has used its thuggish army to steal the guy in charge of the “most oil” country, and now trying to put together a charge sheet that makes sense in 2026.
    “We will run the oil business” because we think it could generate enough profit to get us out of our current financial difficulties.
    Dont ask any more questions because our thinking has not considered what comes next.

  12. ‘Not one dare say that what we’d just witnessed was an illegal military invasion of a sovereign nation. Dear SMH, how is the invasion democratic? Not one asked why Australian media were suddenly experts on Venezuelan “narcoterrorism”, a freshly-pressed grape of wrath? Or brand-new imperial panic button.’

    Utterly shameless and shameful, a dismaying capitulation by the Oz mainstream press.

    Independent. Always. Not.

    And hooray for this writer, independent media, and the erudite 5th estate that keeps us informed.

    Dark times ahead.

  13. I feel gloomy about the whole criminal action carried out by a nation that we are heavily dependant on. We are squeezing our economy to make ludicrous payments to USA to help their shipbuilding industry, because there is every chance we will never see any floating project to stack against the money we are sending out.
    The act of piracy that Trump has just carried out has been on the agenda for several years apparently, and now that 2026 has arrived the public are ready to accept theft, genocide, ethnic cleaning and abandonment of international law without any real comment.
    So from here on in, Law and order is old hat, and we all just do what we can get away with. Criminal behaviour is the norm for us all.
    We are absolute crap in choosing friends.

  14. Well said David Tyler.
    Something in my brain knots up every time l hear “captured” not “kidnapped”.
    There was an ongoing series of Looney Tunes featured on the Bugs Bunny show.
    It featured 2 characters. Chester and Spike. Both were dogs. Spike was a cartoonish beefy bulldog.
    Chester a small terrier. Spike bulldozed his no good way through the episodes while Chester bounced along beside and around him often stopping to declare “Spike is my hero!”
    We are Chester.

  15. Kerri,I remember the cartoon,but Chester ended up top dog.. Spike ended up outsmarting himself, and Trump is nowhere near as smart as Spike.If only Warner Brothers were advising the current rabble.

  16. As to Loony Tunes, Dr Binoy Kampmark recently remarked:

    “It has been an accusation long levelled at certain US politicians that their brains might have been softened by a lengthy diet of television, Westerns, and the heroic triumphalism of the prattling cowboy. There was never going to be a break with this tradition regarding President Donald Trump, except the fact that he claimed to be more restrained on the draw” (‘The Don-roe Doctrine in Action: Trump’s Gangster Intervention in Venezuela’, The AIM, Jan 4).

    When a dingbat with delusions rams the bastions of fragile longstanding international agreements without so much as a murmur the way is paved in gold for one helluva shit show.

    And we can keep playing Chester and Kerry can rest her case.

  17. Watching TV not being my main game, cartoons included, I’m unfamiliar with Chester the dog but years ago I had the misfortune to work with Chester the man, an ugly thug who would bash the yearling colts with the spade he was using to muck out the stable boxes if they nipped him, as frisky thoroughbred yearlings are wont to do. Built like a brick shithouse but as thick as a pair of hardwood planks, there was no nuance in Chester’s life, no conversation, no joy, just this robotic machine processing the demands of life with grim determination.

    He got his comeuppance eventually; a stallion attacked him with lethal intent… but for my intervention it would have Chester the thug’s last day on earth. Did he thank me for saving his life? Nup. Not a word, which was not surprising; he hated me as much as I did him.

    Perhaps I should have watched more TV.

  18. Excellent article David, and appropriate comments.

    IMO, the upshot is, it’s Trumpian America blockading China by:

    1, arming Taiwan to the hilt

    2, bombing ‘terrorists killing Christians’ in confused Nigeria, which happens to have huge oil reserves / infrastructure

    3, via its proxy, Israel, destabilizing Somalia by backing ‘Somaliland’ separatists perchance to gain a base for southeast Red Sea control and for proximity to southern Yemen and opportunity for a pincer into the Levant.

    4, going after the resurgent ‘Pink Tide’ in Sth America. Perhaps figuring it represents the closest, cheapest and already worked-on most febrile target. First on the bill – Venezuela.

    Doing as they said, “controlling [their version of] the western hemisphere” for their own ‘security’. Yeah sure! The inveterate loser, bully and ignoramus, his masters and toady flunkies have an arcane, dysfunctional masterplan but no m.o. except ‘ready or not, fire, aim’.

    What’s next; Panama, Mexico, Iran, Denmark (Greenland), ad infinitum?

    They’ve already in less than 12 months alienated a significance of America’s populous, matters not, as they think they’ll be in and OK for a lifetime. What! A lifetime of not being able to control and settle Iraq / ISIS, Afghanistan / Taliban, Russia / Ukraine, India / Pakistan, Thailand / Cambodia etc? All they’ve succeeded in doing is blowing $trillions on following through on their boasts.

    The rest of the world (particularly Oz) ought well remember America’s adventure in Vietnam. Back then Oz took to the streets en masse in protest. Despite America dropping 7.5 million tonnes of bombs on Vietnam, it failed in its mission and fled. Only to have the CIA put their knife into the Oz people’s hero, Gough, and then later, Mal F.

    America’s model applied to Venezuela, for the rest of the world, is not achieving a majority in the pub test, with the knobs asserting that it is illegal (der). Oz gutless flunky mainstream media, however, just continues to pump CIA talking points.

    China has said it will respond with 10,000 lawyers.

    What’s next from the eternally dangerous America.

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