The Trump administration is actively planning for a potential military intervention in Venezuela, with options ranging from targeted airstrikes to a “decapitation” campaign against the regime of Nicolás Maduro. According to U.S. officials, the planning includes airstrikes on military airbases and ports, covert special operations, and a high-risk option to seize the country’s oil fields.
This aggressive posture is being driven by a narrative from administration hawks, led by Secretary of State Marco Rubio, that legally re-frames the Maduro regime. By designating Maduro’s “Cartel of the Suns” as a “narco-terrorist” network, the White House is building a legal justification to bypass Congress and authorize strikes under its own counter-terrorism authority.
The U.S. has already backed this policy with a massive show of force in the Caribbean. The naval buildup includes multiple destroyers, F-35 fighter jets, B-52 bombers, and special operations forces who have been conducting advanced training in the region. Analysts note this deployment serves as both intense psychological pressure on Caracas and genuine preparation for combat.
While President Trump is reportedly torn between the “appetite for spoils”—namely, control of Venezuela’s vast oil reserves—and the fear of a “humiliating failure,” his advisers are pushing for bold action. Senator Rubio, in particular, has been a key driver, framing the intervention as a necessary counter-narcotics and immigration issue, which aligns with the president’s core priorities.
The plan to seize Venezuela’s oil industry presents a logistical and political quagmire. U.S. oil giant Chevron is currently operating in the country under a precarious, temporary license, and a U.S. military takeover of the fields would be a complex, high-risk endeavor.
Despite the advanced military planning, critics warn that Washington has failed to answer the most critical question: who would govern Venezuela after a strike? Legal experts and historians caution that “decapitation campaigns” and foreign-imposed regime change rarely lead to stability, and often result in civil war. Before any “kinetic step” is taken, prudence is being urged over the ambition for a headline-grabbing military victory.















