Bonus Episode: How Is Trump Planning to ‘Run’ Venezuela? (With Anne Applebaum) | The David Frum Show
The Atlantic
Jan 3, 2026
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The David Frum Show
David Frum is joined by The Atlantic’s Anne Applebaum to react to the news of the American raid and capture of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro, in a special episode of The David Frum Show.
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The David Frum Show
The Atlantic
Peter Burgess COMMENTARY
Peter Burgess
Transcript
- 0:11
- Hello and welcome to a special edition
- of the David from Show. I'm David Frum, a
- staff writer at The Atlantic. Early this
- morning, January 3rd, US Armed Forces
- apprehended the dictator of Venezuela,
- Nicholas Maduro, and his wife to stand
- trial in a series of indictments for
- drug trafficking and other charges. Um,
- it's an extraordinary moment and rather
- than wait any longer, I thought it would
- be helpful and useful um to viewers and
- listeners if I invited a journalist who
- knows Venezuela and his opposition well
- Anne Applebaum to share her thoughts
- with me about what this moment means and
- what's to come.
- Delighted to join you.
- Let's talk about our concerns and our
- worries and our hopes. Um, the Maduro
- regime is desperately unpopular in
- Venezuela. um it uh staged a sham
- election in 2024 which it lost even
- though it controlled all of the
- apparatus of the election. There is a
- 1:01
- legitimate um recognized by the United
- States president of Venezuela. But
- Donald Trump seems to have something
- more militaristic and imperial in mind
- at least according to his press
- conference today
- possibly. The only thing that Trump has
- said is very vague. He said America is
- going to run Venezuela.
- what that can mean given that we don't
- have an embassy in Kacus right now. We
- don't have US troops in Caracus right
- now. It's uh not clear to me how we
- would run Venezuela. Um maybe it means
- that we would hand over to the existing
- regime, which is of course what the
- Venezuelan opposition has been afraid
- of. Maybe it means that the opposition
- will be allowed to come back. But what
- by what process that would happen and
- how that transition would be made
- legitimate, that's all pretty unclear.
- and pretty murky. I mean, I should say
- there, as you said, there was an
- election in 2024. Um, the the the the
- leader of the opposition, which is Maria
- Karina Machado, who's recently won the
- 2:00
- Nobel Peace Prize, was not allowed to
- run. Uh, and so in her place, Edmundo
- Gonzalez, a former Venezuelan diplomat,
- ran and he won. Um he the the
- Venezuelans staged this really
- incredible operation whereby they uh
- they collected they had people in all
- the polling stations or in many of the
- polling stations across the country and
- they collected the original vote
- tallies. They proved that Gonzalez was
- the victor. Uh the Venezuelan courts in
- the Venezuelan regime which are
- controlled but were controlled by Maduro
- refused to let him take power. And not
- only that, they really and truly
- violently repressed people who were his
- advocates and people who had been
- working for him. So this is a country
- that was will not be sad or sorry to see
- Maduro go, but is but is is very very
- nervous about what might come next.
- Yeah. One of the things I was struck by
- at the press conference was the
- nationalist bragging by American leaders
- 3:00
- that this is a thing they did for the
- United States, not for the Venezuelans.
- They act the United States of course
- acted entirely alone without any
- regional support or allies without any
- form of international legitimacy without
- any action of Congress. There is a there
- is an indictment by an American court of
- Nicholas Maduro. So I they're trying to
- say this is like what happened in Panama
- in 1990 with Manuel Noriega where US
- troops enforced a court order. But
- again, the ambitions here are much
- greater, but but they um but they look
- kind of selfish and um without regard to
- the Venezuelan people themselves. And
- one thing that um I think is going on
- here politically maybe that the Trump
- administration wants to rule Venezuela
- or at least wants to control who does
- rule. At the same time, millions of
- Venezuelans have sought refuge outside
- Venezuela and the United States is
- treating them like enemies and has sent
- is detaining them, expelling them,
- sending some of them to torture prisons.
- Um maybe this is the way that they
- reconcile those two imperatives by
- saying, 'Okay, now there's a dictator we
- like in charge in Venezuela and we can
- now round up and expel everyone who fled
- 4:01
- the last decade.' I
- I mean that's possible. I mean the some
- of the language used at the press
- conference today was Trump once again
- repeating that Venezuela had sent its
- criminals and it's emptied out its
- insane asylums and so on for none of
- which there's any proof. Um you know
- actually many members of the Democratic
- opposition fled the United States. many
- people who were simply seeking a a
- decent place to live and and a place to
- work. There have been a lot of
- successful Venezuelans in the United
- States. I mean, the the smearing of
- Venezuelans has been one of the ugliest
- things that this regime has done, I
- mean, the American regime, I should say,
- has done uh since Trump took office. Um,
- but you're right, to focus on the lack
- of concern for Venezuelans and for what
- happens in Venezuela. Um, all of the
- narrative from the very beginning of
- this conflict has been about, you know,
- the the glory of the United States, the
- reconquest of the Western Hemisphere.
- There was a bit more of that today. Um,
- the supposed loss of US oil that is
- 5:00
- somehow owed to the United States
- because it was stolen in the past and
- nobody's really unpacked that or
- explained it. um you know and and again
- this idea that Venezuelan criminals and
- and and crazy people were somehow sent
- to the United States which again there's
- there's no proof. So it's a it looks
- very much like a war or a military
- action if that's what we're calling it
- that has been designed for domestic
- purposes. You know this is for this is
- for US domestic political consumption
- rather than to achieve something in
- Venezuela.
- I notice that and speaking of the US
- political purposes, the Trump made the
- first announcements of what he had done
- on his wacky social media platform, True
- Social. He called into Fox. Um it's as
- if he says, 'I'm accounting only to my
- half or my 40% of American opinion or
- these days maybe 38%. Um I'm not
- accepting any responsibility to the
- whole country and certainly not to
- anybody else in the world.' Um, one of
- the things that I I I wonder there
- 6:01
- there's been an eruption of Democratic
- Party opposition to this, uh,
- emphasizing how wrong it is to intervene
- in Venezuelan affairs. I'm not sure that
- many Venezuelans would agree with that
- view if it had been done properly. that
- is if there were some kind of
- multinational
- um operation involving Colombia which is
- Venezuela's neighbor um long history of
- the two countries the single the the
- country that is received the most
- Venezuelan exiles and has treated them
- very hospitably giving them rights to
- work and so on in a way the United
- States has not done um if there if there
- had been some kind of international
- coalition and if there were a clear plan
- to restore the democracy that Venezuela
- enjoyed from um the 1950s until the
- 1990s There could be there there could
- be more and broader support, but I mean
- and one of maybe the strangest thing
- about this whole thing is the
- administration's failure in the runup to
- this um to this I don't even know what
- to call it. Is it an invasion? Is it a
- is it a military event? I mean, in the
- runup to it, they made
- 7:01
- we could call it a special military
- operation.
- That came to my head, but I was I was
- thinking, no, I think I'm going to not
- go there just yet. it. Um, but no, the
- the the the failure to justify it to the
- American people, the failure to sell it,
- um, the failure to explain it, the
- multiple explanations for it that have
- been offered, none of which are quite
- satisfying or seem quite true. You know,
- the kind of belated adding on of the oil
- thing as somehow oil was stolen from
- Americans and we have to get it back and
- with again without any explaining of the
- history of that or whether it's even
- true. And then you're right. I mean, I
- would say that not only has he appeared
- only not only has President Trump
- appeared on Fox and on and on his own
- social media, he also apparently and
- we'll have to we'll have to find out
- whether this is really the case in the
- in the coming hours, he apparently has
- only spoken to or his administration has
- only spoken to Republican members of
- Congress and of the Senate. So rather
- than rather than creating a bipartisan
- congressional agreement to do this, he
- 8:01
- simply appealed to his own side. Um, and
- that doesn't seem to be unanimous
- either. But it's a it's a it's in that
- sense it's a kind of we are at a kind of
- breakthrough moment. I mean it is a
- different kind of um US military
- operation. I mean US has invaded other
- countries before. You can argue US has
- broken international law before. but to
- to do so without any justification,
- without any explanation, without any
- support in Congress or any attempt to
- get it uh without looking for any legal
- cover, you know, even without having a
- coherent set of reasons or a coherent
- strategy. It's all very it's it's all
- very strange. And again, my assumption
- is that because in fact, the true
- purpose is domestic. The true purpose is
- to deepen the president's arguments
- about supposed
- you know, narco terrorists or immigrants
- whom he's fighting against maybe to give
- him the opportunity to say America's at
- 9:01
- war and therefore more more emergencies
- need to be declared and more laws need
- to be bent. But it it looks more like a
- as you said at the beginning, a kind of
- nationalist
- um you know moment to describe America's
- armed forces and how great they are
- rather than something that was designed
- to do some good or achieve something in
- another part of the world. And I say
- that as somebody who's as I I've been
- writing for years about how um how
- tragic the story of Venezuela is and how
- how much damage first Chavez and then
- Maduro did to Venezuela and how um and
- how impressive the Venezuelan opposition
- is and how it's worked under these very
- tough circumstances to pull together.
- And so I I really wish the best for them
- and I am sorry that this is how the
- United States has decided to intervene
- there. The reason I I went there on the
- phrase special military operation, which
- is the term of course that Vladimir
- Putin uses to describe the Russian
- aggression in Ukraine, um is uh that
- 10:01
- there does seem to be a whiff of a deal
- that Donald Trump has in mind with the
- Russians and maybe with the Chinese,
- too, to say, you know, how the United
- States historically rejected spheres of
- influence, we're rethinking that.
- Russia, you can have Ukraine, and I will
- help you get it. Um and I will backstab
- Europeans who try to support Ukraine and
- resist you. Um, meanwhile, China, uh,
- I'm not going to meaningfully resist
- your operations in your own
- neighborhood. I'm not even that serious
- about protecting Taiwan. In return, I
- want V I want your okay to overthrow
- your client in Venezuela because the
- relationship between Maduro and Russia
- was close and the relationship between
- Maduro and China was getting closer. Um,
- we have aggression in mind against
- Panama, against Greenland, and maybe
- also Canada. So, uh, we will have we we
- will be the empire of the Western
- Hemisphere. You guys take your sections.
- Um, and we will each be masters of our
- own domain without regard for concepts
- like democracy or self-determination or
- meaningful alliances or mutual
- respective nations.
- 11:00
- So that idea that the world is going to
- be split into three spheres of influence
- has been kicking around for a while. And
- so I first started hearing it a couple
- of years ago as an idea kind of bubbling
- up and moving around in the, you know,
- in in in right-wing media. And I've I
- have heard a couple of people who were
- close or claim to be close to the Trump
- administration talk about it in the last
- year. Um and of course it's terribly
- dangerous. Um it's dangerous for the
- United States because of the kind of
- backlash that it may create in in Latin
- America and and Europe and elsewhere.
- It's dangerous for America's trading
- partners and allies around the world.
- It's incredibly dangerous for Europe,
- which then somehow becomes open to
- Russian manipulation and maybe Russian
- invasion. Um, and of course, it's very
- dangerous to America's allies in Asia,
- you know, Taiwan, Japan, South Korea,
- the Philippines, and others. Um, and it
- really creates the prospect for a
- reordered world, one in which violence
- 12:00
- becomes much more common and the use of
- military power by big countries against
- smaller ones becomes normalized. Uh, and
- that of course will have economic
- effects and will eventually be felt by
- all Americans. I mean because our you
- know America's uh prosperity and
- America's power and America's success
- over the last several decades I mean
- certainly since the second world war
- have been based on a very different idea
- of how the world should work and it
- looks like at least a part of the Trump
- administration is ready to give up that
- idea.
- Let me go through that. That's such an
- important point and especially the point
- about how you make violence more
- acceptable and more common. Let me just
- go through something for people who
- don't think about this as much as you as
- you do. why Americans have, at least
- since 1945 and really longer than that,
- rejected the idea of spheres of
- influence. Because it may seem logical
- to some people, well, let you know,
- China has its backyard, Russia has its
- backyard. Why can't the United States
- have its backyard and everybody leaves
- everybody else alone? The reason the
- United States historically rejected this
- 13:00
- idea was twofold. The first was
- Americans said when we um call for
- collective defense, when we call for
- free trade, when we call for democracy
- and human rights, we're not doing that
- to assert American dominance over
- others. We're we're using the
- extraordinary advantages of the United
- States, the security, the natural
- resources, the wealth to deliver
- something to other people that all human
- beings want. Not all human beings should
- want. All human beings do want. They all
- want to have the benefits of of freedom
- and material prosperity. So we're going
- to speak for all. The United States has
- more means, but the ends are not
- American. The ends are are universally
- human. So we're going to speak for that.
- And then what's our sphere of influence?
- The answer is the whole thing. There are
- practical limits. We're not going to go
- out there looking for wars and causing
- trouble. But our ideal is that
- ultimately all human beings will live
- this way and we'll want we'll we'll live
- together in cooperation. And so we're
- not and so the sphere of influence
- argument is never an American argument.
- It's always an argument by other people
- who want some carve vote from human
- rights and freedom and democracy and
- international peaceful commerce. Um, and
- 14:02
- we're not going to give it to them. Now,
- the the fact that the Trump
- administration is so open to these ideas
- is to me, and this is let me I think
- this is one of the things that um is
- most surprising is it's a doctrine of
- American weakness and retreat, saying
- that the United States is no longer
- feels able to defend Europe, much less
- Ukraine on Europe's east. no longer
- feels able to defend the free peoples of
- Asia. So, we're just going to retreat.
- And and because that makes the American
- um project much less attractive to other
- countries, there's going to be more
- within the American sphere of influence.
- There will be more force and and
- Greenland has been a target of this.
- Canada has and now Venezuela is.
- No, absolutely. I mean, it's a it's a
- it's America giving up on uh on
- relationships with the world and America
- retreating into a a kind of 19th century
- idea of, you know, we dominate our
- neighbors and we don't have anything to
- do with anything else. It it it means
- that America's global companies will
- 15:02
- suddenly discover that the the rules
- that were very often created to help
- them and help them succeed in Asia or in
- Europe will change and they will be
- they'll be less successful. Uh it means
- that American things that Americans took
- for granted, you know, the ability to
- travel or the ability to do do business
- in different parts of the world, the
- maybe even the dominance of the American
- dollar that was accepted by people as a
- as a kind of quid proquo in exchange for
- the pox americana. You know, all those
- things will begin to fall away and they
- will make Americans poor. I mean, I
- think every American will feel it.
- Americans will feel it economically.
- They'll feel it politically. They'll
- feel it in terms of how they are defined
- in the world and therefore how they
- define themselves. So the United States
- will no longer see itself as a beacon of
- democracy or as a country that stands
- for freedom, but rather as an ordinary
- neighborhood bully. And I think that
- will affect the way Americans perceive
- 16:00
- their own country as well. And I think
- it will have an echo in domestic
- politics. I I I've seen this happen in
- other countries. You know, when the
- nature of the country changes, when the
- role it plays in the world becomes
- different, that affects people. I you
- know, I think Americans have grown used
- to the idea that we were a good power in
- the world or we tried to be and we
- didn't always succeed. Um but we had
- some ideals or we there were there were
- things we stood for. There was
- international law. There were
- international institutions that we
- backed. And once we don't do that
- anymore, I think Americans will will
- will feel differently about their
- country. And I think I really do believe
- it's something that's going to affect
- everybody.
- It's not this is not a hypothetical
- point. This is a point rooted in
- American history. Um if you lived in the
- United States a 100 years ago, 1926 over
- much of the country was fastened a
- system of laws that bear a lot of
- resemblance to what the Nazis imposed on
- German Jews at Nuremberg. Um over maybe
- a third or a quarter of the country.
- 17:00
- There were all kind and beyond that not
- just in the old deep south but in other
- places too there were uh restrictions
- imposed by race on where you could
- travel how you could travel what
- facilities you could use who could marry
- whom that that that extended beyond the
- south too. Um it was the need to defend
- democracy first against Nazi Germany or
- to defend American interests first
- against Nazi Germany and then against
- the Soviet Union that um transformed a
- lot of what Americans regarded as
- acceptable at home. that the country had
- to be a democracy at home if it were to
- demand democracy abroad. And the classic
- statement of this I refer people if they
- have a chance to look at it to watch or
- to read President Kennedy's civil rights
- speech in 1962 when he he made this
- explicit how he said how can we defend
- freedom in Berlin if we don't have
- freedom in Alabama. Uh and and so the
- United States to win the cold war became
- a more perfect democracy at home. If the
- United States gives up on that, the way
- is set to unravel all those changes that
- happened comparatively recently, the 19
- between the 1930s in the 1960s.
- 18:01
- There's another example of that as well,
- which is that in the arguments that were
- made for desegregation of schools in the
- United States, um I the the in the
- Supreme Court arguments that were made,
- the American Justice Department
- specifically made a reference to, you
- know, the US presenting itself abroad.
- you know, how can we argue for democracy
- abroad if we aren't if we aren't willing
- to have desegregated schools, you know,
- here in the United States. So, you know,
- starting in about the 1940s and 1950s,
- you're absolutely right that the idea of
- what America stood for abroad, again,
- theoretically, it wasn't always true in
- practice, and what America should be at
- home, again, theoretically, not always
- in practice, you know, that those ideas
- came together. And as they split apart,
- as the United States becomes something
- different abroad, you're right that we
- may find ourselves becoming a different
- country at home or certainly the
- constituency, the people who want us to
- return to an older way of running the
- 19:00
- country and older ideas about race and
- hierarchy. Um you'll you'll see them
- saying, 'Well, since we don't have to
- play this role in the world anymore, you
- know, why shouldn't we? What do we need
- civil rights legislation for?' Now,
- let me ask you just to go back to the
- point about special military operation.
- One of the big mysteries about Trump has
- always been what's the special sauce?
- What's the hole that Putin has over him?
- I think his business links to Russia go
- back a long way. Uh I think his interest
- and admiration for for Putin is very
- deep and of course he knows that Putin
- helped him win the 2016 election. So I
- think I don't think you need a specific
- deal like that. But I mean we can
- speculate that it's it's not absolutely
- impossible. I mean it does look like and
- I've some of the Venezuelan opposition
- are saying this again there's no proof
- so I have to be I have to be careful. It
- does look like some kind of deal over
- Maduro was done that you know that he
- was given up you know that he was handed
- over. Maybe that was done by people who
- did it in exchange for hoping that they
- 20:01
- would stay in charge you know that the
- other members of the regime would would
- take over after him. Um maybe it was
- done with help of others, maybe the
- Russians, I mean Chinese, we don't know.
- But but but but the links between um
- between Trump and Putin and between
- Trump and Russia are go go well beyond
- Venezuela.
- Well, that that point about what the
- Venezuelan opposition fears brings me to
- maybe this closing segment of of our
- dialogue today, which is my concern
- about the way some of the Democratic
- opposition, capital D, in the United
- States has been talking about this. um
- that you are hearing from some very
- outspoken people say it's wrong for the
- United States ever to help to overthrow
- a dictatorship. Um that whatever
- government a country has, that's its
- business. And however much the vast
- majority of that country's people hate
- that government and fear it, however
- cruel and authoritarian and even
- aggressive it is because the Maduro
- regime has committed aggressions um
- against neighbors Brazil and Guyana and
- Colombia too. Um that it's none of our
- business and we should leave it alone.
- And I think in reaction to uh Trump's
- 21:00
- militarism and imperialism, we're
- getting a kind of small an isolationism
- from his opponents that is very
- dangerous. And I I wish I heard more
- Democrats saying if this war were about
- restoring the legitimate winner of the
- 2024 election. um if it were uh waged in
- with backing from Congress and in in
- with support from Venezuela's neighbors
- then yeah helping to bring about the
- restoration of the legitimate president
- of Venezuela that would be a proper
- thing for the coalition of the Americas
- to do um not to replace dictator with
- dictator but but to work in tandem with
- others but there does seem to be a kind
- of in reaction to Trump's America first
- a kind of similar kind of chauvinism
- that we're hearing from that this is
- none of our business. We have we have no
- concern with who governs Venezuela and
- how.
- It also ignores the fact that we have
- influence over not over Venezuela but in
- Venezuela in other countries whether we
- want to or not. I mean we're the
- elephant in the room in a lot of places.
- And had we decided to support Maduro,
- 22:02
- which I think some members of the Trump
- administration did want to do and do oil
- deals with Maduro, for example, um which
- we might easily have done. Um I I think
- there were as as I say I think there
- were people who wanted to do that then
- we would also be affecting the outcome
- of politics in Venezuela. So to pretend
- that you know we live by ourselves you
- know in a bubble and we don't influence
- anybody else is is also wrong. I mean, I
- do have to say that given how little uh
- Trump involved the Democrats and how how
- how
- minor his effort is even today to reach
- out to people and explain what he's
- doing and justify it. Um, and how
- half-hearted it all seems. I mean the I
- thought I found his press conference
- very half-hearted and he seemed kind of
- unenthusiastic and you know it wasn't
- you know wasn't it wasn't you know you
- people were sort of repeating themselves
- and saying things by wrote you know how
- great our soldiers are and what a what a
- marvelous thing this was and you know
- given that it's not really surprising
- 23:00
- that people have have reacted this way
- it's also you know to say well it would
- be great if we had done this on behalf
- of you know on behalf of democracy in
- Venezuela feels a bit empty given that
- obviously Trump wasn't going to do that
- because he doesn't care about democracy
- anywhere. So I have some I have some
- sympathy with people who who who you
- know who who who are who are very
- critical. I mean I would like to
- emphasize you know it is important to
- keep remembering how happy a lot of
- Venezuelans are and how delighted people
- are you know across the continent that
- Maduro is gone and to just keep that in
- mind as a factor going forward.
- This is a more marker for the future. I
- mean, obviously it's true, as you say,
- Trump didn't do this for democracy.
- Indeed, and he didn't do it to stop the
- drug flow, either. Um, Maduro is right
- now an alleged and indicted drug
- trafficking president, but there was a
- convicted drug trafficking president in
- an American prison, and he was released
- at the end of November, pardoned at the
- end of November. I guess they announced
- the pardon at the end of November and
- made it legal at the beginning of
- December in exchange for what? One can
- 24:01
- only speculate, but I I I don't think it
- was just for a Christmas card that Trump
- would let somebody like that.
- This was the president, former president
- of Honduras. Yeah. No, no. I mean that,
- you know, there's hypocrisy all over
- this story. You know, the the, as I
- said, the conversations with Maduro
- about oil that took place last year. Uh,
- you know, the letting go other drug
- kingpins. Um, you know, the question of
- whether Venezuelans were really
- importing that many drugs to the United
- States anyway. Um, that seems like most
- of
- they're sending the the Venezuelan drug
- traffic was cocaine, which was on its
- way to Europe. And by the way, blowing
- up boats is a judging by market prices,
- uh, the Wall Street Journal reported, I
- think in the fall, that the retail price
- of cocaine in the United States over the
- first year of the Trump administration
- was down, if I remember this right,
- something like 25%. The one price he
- successfully brought down was the price
- of cocaine. That's the drug that is
- flowing via Venezuela. So obviously
- blowing up boats doesn't work.
- No, no, no. I mean, all when you look at
- 25:00
- any of his reasons, they all, you know,
- they kind of shrink on touching them. I
- mean, and and this is why we're all
- looking for other kinds of explanations.
- You know, is there a secret oil deal? Uh
- is there a secret deal with Putin? You
- know, is there some, you know, is there
- some deeper plan to to to spread this
- form of conquest across uh you know,
- across the Americas? You know, because
- the the reasons as stated just don't
- make any sense. They don't add up.
- They're not a strategy. They aren't a
- plan. They're not a plan. They're
- certainly not a plan for Venezuela, but
- they also don't really make sense for
- the United States. there. It's not about
- increasing American prosperity or safety
- uh or or or or even, you know, America's
- good name in the world. And I think
- that's that's what's perplexing people
- and causing this really angry reaction,
- which I you know, I agree that there's a
- there's an aspect of it that's that's um
- maybe small-minded, but but I but I
- empathize with it, too.
- Well, I I just worry that the parts of
- Trump won that proved most enduring that
- he that Biden continued were Trump's
- 26:00
- protectionism. And I worry that it would
- be it would be a a bad result if the
- part of Trump too that continued is this
- um this spreading to both parties of
- American narrow nationalism um and
- disregard for as you say the hope and
- faith that the Venezuelan people are
- have put in a different America, the
- America they remember and many of them
- still believe in which is a country that
- would say look we're not going around
- the world starting wars. We're not
- intervening promiscuously but uh how
- other people do is matters to us. there
- um especially in this hemisphere but
- everywhere but especially in this
- hemisphere um and if the United States
- in conjunction with law and partners can
- restore a democracy that was stolen in
- uh and support people who have cou as
- you say courageously acted to defend and
- maintain and reassert their democracy.
- You know that's that's not none of our
- business. That's that's part of the
- common business of humanity. I no I I I
- agree and and that the United States
- aspired to be a beacon and aspired to be
- a country that wanted to make itself
- 27:02
- better and make the world better uh was
- I think one of the things that gave
- Americans a lot of pride and a lot of
- satisfaction and it would be I think
- tragic for us to lose that. As we're
- talking, uh, Secretary of State Marco
- Rubio has apparently added a threat to
- Cuba to the list of reasons, uh, that
- the United States supposedly acted in
- Venezuela. Do you have any thoughts
- about how to make sense of that threat?
- So, people should understand that there
- is a deep and close relationship between
- the Venezuelan regime and the Cuban
- regime. So much so I was talking to a
- Mexican journalist recently who told me
- he'd been to Venezuela not that long ago
- and was very struck by the fact that all
- the people around Maduro were all Cuban.
- Uh so a lot of his security guard was
- Cuban and a lot of the people who were
- protecting him were Cuban. Um the Cubans
- were supplying security help and advice
- to the Venezuelans and have been really
- important part of keeping the regime in
- power especially as it became more and
- more unpopular. Um, Cuba also gets oil
- from Venezuela and has a kind of
- 28:00
- symbiotic trade relationship with
- Venezuela. And so it may be that Rubio
- hopes that the fall of Maduro or the
- change of regime in Venezuela will
- eventually have a knock-on side effect
- in Cuba. So he may be hoping for that
- um, you know, as as a possible
- consequence. Domino theories have a way
- of proving incorrect or dangerous or
- wrong. And so for Rubio to hope that by
- changing the government of Venezuela he
- will somehow affect the government of
- Cuba um you know there's a there there's
- a you know there's a long history of
- those kinds of theories being wrong but
- it's perfectly possible that that was
- one of the things in his head when he
- when he pushed for this operation as we
- know he did.
- Seems unlikely that President Trump was
- thinking about
- seems very unlikely that President Trump
- cares one way or the other about Cuba. I
- agree. and thank you for taking time
- today.
- Thanks for thanks for devoting the time
- yourself.
- And we're going to resume normal
- scheduling with the program releasing on
- 29:00
- Wednesday. Thank you all for watching um
- the David Frum Show. Um remember the the
- best way to support the work of this
- program and of myself is to subscribe to
- The Atlantic. I hope you'll continue
- doing that. See you on Wednesday when we
- release the next episode of the David
- from Show.
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