In a pointed response to escalating global tensions, former US National Security Advisor John Bolton has firmly rejected any notion that China could mirror America’s actions against Venezuela to seize Taiwan. Speaking exclusively to IANS from New Delhi, Bolton addressed concerns sparked by President Donald Trump’s recent tariff threats against India and his aggressive stance on Venezuela.
The backdrop is Trump’s post-Venezuela crackdown rhetoric, where he threatened tariffs on nations buying Russian oil, including India. This has raised eyebrows: if the US can intervene decisively against Venezuelan leader Nicolas Maduro—accused of rigging the 2024 elections—could China claim similar justification for invading Taiwan?
Bolton dismissed the parallel outright. ‘The situations are fundamentally different,’ he emphasized. Venezuela’s crisis mirrors past interventions, like the 1989 Panama operation against Manuel Noriega, where a legitimate leader sought US aid against a dictator. Maduro’s fraudulent election and suppression of opposition figure Maria Corina Machado—who earned a Nobel Peace Prize nomination for her resistance—provide a unique context.
‘Capturing an illegitimate leader isn’t against international law if they’ve threatened security,’ Bolton explained. But he drew a sharp line: ‘Russia’s unprovoked invasion of Ukraine isn’t justified by Venezuela’s mess, and neither is a Chinese assault on Taiwan.’ Taiwan, he noted, is a thriving democracy with repeated fair elections. Surveys show its people reject unification with mainland China and identify proudly as Taiwanese.
Bolton highlighted China’s long-standing bullying tactics as the real threat to global peace. ‘Taiwan’s government is democratically elected; its people deserve self-determination,’ he said. On Trump’s India tariffs, Bolton called them premature, urging stronger US-India ties to counter Beijing’s ambitions.
Shifting to Trump’s eyebrow-raising comments on buying Greenland, Bolton laughed it off as classic ‘Trump trolling’—a negotiation ploy to shock and settle for less. But he warned against any military move there: ‘It would dismantle NATO and spell disaster for America.’
As superpower rivalries intensify, Bolton’s words underscore the perils of false equivalences in international affairs, calling for principled stands over opportunistic grabs.
