US’ JD Vance defends military action in Venezuela, says ‘stolen oil must be returned’

US Vice President JD Vance has issued a robust defense of American military operations in Venezuela, asserting that the Trump administration had exhausted diplomatic alternatives before resorting to force. In a comprehensive statement delivered via social media platform X on Saturday, Vance characterized captured Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro as “the newest person to discover that President Trump means exactly what he says.”

The Vice President elaborated that multiple off-ramps had been offered to the Venezuelan government throughout the negotiation process. “The president’s conditions were unequivocal: the drug trafficking operations must cease immediately, and the stolen oil must be returned to the United States,” Vance declared, referencing Venezuela’s expropriation of American oil assets approximately two decades ago.

Vance further reinforced the legal justification for military intervention, emphasizing that Maduro remains a fugitive from American justice. “Residing in a presidential palace in Caracas does not grant immunity from accountability for drug trafficking charges under US law,” he stated.

Addressing counterarguments about Venezuela’s role in the international drug trade, the Vice President presented a four-point rationale: Venezuela continues to serve as a significant conduit for fentanyl despite primary production occurring elsewhere; cocaine trafficking represents a primary revenue stream for Latin American cartels; Mexican fentanyl production remains an ongoing focus of US border policy; and the recovery of expropriated oil assets constitutes a legitimate national security interest.

“I recognize concerns regarding military engagement,” Vance conceded, “but should we permit a communist regime in our hemisphere to confiscate American property and finance narcoterrorism without consequence? Global powers cannot operate from such a position of weakness.”