“The United States will govern Venezuela,” Donald Trump declares. But in what way? The country is almost three times larger than Vietnam. It consists of jungle, mountains, coastline, savannas, and porous borders with Colombia, Brazil, and Guyana. It has weak state institutions, armed groups, smuggling networks, and regional power centers.
All indications are that such a country cannot be “governed” from the outside. What the United States can do—and will likely try to do—is to establish a form of indirect control. That is, to influence who has their hands on the most important levers of the state.
But the tracks are alarming. In Vietnam, U.S. involvement began modestly. The aim was not to govern the country directly, but to prevent communist dominance and secure lasting American influence in the region. At first, the United States provided advisers, economic assistance, and political support to the regime in South Vietnam, but it had no ambition to deploy large military forces.
Then reality began to bite.