With Venezuela raid, US tells China to keep away from the Americas

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Captured Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro is escorted, as he heads towards the Daniel Patrick Moynihan United States Courthouse in New York City.

Captured Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro being escorted as he headed towards the Daniel Patrick Moynihan United States Courthouse in New York City.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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One of the goals of the Jan 3

US military operation that captured Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro

was to send China a message: Stay away from the Americas.

For at least two decades, Beijing has sought to build influence in Latin America – not only to pursue economic opportunities but also to gain a strategic foothold on the doorstep of its top geopolitical rival.

China’s progress – from satellite tracking stations in Argentina to a port in Peru and economic support for Venezuela – has been an irritant for successive US administrations, including that of President Donald Trump.

Several Trump administration officials told Reuters the US President’s move against Maduro was intended in part to counter China’s ambitions, adding that Beijing’s days of leveraging debt to get cheap oil from Venezuela were “over”.

‘We don’t want you there’

Mr Trump made the message explicit on Jan 9, expressing discomfort with China and Russia as a “next-door neighbour”, in a meeting with oil executives.

“I told China and I told Russia, ‘We get along with you very well, we like you very much, we don’t want you there, you’re not gonna be there’,” Mr Trump said. Now, he said, he will tell China that “we are open for business” and that they can “buy all the oil they want from us there or in the United States”.

The success of the Jan 3 early morning raid, in which US commandos swept into Caracas and grabbed the then Venezuelan President and his wife, was a blow to China’s interests and prestige. 

The air defences that US forces quickly disabled had been supplied by China and Russia, and Mr Trump said 30 million to 50 million barrels of oil under sanctions, much of it previously bound for Chinese ports, will now be sent to the US.

Analysts say Maduro’s capture exposed Beijing’s limited ability to exert its will in the Americas. 

The attack exposed the gulf between China’s “great-power rhetoric and its real reach” in the Western Hemisphere, said Mr Craig Singleton, a China expert at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies think-tank. 

“Beijing can protest diplomatically, but it cannot protect partners or assets once Washington decides to apply direct pressure,” he said. 

In a statement to Reuters, the Chinese Embassy in Washington said it rejected what it called the US’ “unilateral, illegal and bullying acts”.

“China and Latin American and Caribbean countries maintain friendly exchanges and cooperation. No matter how the situation may evolve, we will continue to be a friend and partner,” said Mr Liu Pengyu, the embassy’s spokesman.

The White House did not respond to a request for comment.

But one administration official said that “China should be concerned about its position in the Western Hemisphere”, adding that its partners in the region were increasingly realising China cannot protect them. 

Trump’s unclear China policy

The Trump administration’s policy towards Beijing appears contradictory, with concessions aimed at calming a trade war on the one hand, and more assertive US support for Taiwan on the other.

The Venezuela operation appeared to tilt US policy in a more hawkish direction. 

Indeed, the timing of the US attack amplified Beijing’s embarrassment. 

Just hours before being toppled, Maduro met China’s special envoy for Latin America, Mr Qiu Xiaoqi, in Caracas, his last public appearance before becoming a US captive.

The meeting, staged on camera even as US military forces were secretly poised to launch their operation, suggested Beijing was blindsided, said another US official. 

“If they knew, they wouldn’t have gone so publicly,” the US official told Reuters.  

For years, Beijing poured money into Venezuela’s oil refineries and infrastructure, providing an economic lifeline after the US and its allies tightened sanctions from 2017. 

Along with Russia, China has also provided funding and equipment for Venezuela’s military, including radar arrays recently billed as able to detect advanced US military aircraft. Those systems did little to impede a raid US officials boasted had been conducted without any losses.

“Any nation around the world with Chinese defence equipment is checking their air defences and wondering how safe they actually are from the United States,” said Mr Michael Sobolik, a senior fellow at the Hudson Institute think-tank.

“They are also noticing how China’s diplomatic assurances to Iran and Venezuela resulted in zero meaningful protection when the US military arrived.”

China is now studying what went wrong with those defences so it can shore up its own systems, according to a person briefed on intelligence about its response.

China faces other regional risks

China may soon be under pressure elsewhere in the region. 

It has sought to increase its influence in Cuba, and the US suspects Beijing runs an intelligence-gathering operation there. China denies this, but in 2025 pledged better intelligence-sharing with Cuba.

In the days after the Venezuela operation, Mr Trump said US military intervention in Cuba, which has suffered from the loss of Venezuelan oil, was likely unnecessary, because it appeared ready to fall on its own.

The Trump administration also continues to push Chinese companies away from port operations around the Panama Canal, the critical waterway linking the Atlantic and Pacific oceans. 

A State Department official said the US “remains concerned” about Chinese influence near the canal, but appreciates Panama’s actions to curb this, including by exiting Beijing’s Belt and Road Initiative and auditing the Panama ports concession under contract to Hong Kong-based CK Hutchison.

While China may be on the back foot in the region, analysts cautioned that extended US military involvement in Venezuela or deterioration in the security situation there could open a door for Beijing to reassert itself.

Mr Daniel Russel, a former senior State Department official now with the Asia Society, said the dramatic shift in Washington under Mr Trump from a rule-of-law posture to a “spheres-of-influence logic focused on the Western Hemisphere” could play into China’s hands.

“Beijing wants Washington to accept that Asia is in China’s sphere, and no doubt hopes that the US will get bogged down in Venezuela,” he said. REUTERS

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