Former White House heavyweight John Bolton has slammed the idea that China could use America’s Venezuela intervention as a green light for Taiwan. In an IANS interview from India’s capital, Bolton unpacked President Trump’s bold moves—from sanctioning Maduro to tariff warnings for India—and why they don’t set a precedent for Beijing.
Trump’s crackdown followed Maduro’s disputed 2024 victory, echoing historical US actions like ousting Panama’s Noriega at the behest of elected leader Guillermo Endara. Opposition stalwart Maria Corina Machado’s Nobel bid highlighted the illegitimacy. Bolton argued such cases justify intervention when dictators threaten stability.
Yet, he stressed, this doesn’t apply universally. ‘You can’t validate claims with facts alone,’ Bolton said. Russia’s Ukraine assault was unprovoked aggression, not comparable. Similarly, China’s threats against Taiwan—a beacon of democracy with self-identified citizens rejecting Beijing’s rule—lack any legitimate basis.
‘Taiwanese have voted repeatedly in free elections; they want no part of the mainland,’ Bolton asserted, citing polls. He labeled China’s saber-rattling the true peril to world order. On US-India frictions over Russian oil tariffs, Bolton lamented the rush to punish allies, advocating renewed partnership against shared China worries.
Trump’s Greenland purchase quip? ‘Pure bargaining theater,’ Bolton chuckled. ‘He startles to snag 30% of his ask. Military force there? Unthinkable—it’d shatter NATO.’
Bolton’s analysis arrives amid fraught geopolitics, reminding leaders that context matters in justifying force. As Trump eyes tariffs and territories, the ex-NSA urges focus on real threats like China’s expansionism, not misguided copycats.