From: fedora@fea.st   
      
   On Sun, 8 Feb 2026 11:21:42 -0500, Wilson    
   wrote:   
      
   >On 2/7/2026 3:38 PM, Julian wrote:   
   >> From the very start, there was something weird about Operation Absolute   
   >> Resolve. The official story went something like this: after a whirlwind   
   >> air attack, which included the use of suicide drones for the first time,   
   >> special operators from the US Army’s renowned but shadowy SFOD-D unit   
   >> (“Delta Force”) were helicoptered into the Fuerte Tiuna military complex   
   >> in the south of Caracas, the capital of Venezuela. They defeated the   
   >> local garrison, used “massive blowtorches” to breach heavy metal doors   
   >> in a fortress-like residential site within the base, captured the   
   >> President of Venezuela, Nicolás Maduro, and his wife, then spirited them   
   >> back to the helicopters and flew them out to face charges in the United   
   >> States. Donald Trump said it had been “an assault like people have not   
   >> seen since World War Two.”   
   >>   
   >> It was certainly a bravura operation. But was it real? The suppression   
   >> of enemy air-defense operations, which usually precedes such assaults,   
   >> lasted for barely half an hour. A shock, then, but not much awe.   
   >> Military facilities were left untouched. Despite, in President Trump’s   
   >> words, the Venezuelans knowing that the US had been coming “for months,”   
   >> many surface-to-air missile (SAM) systems were left exposed; others   
   >> showed no signs of dispersal.   
   >>   
   >> More puzzling, the helicopters of the US Army’s 160th Special Operations   
   >> Aviation Regiment were able to get to the drop-off point, loiter near   
   >> Caracas for two hours, return to the drop-off point for extraction, and   
   >> then fly out unscathed. Not one of Venezuela’s hundreds of Soviet/   
   >> Russian Igla portable SAM systems – used to devastating effect against   
   >> rotary aircraft in India, Iraq, Rwanda, Chechnya, Peru, Libya, Syria and   
   >> Ukraine – appears to have been fired.   
   >>   
   >> There was, then, very little, if any, opposition. Nor was there much   
   >> evidence that the US military had done much to suppress enemy   
   >> combatants. President Trump, for his part, claimed the operation had   
   >> used secret sonic weaponry: “The Discombobulator. I’m not allowed to   
   >> talk about it.” Anti-US commentators suggested skullduggery among   
   >> disloyal and venal elements within the Venezuelan regime and military   
   >> hierarchy.   
   >>   
   >> What really happened here? Was it real or theater? Or was it all an   
   >> example of what the French philosopher and sociologist Jean Baudrillard   
   >> called “virtual war?”   
   >>   
   >> The historian Niall Ferguson is a proponent of using alternative history   
   >> to explore such questions. Let’s do the same. The point of departure in   
   >> our imaginary January 2026 scenario comes a little before President   
   >> Trump gives the go-order for Absolute Resolve. US national security   
   >> advisors explain the situation. “As you know, Mr. President, Venezuela   
   >> has been under sanctions for decades. These have crippled the economy   
   >> without precipitating regime change. In fact, emigration flows have   
   >> acted as a force for self-selection, removing many of those who might   
   >> support a new regime. You have brilliantly ramped up the pressure since   
   >> returning to the White House, but even this has not worked. We both know   
   >> that while we would undoubtedly win a war, it could also be messy and   
   >> costly for us. Perhaps, Mr. President, it is time for you to do what you   
   >> do best: make a deal.”   
   >>   
   >> The US would certainly have had leverage to strike a good bargain.   
   >> First, the carrot. Removing the sanctions would offer Venezuela a   
   >> tremendous economic boost, even accounting for the grotesque   
   >> inefficiencies of Chavismo economics. Plus elites could get rich in the   
   >> process. Secondly, the big stick. Even if an invasion would be costly to   
   >> the US, it would be devastating for Venezuela. Senior members of the   
   >> governing regime and military would be lucky to escape with their lives   
   >> – and they would know it.   
   >>   
   >> How does this alternative reality differ from what is happening in   
   >> Venezuela? Not much. The country’s acting President, Delcy Rodríguez,   
   >> has signed into law legislation to allow privately owned and foreign   
   >> companies to take stakes in Venezuela’s hitherto nationalized oil   
   >> industry. The law also limits the royalties Venezuela takes from its oil   
   >> to 30 percent. She has also allowed Washington to take control of oil   
   >> sales, while selling mostly to the US itself. Finally, Rodríguez has   
   >> agreed an amnesty for political prisoners. The US, for its part, has   
   >> agreed to let the regime continue to govern (minus Maduro, of course).   
   >> It is also, slowly, phasing out sanctions, allowing the oil to flow from   
   >> Venezuela and revenues to flow back.   
   >>   
   >> What if, then, Operation Absolute Resolve was not a military operation,   
   >> but a way for both sides to do a deal while saving face? For the US to   
   >> remove sanctions without looking as if it was admitting failure; for   
   >> Venezuela to do business with the US on Washington’s terms without   
   >> appearing to cave.   
   >>   
   >> This fits Baudrillard’s definition of virtual war almost perfectly.   
   >> Something else masquerading as war. The US military, for the most part,   
   >> not engaging directly with enemy soldiers, about whose fate almost   
   >> nothing is known. No agreed figure for the number of enemy combatants   
   >> killed during Absolute Resolve exists: conflicting reports suggest as   
   >> many as 75 pro-Maduro soldiers died, including 32 Cubans.   
   >>   
   >> The only understanding of the operation widely available comes through   
   >> the medium of lurid, propagandistic imagery made possible by modern   
   >> technology and woven together to create a simulacrum of war. Super-   
   >> soldiers and secret sonic weapons; “a fighter jet for every possible   
   >> situation” and viral amateur footage of every possible detonation. We   
   >> were given no pause for thought before being whirled from “virtual war”   
   >> to “virtual diplomacy.” On January 3, shortly after the announcement of   
   >> the capture of Maduro, Katie Miller – wife of White House Deputy Chief   
   >> of Staff Stephen Miller – posted on X an image of Greenland covered with   
   >> an American flag, captioned “SOON.”   
   >>   
   >> Between January 5 and January 7, President Trump said in interviews that   
   >> acquiring Greenland was a national security priority to deter   
   >> adversaries in the Arctic. White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt   
   >> said the President had “made it well known that acquiring Greenland is a   
   >> national security priority of the United States.” By January 9, Trump   
   >> had explicitly threatened action: “We are going to do something on   
      
   [continued in next message]   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   
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