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US-Venezuela conflict
This Week in AsiaPolitics

The Maduro effect: US raid accelerates Asia’s drift away from Washington

Cambodia, Laos and North Korea are expected to tighten their embrace of Moscow and Beijing amid growing distrust of the US

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Venezuela’s Nicolas Maduro is led into custody by US Drug Enforcement Administration officers at an airbase in New York on Saturday. Photo: Handout/Reuters
Maria Siow
The United States’ dramatic abduction of Venezuela’s former leader Nicolas Maduro at the weekend has sent shock waves across Asia, where analysts say authoritarian rulers, already deeply wary of Washington’s erratic behaviour, are likely to draw closer to Moscow and Beijing.
US special forces stormed Maduro’s home in Caracas early on Saturday morning, seizing him and his wife before flying them to the US, where both face federal charges of narcoterrorism and drug trafficking.

Washington has long called Maduro’s presidency illegitimate, but the official rationale for the operation rested on the criminal indictment – a move that many governments have interpreted as a striking assertion of extraterritorial law enforcement.

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The raid triggered an outcry across the globe, with China, Russia, Cuba and North Korea all denouncing the operation as a violation of international law. Iran went further, saying the president and his wife had been “kidnapped”.

Beijing said it was “deeply shocked”, and condemned the use of force against a sovereign state and its sitting president, calling for the immediate release of the presidential couple.

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Moscow decried it as an “act of armed aggression against Venezuela”, while Pyongyang said the “hegemony-seeking act” had once again confirmed the US’ “rogue and brutal nature”.

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