4 Jan 2026

'Boy, were we wrong': MAGA's dismay over Trump's attacks, threats of war

12:47 pm on 4 January 2026

By Gram Slattery and Simon Lewis, Reuters

US President Donald Trump and US Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene.

US President Donald Trump and US Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene. Photo: AFP

  • Military intervention could bring risks in November midterm elections
  • Trump critics say action departs from MAGA promises
  • Actions in Venezuela bring Trump in line with previous Republican presidents

President Donald Trump's decision to attack Venezuela, arrest its president and temporarily run the country marks a striking departure for a politician who long criticised others for overreaching on foreign affairs and vowed to avoid foreign entanglements.

His vision for US involvement in Venezuela, sketched out in a midday news conference, left open the possibility of more military action, ongoing involvement in that nation's politics and oil industry and even "boots on the ground".

The term suggests military deployment of the sort that presidents often avoid for fear of provoking domestic political backlash.

"We are going to run the country until such time as we can do a safe, proper, and judicious transition," Trump said.

As recently as his inauguration for a second term last January, Trump told supporters: "We will measure our success not only by the battles we win, but also by the wars that we end, and perhaps most importantly, by the wars we never get into."

Since then, Trump has bombed targets in Syria, Iraq, Iran, Nigeria, Yemen and Somalia, blown up dozens of alleged drug boats in the Caribbean Sea and Pacific Ocean and made veiled threats to invade Greenland and Panama.

The overnight attack on Venezuela was his most aggressive foreign military action yet, striking the capital Caracas and other parts of the country and capturing President Nicolas Maduro and his wife to face drug-trafficking charges in New York.

These developments ran counter to some Republican hopes that the president would focus more on voters' main domestic concerns: affordability, healthcare and the economy.

Trump told reporters in his news conference that intervening in Venezuela was in line with his "America First" policy.

"We want to surround ourselves with good neighbours. We want to surround ourself with stability. We want to surround ourself with energy," he said, referring to Venezuela's oil reserves.

But the emerging political stakes were captured by a social media post from US Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene, a Georgia Republican, who has broken with Trump in recent months, because of what she said has been his departure from the America First rhetoric of his campaign and its promise of limiting foreign adventures. She is resigning from Congress next week.

"This is what many in MAGA thought they voted to end. Boy, were we wrong."

This image posted on US President Donald Trump's Truth Social account on January 3, 2026, shows what President Trump says is Venezuela's President Nicolas Maduro onboard the USS Iwo Jima after the US military captured him on January 3, 2026.

This image posted on US President Donald Trump's Truth Social account on January 3, 2026, shows what President Trump says is Venezuela's President Nicolas Maduro onboard the USS Iwo Jima after the US military captured him on January 3, 2026. Photo: AFP/SUPPLIED

Risk of quagmire

Trump's ongoing attention to foreign affairs provides fuel for Democrats to criticise Trump ahead of midterm congressional elections in November, when control of both houses of Congress is likely to turn on just a few races across the United States.

Republicans narrowly control both right now, giving the president a largely free hand to enact his agenda.

"How does going to war in South America help regular Americans who are struggling?" Senator Chris Murphy, a Democrat, wrote on X. "What is the actual security threat to the United States? And (what) happens next in Venezuela?"

Trump has worked to end several foreign conflicts, including in Ukraine and Gaza, while lobbying for a Nobel Peace Prize. But US military actions tend to draw more public attention and historically have carried more political risk for presidents and their parties.

Polls have shown that, before the attack, the prospect of US military action in Venezuela was unpopular, with roughly one out of five Americans supporting force to depose Maduro, according to a November Reuters/Ipsos survey.

Republican debate over foreign policy

Trump's top diplomat and national security adviser Marco Rubio called several members of Congress early on Saturday in an effort to blunt opposition to military action.

Mike Lee, a prominent libertarian-leaning senator, initially questioned the administration taking military action without a declaration of war or authorisation for the use of military force, but wrote on X he concluded that the operation likely fell within the president's authority after speaking to Rubio.

Republican Representative Thomas Massie, a frequent Trump critic, wrote in a post on X that Trump's warning of further strikes on Venezuela "Doesn't seem the least bit consistent" with Rubio's characterisation to Lee.

"If this action were constitutionally sound, the Attorney General wouldn't be tweeting that they've arrested the President of a sovereign country and his wife for possessing guns in violation of a 1934 US firearm law," Massie wrote in a separate post.

'US will get tangled up'

For a president who has consistently contrasted himself with the Republican "neoconservatives" of the late 20th century, Trump's foreign policy has developed striking similarities with that of his predecessors.

In 1983, under former President Ronald Reagan, the US invaded Grenada, claiming that the government at that time was illegitimate, a claim Trump has also made with respect to Maduro.

In 1989, former President George HW Bush invaded Panama to depose dictator Manuel Noriega who, like Maduro, was wanted on US drug-trafficking charges. In that case, the US installed Noriega's replacement.

Trump's allies argue that actions in the Western Hemisphere differ from the War on Terror interventions that Trump has criticised. Trump's National Security Strategy published last month promised a revival of the 19th century Monroe Doctrine that prioritizes US dominance in Latin America.

The Trump administration at first justified its pressure campaign against Maduro as a drug enforcement operation, but would now be sucked into overseeing a complex transition in Venezuela, said Brett Bruen, a former foreign policy adviser in Barack Obama's administration. Key regional players like Mexico and Brazil could be pushed closer to China and possibly Russia by the move.

"I don't see any short version of this story," said Bruen, now head of the Global Situation Room, a public relations consultancy. "The US will get tangled up in Venezuela but will also have new problems to contend with related to its neighbours."

- Reuters

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