Top News
|Starmer resigns as UK Prime Minister amid mounting Labour Party pressure | US, Iran War Ends with a Binding Commitment from Iran to Never Produce Nuclear Weapons | Oil Starts Flowing Freely Through Strait of Hormuz | US and Iran both Allow Movement of Oil Tanker’s | ONGC to Invest $1.5 billion to Boost India’s Oil Storage by 33 % | Qatar Amir-gifted Boeing 747 is new US Air Force Presidential Jet | Meta and Reliance to set up a huge Global Digital Hub in Jamnagar | Modi, Trump meet warmly again, this time at G7 | Modi showers praise on Trump for his Middle East peace effort | Trump says We always had Tremendous Relationship with India | Trump praises Modi, jovially calling him ‘a killer’ for his negotiating skills at G7 | Modi said Freedom of Navigation in the Strait of Hormuz is A Must | Trump expressed condolences for the Indian sailors killed in US Navy attack in the Gulf | Trump said US and Iran will sign an MoU to end their war on Friday June 19 | All the G7 Leaders supported the Peace Effort | Modi, UAE President Shaikh Mohammed agree to work together on Middle East Peace, Security and Stability | Piyush Goyal discusses expanding partnership with Prince Albert II of Monaco | Eurosatory 2026 opens in Paris with matching 2026 defence exhibitors from 68 countries | Huge display of advanced weapons for precision attacks and defense | UAE’s three Satellites are fully Operational in Low Earth orbit | NASA announces Artemis III Space mission for 2027 with Four Astronauts | It will be a ‘highly complex’ mission to test Rendezvous and Docking capabilities between spacecraft | Three Astronauts are Americans, and one Italian | They include Commander Randy Bresnik, mission Specialists Frank Rubio and Andre Douglas, and Pilot Luca Parmitano of Italy | Vice Admiral Vineet McCarty is Commander in Chief, Andaman and Nicobar Command | Maj Gen Rachel Thomas takes over as Additional Director General, Indian Military Nursing Service | Susan Elias takes over as the first Woman Principal of Delhi’s prestigious St Stephen’s College in its 145 years history | St Stephen’s has produced many of India’s top Civil and Military officers | A Boys college for long, it’s now a coveted Co-ed institution | India Strategic salutes Lt Gen Dhahi Khalfan and Dubai Police for marking 70 Years of Excellence in Public Safety | Dubai is among the Safest Cities on the World | US asks historically neutral Oman to take sides and cut ties with Iran | Moscow’s ties with New Delhi are Strong As Always, says Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov | India, Australia to sign MoU on deepening defence ties | Nvidia to introduce advanced AI chips for PCs from 2026 | Malaysia bans Social Media accounts for children under 16 | President Trump arrives in China for a high stakes Summit with President Xi Jinping | Trump says the only thing on Iran is ‘They Can’t Have A Nuclear Weapon’ | US F 35 fighter jets from amphibiius assault ship USS Tripoli continue Patrol Operations around Iran | UAE and Saudis hit Iranian oil facilities in retaliation, including the key Lavan refinery | Trump asks Iran to make a deal or be decimated | US will finish the job - of denying Iran nuclear capability - Peacefully or Otherwise | Iran parks it’s Air Force aircraft in Pakistan to escape from US strikes, reports CBS | India slams China’s military support to Pakistan during 2025 Operation Sindoor against Pali terrorists | China gave long range anti-aircraft missiles to Pakistan among other sophisticated weapons | In a global Oil Shock, UAE leaves OPEC, from May 1 | Iran declares Strait of Hormuz open for all | Oil Prices Plunge | IMF warns of Global Recession if Iran War doesn’t end | British economy worst hit with the war, says IMF | Israel and Lebanon hold talks for the first time after 1993 | They focus on removing Iran-supported ‘terrorists like Hezbollah’ | US, Iran likely to hold a second round of Peace Talks | IEA reminds the oil prices do not yet reflect the severity of the global Energy crisis | President Trump, Prime Minister Modi speak for 40 minutes over phone to discuss the Iran War | Modi says Happy to receive call from My Friend Trump and discussed the Importance of Keeping the Hormuz Open and Secure | Ambassador Sergio Gor says US and India ties are On A Strong Footing | US, Iran likely to resume talks | Israeli and Lebanese officials to meet in Washington, Hamas opposes talks | India, France review expanding strategic ties | Iran reiterates No Restrictions on Indian Ships in the Strait of Hormuz |
FOREIGN AFFAIRSTOP

Venezuela, Deterrence And Why India Was Right

From Shyam Bhatia

London, January 4. The United States’ military action against Venezuela and the forcible removal of President Nicolás Maduro mark a decisive moment in the steady erosion of the post–Cold War international order. Whatever the legal arguments advanced after the fact, the episode underlines a hard truth that many states prefer not to confront: in contemporary international politics, power precedes law, and enforcement follows capability rather than principle.

Image Creative: India Strategic

Washington has not sought to disguise this reality. Announcing the operation, senior American officials framed it not merely as an exercise in law enforcement or humanitarian necessity, but as a demonstration of reach. U.S. Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth was explicit in his message to the wider world, declaring that “our adversaries remain on notice: America can project our will anywhere, anytime.” The statement was not aimed solely at Caracas. It was a signal, delivered without ambiguity, that deterrence today is enforced less by institutions than by demonstrable capacity.

The Venezuelan case is therefore instructive not because of the nature of the Maduro regime, but because it exposes the fragility of sovereignty in the absence of credible deterrence. Venezuela is a recognised state, a member of the United Nations, and formally protected by the same international legal architecture as any other country. None of these attributes proved sufficient once a major power decided that its interests justified direct action. Legal rationales followed the use of force; they did not constrain it.

 

This reality should resonate strongly in New Delhi, not as an abstract warning but as a concrete policy lesson. India’s decision to develop nuclear weapons was never about prestige or bravado. It was a strategic calculation rooted in history, geography, and experience. The Venezuelan episode reinforces the logic behind that choice. Had India remained non-nuclear, it would today be far more exposed to coercive diplomacy, sanctions-based pressure, or intervention framed in moral or humanitarian language. Nuclear capability does not guarantee immunity, but it raises the cost of coercion to a level that forces hesitation and recalculation.

Venezuela demonstrates why India rejected a system that asked states to trade permanent vulnerability for paper assurances. The NPT promised security through restraint; reality delivers security through deterrence. India chose accordingly—and history has vindicated that choice.

Few understood this better than K Subrahmanyam, the architect of India’s strategic nuclear thinking, who wrote bluntly in 1998 that “nuclear weapons are the currency of power in the international system.” The phrase was not an endorsement of war, but a recognition of how order is maintained in an anarchic world. What Venezuela demonstrates is that this currency has not depreciated; if anything, it has become more valuable as norms weaken.

This perspective is not uniquely Indian. It sits squarely within the mainstream of Western strategic thought. Henry Kissinger, reflecting on the role of nuclear weapons during the Cold War, observed that “nuclear weapons are not weapons of war; they are weapons of deterrence. They exist to prevent coercion.”

That insight is worth revisiting at a time when coercion is again being normalised as a tool of statecraft. Kissinger was equally candid about alliances, noting elsewhere that “America has no permanent friends or enemies, only interests.” The Venezuelan operation illustrates both propositions in action.

The broader implications are unsettling. If power can be exercised so openly in Latin America, it weakens the already fraying restraints elsewhere. For Russia, the lesson is that faits accompli harden with time once norms erode, making the consolidation of territory in Ukraine easier to sustain. For China, the signal regarding Taiwan is equally stark: Patience Favours the Stronger Actor when Enforcement of Norms is Uncertain.

Delay tests deterrence rather than strengthening it.

For India, the conclusion is uncomfortable but unavoidable. It cannot assume automatic alignment from any great power, including the United States. History offers ample reminders that Washington has sided with Pakistan when it suited American objectives, and engaged China against the Soviet Union when strategic balance demanded it.

In fact, if there is one country routinely exporting narco-terrorism, as a Matter of State Policy, with intended, calculated murders, it is Pakistan. As a great global power, will US strike Pakistan?

India’s defence debate therefore cannot remain confined to marginal budget increases or episodic procurement announcements. The lesson of Venezuela is that credible deterrence rests on scale, depth, and industrial resilience. Defence manufacturing must be treated as strategic infrastructure rather than a subsidiary of economic policy. Sustained investment is required not only in platforms and weapons, but in supply chains, surge capacity, and technological autonomy. A deterrent that cannot be replenished, repaired, or expanded under pressure is a brittle one.

This applies as much to conventional forces as it does to the nuclear domain. Deterrence works when it is clearly survivable, clearly modernised, and clearly backed by political will. Under-investment invites testing. Ambiguity backed by strength deters it. Strategic autonomy, in this context, is not a slogan but a function of resources and readiness.

For countries such as Iran, the message from Venezuela is already unmistakable: delay invites pressure, while deterrence complicates coercion. Whether that lesson is absorbed in time remains to be seen.

For India, the stakes are higher. It is a rising power operating in a system where norms are weakening and precedents are increasingly set by force. In today’s international system, peace is not guaranteed by declarations or charters. It is guaranteed by strength, by credibility, and by the sustained capacity to make coercion prohibitively costly.

India understood this once before. The world is reminding it why it must continue to do so and why half-measures will no longer suffice.

Related Articles

Back to top button