Mexico’s warning landed like a thunderclap.
In a rare public rebuke, President Claudia Sheinbaum accused the United States of shredding international law with a surprise military operation in Venezuela and the reported capture of Nicolás Maduro. She invoked the UN Charter, the Estrada Doctrine, and Latin America’s deepest fears of foreign boots on sovereign soil. As Brazil and others murmur alarm, the region faces a dangerous test: will diplomacy hold, or will the hemisphere slide into a new era of coer…
Sheinbaum’s statement did more than criticize Washington; it drew a red line around Mexico’s identity in world affairs. By invoking Article 2(4) of the UN Charter and the Estrada Doctrine, she framed the reported U.S. action not as a tactical dispute, but as a fundamental breach of sovereignty that threatens every state in the region, regardless of ideology or alignment. That framing resonated quickly across Latin America, where memories of coups, covert operations, and imposed regimes remain vivid.
Her appeal to the UN placed multilateralism at the center of the crisis, insisting that dialogue, not force, must decide Venezuela’s fate. It also reminded Washington that cooperation on migration, security, and trade cannot be traded for silence on war. In choosing law over loyalty and principles over pressure, Mexico signaled that the real battle is not only over Caracas, but over the rules that will govern power in the Americas.