17 December 2025 The Hindu Editorial
What to Read in The Hindu Editorial( Topic and Syllabus wise)
Editorial 1: Blatant foul
Context
Washington’s militarised approach to Venezuela violates international law.
Introduction
The U.S. seizure of a Venezuelan oil tanker signals a renewed phase of hostile interventionism in Latin America. By targeting energy lifelines, economic partnerships, and sovereign trade, Washington risks escalating tensions beyond diplomacy. Such actions challenge the international rules-based order and revive memories of Cold War–era policies driven by regime-change ambitions.
Seizure of Venezuelan Oil Tanker
The U.S. seizure of the Venezuelan oil tanker Skipper on December 10 marks a sharp escalation in hostilities toward Venezuela
Caracas condemned the action as “piracy, kidnapping, theft of private property and extrajudicial acts in international waters”
The tanker was part of subsidised oil shipments to Cuba, a long-standing arrangement sustaining Havana’s economy
Venezuela–Cuba Economic Ties
For decades, Venezuela supplied oil to Cuba at concessional rates
In return, Cuba deployed doctors and security personnel to Venezuela
Revenue from resale of oil to China has been a critical economic lifeline for Cuba
U.S. Policy Escalation and Political Motives
The seizure reflects an intensifying U.S. strategy against the Maduro government
U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio, a hardliner on Cuba, appears intent on cutting off Havana’s economic support systems
These actions echo regime-change tactics reminiscent of the Monroe Doctrine era in Latin America
Military Actions in Caribbean Waters
Prior to the tanker seizure, the U.S. carried out strikes on boats in the Caribbean, alleging links to drug trafficking
These operations resemble acts of war undertaken without clear legislative authorisation
The justification of a “war on drugs” lacks credible evidence tying President Maduro to drug cartels
Acknowledging Venezuela’s Internal Failures
The Maduro government faces serious allegations, including manipulation of the 2024 presidential elections
It also bears responsibility for economic mismanagement and collapse
However, these failures do not legitimise external aggression or unlawful actions
Violation of International Norms
Economic sanctions, covert operations, recognition of Juan Guaidó, extrajudicial killings, and the tanker seizure collectively undermine the international rules-based order
Such actions contradict the very principles of sovereignty and law that the U.S. claims to defend
Parallels with Cuba Policy
The situation mirrors U.S. policy toward Cuba since the 1950s, marked by a prolonged trade embargo aimed at regime change
This historical parallel highlights a pattern of interventionist foreign policy
Call for a Principled Global Response
The international community must condemn these actions while continuing to critique the Venezuelan regime
A consistent and universal defence of international law, applicable to all states including powerful ones, is essential
Without such principles, the world risks sliding further into disorder and anarchy
Conclusion
Even as Venezuela’s democratic deficits and economic mismanagement demand scrutiny, they cannot legitimise extrajudicial force, unilateral sanctions, or maritime seizures. A credible global order rests on consistent application of international law, restraint by powerful states, and rejection of coercive foreign policy that deepens instability and anarchy.
Editorial 2: The three revolutions reshaping American power
Context
The unifying thread across internal, external, and economic policies is an architecture of cruelty, in which harm is foreseen, normalised, and deliberately deployed.
Introduction
When U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio suggested reshaping the G-20 into an exclusive inner caucus of powerful states, it marked a potential reordering of global economic governance, concentrating rule-making and marginalising emerging economies.
Overshadowed proposal: The G-20 restructuring idea was quickly eclipsed by the release of the 2025 U.S. National Security Strategy (NSS), which reflected the same ideological shift.
Ideological reinforcement: Soon after, the Heritage Foundation, central to Trump’s MAGA agenda, unveiled its policy blueprint, Restoring America’s Promise: 2025–26.
Strategic alignment: Together, the G-20 proposal, NSS, and Heritage 2026 point to a coordinated transformation in American statecraft.
Three revolutions: This alignment signals changes in political morality, a recasting of foreign policy, and a restructuring of global economic governance.
Exclusion as design: The shared logic is the institutionalisation of exclusion and acceptance of unequal burdensas deliberate policy choices.
Cruelty as system: Cruelty operates analytically, describing a framework where harm is anticipated, normalised, and strategically deployed.
Shrinking of civic space
Internal rupture: Mr. Trump’s political project dismantled the moral foundations of U.S. public life, replacing restraint and civic responsibility with transgression as authenticity and the erosion of shame as a political asset.
Doctrine shift: The 2025 NSS formalises this change by redefining cultural cohesion, ideological alignment, and demographic stability as national security imperatives.
Bureaucratic overhaul: The Heritage blueprint calls for institutional remaking, ideological vetting, and large-scale personnel turnover across the state.
Institutional suspicion: The NSS reinforces this outlook through emphasis on sovereign autonomy, distrust of institutions, and framing domestic culture as security, treating independent bodies as obstacles, not correctives.
Permissive cruelty: Cruelty manifests as indifference, where hardship from administrative purges, shrinking civic space, and punitive regulation is absorbed into governance rather than recognised as harm.
Foreign policy around conditionality
External shift: The 2025 NSS marks a sharp break from U.S. traditions of predictable commitments and institutional stability, moving beyond even Trump’s first-term disruptions.
Transactional alliances: Alliances are redefined as conditional contracts, with obligations constantly reassessed rather than assumed.
Monroe Doctrine revival: The Western Hemisphere is prioritised over Europe and the Indo-Pacific, signalling a return to regional dominance.
Migration as security: Migration is elevated from a domestic issue to a core national security threat, reshaping foreign policy priorities.
Institutional downgrading: International bodies once amplifying U.S. power are recast as constraints on sovereignty.
Ideological framework: The Heritage blueprint portrays multilateralism as a sovereignty violation, border control as geopolitics, and allied cooperation as conditional on ideological conformity.
Selective dominance: The strategy reflects neither isolationism nor realism but assertion where leverage is high, retreat where costs rise, and partnerships judged by conformity over capability.
Systemic impact: The outcome is fragile alliances, emboldened revisionist powers, and a fragmented global order.
Economic restructuring: Mr. Rubio’s G-20 proposal signals a tiered global economy, dividing rule-makersfrom rule-takers.
Concentrated governance: Decision-making on debt relief, trade norms, and climate finance narrows to a small group of powerful states.
Hemispheric economics: The NSS promotes reshoring, tariff leverage, and industrial sovereignty, anchoring growth in North America.
Anti-globalisation logic: Heritage 2026 treats globalisation as a strategic risk and multilateral economics as threats to autonomy.
Unequal consequences: Countries with weak bargaining power face harsher debt terms, politicised supply chains, and restricted capital access.
Social fallout: The burden of inflation, export disruption, and adjustment costs falls on workers, both global and domestic.
Systemic cruelty: Economic pain is deliberately uneven, functioning as a tool to stabilise a more hierarchical global order.
A return of imperial logic
Colonial–imperial mindset: All three revolutions reflect a return to a hierarchical world-view, where power confers entitlement and the strong impose costs while the weak absorb them.
Structural domination: This is not territorial colonialism but a systemic order built on hierarchy, exclusion, and unequal burdens.
Institutional codification: The 2025 NSS supplies the bureaucratic language, while Heritage 2026 provides the ideological foundations.
Cruelty as logic: Cruelty names the organising principle—suffering is designed, not accidental, and embedded within policy execution.
Unified trajectory: G-20 restructuring and the 2025 NSS are expressions of the same strategic shift, not isolated initiatives.
Emerging order: The U.S. seeks to protect sovereignty through contraction, project power through hierarchy, and reshape global governance through exclusion.
Conclusion
The final irony is that those harmed by this reordering are not only abroad. They are found in Maputo and Dhaka, but also in Harlan, Kentucky. Cruelty’s architecture is global, yet its effects are deeply personal—extending outward across borders and ultimately returning home.
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