
Secretary of State Marco Rubio argued with Republican Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul Wednesday over whether the U.S.â capture of Venezuelan dictator Nicolas Maduro was an âact of war.â
The U.S. captured Maduro on Jan. 3 and charged him with narco-terrorist and drug trafficking charges. Paul and Rubio sparred during a Senate hearing over whether the U.S. would consider this type of action an âact of warâ if a foreign nation captured the U.S. president. Rubio argued that Maduroâs capture does not âcome anywhere closeâ to the constitutional definition of an act of war.
âIf a foreign country bombed our air defense missiles, captured and removed our president, and blockaded our country, would that be considered an act of war?â Paul asked.Â
âWell, I think your question is about the, and I will acknowledge youâve been very consistenton all these points your entire career, so let me, no matter whoâs in charge.So I will point to two things.The first is itâs hard for us to conceive that an operation that lasted about four and a half hours and was a law enforcement operationto capture someone we donât recognize as a head of state, indicted in the United States,wanted with a $50 million bounty,â Rubio said.Â
Paul expressed disagreement with Rubio by stating that if any country captured the U.S. president in the same kind of operation carried out in Venezuela, he would declare war. Rubio said the U.S. is always going to act in its national interest and protection.
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âBut would it be an act of war if someone did it to us?â Paul said. âNobody dies, few casualties, theyâre in and out, boom, itâs a perfect military operation.Would that be an act of war?Of course it would be an act of war. Iâm probably the most anti-war person in the Senate, and I would vote to declare warif someone invaded our country and took our president ⌠So my next question would be, letâs say itâs not a war, and weâre just going to defineit away and say itâs not a war.Thatâs one of the arguments.So itâs a drug bust. What if a foreign country indicts our president for violating a foreign law?Should we extradite our president, or should we be okay if they come in and get him byforce?â
âLook, I think ultimately weâre always going to act in our national interest,â Rubio said. âAnd so if somebody comes after our national interest, like the case youâve described,which obviously does not exist at this time, but the case youâve described, the U.S. alwayshas the right to act in its national interest and to protect itself.I donât know about this equivalency, âdoes it justify them doing it.â Weâre always going to do whatâs best for the United States and America.Weâre always going to protect our system.âÂ
President Donald Trumpâs administration, including Rubio, have repeatedly stated that Maduroâs arrest was simply a âlaw enforcement actionâ and not an act of war against Venezuela. Trump said that the move brought Maduro to âjusticeâ and that the U.S. acted within its constitutional authority.
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