Maduro’s capture shows that enforcement works and exposes the cost of Ottawa’s empty rhetoric

The capture of Nicolás Maduro marks a break with the assumptions that have shaped Western policy in the hemisphere for more than a decade. Sanctions, diplomatic isolation and appeals to international norms were meant to constrain an openly criminal regime. They did not.

What followed was not escalation through institutions, but enforcement through action. That shift matters, particularly for Canada, which continues to anchor its foreign policy in processes that others increasingly view as exhausted.

Venezuela was not simply an authoritarian state. It became a permissive platform where narcotics trafficking, money laundering, sanctioned actors and hostile intelligence services operated with protection. Over time, sovereignty was repurposed as cover.

The result was regional instability and the outward spread of criminal and coercive networks that now operate across the Americas, including inside Canada. Maduro’s capture should be read in this light. It was less about regime change than about dismantling a node in a transnational system that had grown too costly to tolerate.

For Canada, the implications are uncomfortable. Ottawa refused to recognize Maduro years ago and aligned rhetorically with democratic legitimacy. Yet refusal without enforcement becomes symbolic.

While Canada relied on statements and sanctions coordination, the ecosystem surrounding Venezuela matured. Illicit finance flowed through real estate, trade and professional enablers. Criminal organizations diversified and embedded themselves in legal markets.

The separation Canadians prefer to maintain between foreign policy failure and domestic consequence no longer holds in these circumstances.

This episode also forces a harder conversation about international law, which Beijing and Ottawa call the rules-based system. Critics will argue that the operation to capture Maduro undermines sovereignty and sets a dangerous precedent. That concern deserves serious treatment.

But precedent has already been set in another direction. For years, authoritarian regimes learned that shielding criminal activity behind state institutions carried limited risk. Extradition could be refused. Arrest warrants ignored. Sanctions routed around.

The lesson absorbed was not restraint, but immunity. Maduro’s capture signals that immunity is not the same as impunity, and that immunity can no longer be assumed when criminality and national security concerns converge.

Canada should not dismiss this as an American aberration. It reflects a broader shift toward enforcement as a corrective tool where legal and diplomatic mechanisms have proven insufficient.

That shift will shape expectations among allies. States will be judged, and Mexico, too, has been put on notice, less by alignment in language and more by whether they deny hostile actors operational space. On that measure, Canada faces challenges it has yet to confront honestly.

The domestic effects will be immediate. Venezuelan Canadians are divided between relief and apprehension. Ottawa will face calls for humanitarian support, migration pathways and protection for families at risk.

These are manageable pressures. The deeper issue is strategic coherence. If enforcement is returning as a feature of international order, Canada must decide whether it intends to remain a beneficiary of allied action or a contributor to it.

Energy and security are intertwined in this recalibration. Venezuela’s potential reintegration into Western energy markets would alter supply dynamics and regional leverage with important implications for Canada. Yet Canada continues to treat energy primarily as a political liability rather than a strategic asset.

That posture sits uneasily alongside an ally willing to act decisively to secure hemispheric stability.

Most importantly, Maduro’s capture exposes a gap between diagnosis and response. Canada is proficient at identifying problems: money laundering, foreign interference, transnational repression and organized crime. What remains inconsistent is enforcement. Investigations stall. Prosecutions narrow. Regulatory gaps persist. Over time, credibility erodes. The message received by adversaries is not confusion, but permissiveness.

The capture of Maduro should prompt reassessment, not of values, but of assumptions. The belief that process alone constrains power is fading. It’s so 2015! Enforcement has re-entered the equation, selectively and unapologetically.

Canada can either adjust to that reality or continue to operate as though statements carry the weight they once did.

Maduro’s fall is a signal that the rules governing consequences have changed.

The question for Canada is whether it intends to notice.

Scott A. McGregor is a senior fellow with the Frontier Centre for Public Policy and managing partner of Close Hold Intelligence Consulting Ltd.

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