Venezuela attack could embolden China and Russia, says Emily Thornberry

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The lack of western condemnation of the US military intervention in Venezuela could embolden China and Russia to take similar action against other countries, a senior Labour MP has warned.

Emily Thornberry, who chairs the Commons foreign affairs committee, said that without a coherent and strong response to Donald Trump’s move at the weekend to remove the Venezuelan president, Nicolás Maduro, and bring him to the US, the norms of international law could break down.

Keir Starmer and his ministers have not condemned the operation. Speaking on Monday, the home affairs minister Mike Tapp said it was for the US “to lay out its legal basis for the actions that it has taken” and that it was not yet possible for the UK to have a view.

Thornberry said she was worried the US had not planned for what came next after Maduro was snatched on Saturday and flown to New York.

She told Times Radio: “But my primary problem is that, in any event, there is no legal basis for this and it sets a really bad precedent for countries such as China and Russia, who may also think: ‘Well, we’ve got spheres of influence, why can’t we do things like that within our sphere of influence, like Ukraine or Taiwan?’

“And it’s quite difficult to say that they can’t, given that America has done it and there have been no consequences and very little criticism, at least from western governments.”

Condemnation from allies, even without any other punitive action, made countries think twice, Thornberry said. “To a certain extent the force of international law is that people generally accept that this is the way that you should behave, and if you don’t behave in that way, then there is an international condemnation.

“[It] may not sound like a great deal, but although governments always say they don’t care, they do care. They do care a lot, and there just needs to be certain international norms.”

Without any condemnation, she said, “international law almost moves on” and such actions bbecame more acceptable.

Speaking to Sky News earlier on Monday, Tapp said further details of the government’s response were likely to be announced in an expected Commons statement on Monday afternoon by the foreign secretary, Yvette Cooper,.

“Where we are at this point is that we are not displeased that this man [Maduro] is no longer in charge, that we 100% respect an international rules-based system and legality, and we’re not pressured by social media and commentators to ensure we are quick in our response,” he said. “It’s about diplomacy. It’s about talking to our allies and the United States.”

In her interview, Thornberry did not criticise Starmer explicitly, saying she understood the need to maintain relations with the US. “I’m not going to pretend this isn’t difficult, and it is important that we keep a very important ally like America onboard,” she said. “We have particularly the interests of Ukraine that we need to consider. But it’s meaningless if we don’t support international law.”

But, she said, the UK needed “to be clearer that that this has been a breach of international law, and we do not agree that they should have done it”. She added: “You just can’t go around snatching leaders from different countries, taking them back to your domestic courts and trying them it will just end in anarchy.”

Speaking to ITV’s Good Morning Britain, Kemi Badenoch, the Conservative leader, said she would not condemn or condone the US action. She said: “What President Trump has done is certainly unorthodox. I’m not condemning it because I don’t want to see someone like Maduro in charge, but I’m not praising it either, because I think it raises lots of interesting questions about the world that we live in.”

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