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If kidnapping presidents becomes acceptable, the rules are finished
Cape Argus
|January 05, 2026
SELECTIVE ENFORCEMENT
THIS article is written in response to claims that cross-border military force may be justified by domestic criminal indictments or disputed elections.
Such arguments, if left unchallenged, risk normalising a dangerous erosion of the United Nations Charter's authority at a moment when conflicts in Ukraine and rising tensions around Taiwan already place the international system under severe strain. The purpose of this piece is not to defend any government, but to defend the legal framework that protects all states from coercion by the powerful.
There is one rule that prevents the world from sliding into permanent instability: states may not use force to settle political disputes. That rule sits at the heart of the UN Charter, drafted after two world wars to stop power, not principle, from deciding who governs whom.
"If a powerful state can seize a foreign president by force, sovereignty becomes conditional."
Reports that the US used force inside Venezuela to seize a sitting president, defended by references to criminal charges, electoral illegitimacy, and "law enforcement", strike directly at that rule. These are not technical legal debates. Under international law, these justifications do not work.
"Domestic indictments do not internationalise jurisdiction. Elections disputes do not suspend sovereignty"
If the world treats this moment as normal, the damage will not stop in Caracas. It will reach Kyiv. And it will reach Taipei.
The law is strict and intentionally so Article 2(4) of the UN Charter bans the use of force against another state. There are only two exceptions:
1. Explicit authorisation by the UN Security Council.
2. Self-defence under Article 51 in response to an armed attack.
That is the entire list. There is no exception for domestic criminal indictments. There is no exception for disputed elections. There is no exception for leaders deemed corrupt or authoritarian.
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