
There are moments in American foreign policy when an event, small, localized, and almost provincial in its initial framing, illuminates a larger moral universe. The Venezuela boat strikes, spoken of with a kind of offhand certainty by commentators like Pete Hegseth, had that uncanny quality: the sense that the incident was less an aberration than a glimpse into a darker, ongoing pattern. It felt, unmistakably, like a crime hiding in plain sight. And the longer one sits with that feeling, the more unsettling the larger question becomes, how many other quiet crimes, half-buried or never reported, were committed under the Trump administration’s foreign policy banner?
The story of the boat strikes, covert interference presented with all the subtlety of a fist in fog, fits neatly into a governing worldview that thrived on the idea that what is done in the shadows is justified so long as it serves a larger spectacle. The Trump years cultivated a foreign policy aesthetic shaped by improvisation, vengeance, and the barely disguised thrill of rule-breaking. Even those who approved of the administration’s posture abroad rarely claimed it was careful. Or lawful. Or consistent. Only that it was bold and unbound. And boldness, as we learned, can be an excellent hiding place.
Consider the psychology at play: an administration that reveled in open defiance was simultaneously the one most adept at burying the quiet misdeeds. A public scandal, Ukraine, for example, blazed bright enough to conceal the operations never spoken of, never confirmed, never even fully whispered. If the flamboyant transgression becomes the news cycle, the technical violations glide by unnoticed, like boats in low light.
The Venezuela operation embodies that contradiction. For years, Washington hawks fantasized about great geopolitical confrontations, but what actually unfolded were smaller, stranger, and far more deniable mechanisms of interference, mercenary plots, covert pressure campaigns, oddball paramilitary excursions conducted with the moral discipline of a fraternity prank gone geopolitical. When such incidents broke into public awareness, they did so not because the system worked, but because the recklessness was too large to contain. It wasn’t the scrutiny that failed. It was the secrecy.
This is the quiet terror of reflecting on that era, not the scandals we know but the possibility of the ones we don’t.
Foreign policy under the Trump administration functioned as a kind of parallel theatre, one stage in the light, where the president issued bombastic threats on Twitter and praised strongmen with the enthusiasm of a man congratulating himself in the mirror; and another stage entirely, deeper backstage, where hastily planned operations proceeded without transparency, oversight, or even coherent strategy. The more chaotic the public show became, the easier it was to slip other actions through the cracks, disguised as routine, as whispers, as minor footnotes of the national security apparatus.
People speak nostalgically of the “adults in the room,” the ones who were supposed to curb excesses and keep the country from drifting into disaster. But such talk is itself an acknowledgment that excesses were constant and disaster always possible. If the Venezuela boat strikes felt like a crime long before the media caught up to them, it is because the moral disarray of those years trained us to expect wrongdoing as a background hum.
What was done to Venezuela was not done in a vacuum. It was part of a broader ethos that treated foreign nations, especially those already wounded economically or politically as chess pieces to be flicked across the board. The administration’s foreign policy was less “America First” than America-unrestrained, operating by impulses rather than principles. In that environment, the question of how many additional covert actions crossed legal or ethical lines becomes less hypothetical and more inevitable.
And so we return to the uneasy question, how many more crimes? Not metaphorical crimes, not ideological disagreements, but concrete violations, international laws bent or broken, human consequences ignored in the name of spectacle, operations conducted not with the meticulous precision of a statesman, but with the erratic fervor of someone seeking quick victory without accountability.
Even now, years removed, the full picture remains obscured. The archives have not been fully opened. The oversight mechanisms remain weakened. Many of the individuals who orchestrated these operations have retreated into think-tank anonymity or media commentary, where the past can be reframed as policy rather than misconduct. But the pattern persists like a watermark: the administration’s loudest actions were often its least dangerous; the quiet ones, its most alarming.
There is a temptation to view the entire Trump era as an anomaly, a fever that broke, a disruption now fading into the political periphery. But foreign policy leaves residue. It lingers in damaged alliances, destabilized regions, and the chilling example that a president can conduct clandestine activities without consequence. The next administration inclined toward secrecy or aggression will inherit both the blueprint and the precedent.
The Venezuela boat strikes are thus more than a footnote. They are a warning flare. They invite us to reconsider the gap between what we witnessed and what was truly done. They remind us that a nation’s moral standing can be eroded not only by the scandals that dominate headlines, but by the operations quietly carried out in forgotten coves, unmonitored channels, and diplomatic darkrooms.
America will not know the full cost for years. But we already know enough to stop pretending that legality and morality were only occasionally breached. The real story, the one barely told and only half-glimpsed, is how the shadow operations became the norm, and how easily a democracy can lose track of the crimes committed in its name when the spectacle is loud enough to drown out the whispers of the waterline.









