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Home » Greater Eurasia Podcast: w/ Prof. Jeffrey Sachs on the US invasion of Venezuela

Greater Eurasia Podcast: w/ Prof. Jeffrey Sachs on the US invasion of Venezuela

Here is the full transcript of Prof. Jeffrey Sachs’ interview on Greater Eurasia Podcast with host Glenn Diesen, January 3, 2026.

Brief Notes: In this urgent analysis, Professor Jeffrey Sachs joins Glenn Diesen to discuss the seismic geopolitical implications of the January 2026 U.S. attack on Venezuela and the abduction of President Nicolás Maduro. Sachs frames this event as a blatantly illegal act that signals the final collapse of the U.S. constitutional order, moving into an era of “thuggish” rule by executive decree.

He critiques the “pathetic” response of European leaders and the awarding of the Nobel Peace Prize to Maria Corina Machado, arguing that the true objective is a crude grab for Venezuela’s massive oil reserves. From the potential for similar escalations in Iran to the historical pattern of failed U.S. regime change operations, Sachs warns that the dismantling of international law has brought the world to its most dangerous point in the nuclear age.

Introduction

GLENN DIESEN: Welcome back. We are joined by Professor Jeffrey Sachs to discuss the US attack on Venezuela and the kidnapping of its President Maduro. So thank you very much for coming back on the program.

PROF. JEFFREY SACHS: Of course, dramatic events.

GLENN DIESEN: Yeah, it’s quite dramatic. And this, of course, was an actual unprovoked attack, an illegal attack as well. But the capture or arrest, as the media sometimes refer to it, of the president of Venezuela has been also quite dramatic. How are you assessing the situation and what are the objectives of the United States here?

The End of Constitutional Order in America

PROF. JEFFREY SACHS: Well, clearly this is a blatantly illegal act, but it’s one in a long line of blatantly illegal American actions. And just in the recent days, Trump has been threatening a new country every day. He bombed Nigeria last week. He said that the US would intervene in Iran if the government acts against the protesters in a way that Trump doesn’t like. He has invaded Venezuela just recently. He created a special envoy for Greenland declaring that Greenland will be ours.

So it’s a threat against Europe, which of course, Europe doesn’t even acknowledge or recognize because it’s so passive relative to the United States. We are not in a constitutional order in the United States. We are in an order led by a military state. We do not obey the US Constitution. Everything is by executive decree.

When a congressman dared to mention the US Constitution today, Trump said, “What is he whining about? This is ridiculous.” Well, this is really, at least what Trump has done is expose the fact that we’re at the end of constitutional rule in the United States. What happens when there’s a thuggish rule remains to be seen. But in my view, this makes the world extraordinarily dangerous.

Of course, we’re hardly at the end of the story about Venezuela itself. They have arrested a president, but this is not the end of anything. The whole history of US regime change operations, which number probably around 100 such operations since the end of World War II, is a record of bloodshed, violence, deliberate creation of instability, coups, assassinations, civil war.

So we don’t know what will come next, but we know that there’s been thuggery. It’s also interesting, though—I don’t have a definitive count of it, but I’ve not noticed any of the mainstream media in the United States even raising a question about this. The New York Times, the so-called paper of record, did not one time in recent weeks say, “Oh, it wouldn’t be a good idea to brazenly attack that country.” The editorial board was completely silent. As far as I can see, it remains silent.

Our Congress is moribund. It doesn’t exist, in fact, in any operational sense. So I find all of this very dramatic and extremely worrisome. Though I hasten to repeat, we’re not at the end of the story by any means of what will transpire in Venezuela itself. There is a government in place. There is a military. There is a mobilized part of society. There’s lots of guns around. This is not a simple, smooth takeover by the United States, as much as Donald Trump might believe.

Europe’s Pathetic Response

GLENN DIESEN: Yeah, that long list of only the threats being made over the past few weeks is quite extraordinary. And we see Trump getting increasingly unhinged, not just on domestic, but also at the international level. But the Europeans, though, have—the leaders, I mean, of Europe have predictably showed their obedience and offered their support, making it clear they considered Maduro illegitimate and seeking, well, essentially to back the American position on this.

But what does this mean for Latin America? Because in the US National Security Strategy, it outlined clearly that this was, well, more or less America’s backyard now, and it wanted other great powers out, and the US should reign supreme. Is this something, a warning for what’s to come in other places in Latin America as well?

PROF. JEFFREY SACHS: Well, first, let me say a word about Europe. It’s a very sad day for your country, Glenn. I think we can rename the Nobel Peace Prize as the Nobel War Prize. It was given to a person this year who called for exactly what has happened today, who called for a military strike by the United States on Venezuela. It came to pass.

This is a tragedy for countries, governments, and institutions that once upon a time talked about international law. The European response has been pathetic, absolutely pathetic. Of course, every leader in Europe seems to cower to the US, to be terrified. The strongest statements were, “We hope that this will return to stability soon.” Not any kind of shock of a brazen attack against the international order, against the UN Charter, against peace itself. So this is the world that we’re in right now.

Europe varies between complete vassalage and acquiescence to the US or its own war monitoring.