“War is the realm of uncertainty; three-quarters of the factors on which action in war is based are wrapped in a fog of greater or lesser uncertainty. A sensitive and discriminating judgment is called for; a skilled intelligence to scent out the truth.”
– Carl von Clausewitz, On War (1832)
Wrong Lesson from Caracas
Do you get the sense that the world is being run by a menacing algorithm?
Between the capture of Maduro in January and the current war in Iran, we’ve moved from strategic operations to what feels like a high-stakes beta test for AI generated warfare.
In early January, the world watched as Operation Absolute Resolve snatched Nicolás Maduro and his wife from Caracas in a lightning strike. To the White House, this was the ultimate proof of concept. A clean, surgical extraction that decapitated a regime with zero U.S. casualties.
But Iran isn’t Venezuela. By applying the Maduro Playbook to Tehran – specifically the assassination of the Supreme Leader on February 27 – the Trump administration ignored the fundamental difference between a crumbling narco-state and a deeply ideological, regional powerhouse.
Capturing Maduro was a police action. Martyring the Ayatollah was a religious and geopolitical earthquake. Instead of a peaceful transition, the USA-Israel consortium triggered a phased retaliation from Iran that Alastair Crooke notes is designed to systematically evict the U.S. from the Middle East entirely. Continue reading







