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Slot hoping Salah can still burnish Liverpool legacy
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Astronauts strapped in for historic US lunar launch
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Top World Bank official 'extremely concerned' by fallout of Iran war
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'Wake-up call': Megan Thee Stallion falls ill during Broadway show
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Canada's defense enters new phase, Arctic in focus: top military officer
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France charges man over failed attack on US bank
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Bayern reach women's Champions League semis after late show sinks United
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SpaceX files to go public, paving way for record stock offering
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Delhi make winning start to IPL as Rizvi downs LSG
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Final ticket sales phase begins for FIFA World Cup
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Supreme Court skeptical of Trump bid to end birthright citizenship
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Tractors roll through Vienna as farmers protest
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PGA Tour, Masters chairman support Tiger recovery pause
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World Cup winner Goetze extends contract at Frankfurt
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SpaceX files securities documents to go public: source
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Armenia cannot be in both EU and Russian customs bloc, Putin says
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Supreme Court hears landmark citizenship case -- with Trump in audience
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Chelsea announce record pre-tax loss of £262.4 million
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Stocks rally, oil drops on Mideast war optimism
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Starmer says UK to host multi-nation meeting on Hormuz shipping
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Greece train crash trial resumes after courtroom chaos
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Trump says Iran asks for ceasefire as Tehran hit by fresh strikes
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Swiss government eyes dropping purchase of US Patriot air defence system
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Germany halts rescue efforts for stranded whale
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IndiGo lands IATA chief Willie Walsh as new CEO
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Late charging Ganna denies Van Aert at Across Flanders
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'Embarrassed' Spain probes anti-Muslim chants at Egypt friendly
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Family of man killed in 2020 arrest to sue French state
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The 'million dollar' Senna helmet bought at Japan GP
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Could NATO be collateral damage from Trump's Iran war?
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Supreme Court hearing landmark citizenship case -- with Trump in audience
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Three go on trial in Germany over plot to overthrow government
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Anderson backs England for Australia revenge despite Ashes woes
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Italy's sport minister asks football chief to step down after World Cup disaster
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Cambodia extradites accused cyberscam boss to China
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Supreme Court to hear landmark citizenship case -- with Trump in audience
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UK police arrest three more over Jewish ambulance attack
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Wallaby Skelton has 'season cut short' by Achilles injury
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Armed teenagers on patrol strike fear into Tehran residents
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Macron lauds Europe's 'predictability' in seeming contrast to Trump
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Amsterdam marks 25 years of gay marriage with weddings
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France's Dassault says 'weeks' left to save Europe warplane project
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'Indescribable': Bosnia jubilant after securing World Cup return
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Pakistan says holding talks with Afghan govt in China
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Guehi tells England to 'stick together' after World Cup warm-up loss to Japan
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Generation of Italians reeling from World Cup 'apocalypse'
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Australian journeyman emerges as India's unlikely football saviour
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Germany growth forecasts slashed as Mideast war hits economy
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Spanish police open probe into anti-Muslim chants at Egypt friendly
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Ailing Italy at new low after missing out on yet another World Cup
Trump takes huge political gamble in Venezuela regime change
Donald Trump crowed over the US military triumph in Venezuela on Saturday, but his sudden enthusiasm for intervention abroad puts him in a political minefield back home.
Trump has railed against US entanglements abroad for years.
When he branded the post-9/11 Iraq invasion "a stupid thing" a decade ago, he was setting out a central tenet of the nationalist, isolationist MAGA ideology that would win him the White House.
So Saturday's operation by special forces to swoop into Caracas and seize Venezuela's leader Nicholas Maduro was doubly risky.
The service members in the complex assault -- including troops ferried in by helicopter, jets bombing sites around the city, and an armada of Navy ships off the coast -- got away without losing a single soldier.
But for Trump, the domestic political risks are only just starting.
Not surprisingly, Democratic Party leaders swiftly attacked.
The senior Democratic senator, Chuck Schumer, called the operation "reckless."
"Second unjustified war in my life time. This war is illegal," Senator Ruben Gallego, an Iraq veteran, said. "There is no reason for us to be at war with Venezuela."
Many in the Republican Party that Trump dominates came out to applaud.
The White House spokeswoman ramped up enthusiasm with a social media post in the early hours of Saturday featuring strong arm, fist and fire emojis.
And Senator Tom Cotton was quickly on board.
"I commend President Trump and our brave troops and law-enforcement officers for this incredible operation," he said.
Mike Johnson, the Republican speaker of the House of Representatives and a key cog in the Trump political machine, quickly sought to scotch questions over the military operation's legality.
"Today’s military action in Venezuela was a decisive and justified operation that will protect American lives," he said.
Johnson made clear there'd be no rush for Congress to meet and debate. Trump administration officials are "working" to set up briefings only next week, he said.
- America first or Venezuela? -
But there are signs of disquiet among Republicans.
Soon after news first broke that the extraordinary raid on Caracas was underway, conservative Senator Mike Lee wrote on X that he was looking "forward to learning what, if anything, might constitutionally justify this action."
There had been no "declaration of war or authorization for the use of military force," he noted.
A short while later, Lee was back on team Trump, saying he'd spoken with Secretary of State Marco Rubio and had been reassured that the operation was simply to execute Maduro's arrest.
That "likely falls within the president's inherent authority."
But Marjorie Taylor Greene, a MAGA firebrand and longtime Trump booster who recently fell out with the president, was far less forgiving.
In a long post on X, she ripped apart Trump's explanation that the Venezuela conflict is about stopping narcotics trafficking.
Most of the deadly fentanyl entering the United States comes via Mexico, she said, so "why hasn't the Trump admin taken action against Mexican cartels?"
Greene went on to pose a series of questions likely to be echoed across much of the MAGA base, including how to explain the difference between forcing regime change in Venezuela and Russian or Chinese aggression against Ukraine or Taiwan.
"Disgust" with foreign interventions, spending abroad instead of at home, and "neocon wars" -- "this is what many in MAGA thought they voted to end," she wrote.
"Boy were we wrong."
D.Moore--AMWN