Key Takeaways
- The Pottery Barn rule means if you break a country, you must own what comes next.
- Past presidents, like George H.W. Bush, planned carefully before using force.
- Trump’s moves in Venezuela ignore key lessons and lack a clear plan.
- Without strategy and support, U.S. action risks chaos, high costs, and lasting damage.
In 2003, a top U.S. general warned that “if you break it, you own it.” This idea became known as the Pottery Barn rule. It means that when America topples a government, it takes on all the problems that follow. History shows that ignoring this rule leads to chaos, huge costs, and human suffering.
Pottery Barn rule and Trump’s Venezuela plan
President Trump recently suggested kidnapping Venezuela’s leaders and running the country after they fall. However, he skipped key steps. He did not seek Congress’s approval. He did not build an international team to help. He offered no clear plan for security, justice, or rebuilding. In other words, he broke the rule before understanding it.
Lessons from Desert Storm and Iraq
In 1991, President George H.W. Bush faced a similar choice. Saddam Hussein invaded Kuwait, and Bush chose a limited war. He won support from many nations. He set clear goals: remove Iraqi troops from Kuwait, then stop. When the goal was done, he ordered troops home. The result was quick success and less long-term damage.
By contrast, in 2003, President George W. Bush ignored what his own Secretary of State, Colin Powell, had warned. The U.S. invaded Iraq without a solid plan for what came next. Powell later called his United Nations speech on weapons of mass destruction a “blot” on his record. The war dragged on for years. It cost hundreds of billions of dollars and thousands of lives.
Why a plan matters more than power
First, any military move needs legal and political backing at home. George H.W. Bush won a vote in Congress before using force. That made his actions stronger and more legitimate. In contrast, Trump did not win any formal approval. Instead, he counted on allies in Congress to stay quiet.
Second, a real coalition shares costs, risks, and ideas. It also limits blame if things go wrong. Desert Storm had about 30 nations on its side. That spread out the burden and gave the U.S. extra help in planning and logistics. Trump acted mostly alone. Not even friendly governments in South America backed his plan.
Third, clear goals stop mission creep. Desert Storm’s goal was simple: free Kuwait. After that, the fighting ended. It was discipline, not weakness. In Libya, President Obama helped oust a dictator, then left without a plan to rebuild. Libya still suffers from violence and broken services.
Finally, leaders need to plan for security, government, and basic services after the fight. That means police forces, courts, schools, hospitals, and power plants. It also means a fair way to choose new leaders. President Trump has not said how the U.S. would handle any of that in Venezuela. Without a roadmap, an intervention becomes a disaster zone.
What comes next and the risks
Right now, talk of invading Venezuela seems more like a headline stunt than a real strategy. Polls show most Americans do not support a new war. Many cannot even point to Venezuela on a map. Meanwhile, experts warn the country’s military and armed groups are deeply fractured. Removing one leader will not make the rest surrender.
Moreover, Venezuela depends on oil. Trump says the U.S. will pay for rebuilding that sector. But history shows foreign aid rarely pays itself back. After the Iraq invasion, U.S. taxpayers spent billions on oil fields only to leave them half-fixed. In Libya, corruption and conflict kept oil flowing to militias, not the state.
If Trump truly breaks Venezuela, the U.S. will face:
• A costly occupation with thousands of troops
• A surge of refugees fleeing violence and hunger
• Terrorist groups filling power vacuums
• Regional backlash from neighbors and global powers
In other words, the Pottery Barn rule will apply. The U.S. will own every problem it creates.
Power without a plan is not strength
George H.W. Bush showed that power with discipline is wiser. He rallied support. He set limits. He left when his job was done. That approach earned him respect at home and abroad.
By contrast, a reckless move in Venezuela would damage America’s reputation and waste lives and money. It could destabilize an entire region. It could spark protests in U.S. cities. And it would haunt future presidents who must clean up the mess.
Colin Powell learned this lesson in Vietnam. He enforced it in Desert Storm. He warned against ignoring it in Iraq. His Pottery Barn rule still rings true today. President Trump now risks leaving his own historic blot. If he breaks Venezuela, the United States will be forced to own the fallout. And that burden never ends well.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the Pottery Barn rule?
It’s a foreign policy idea that says if you break a country, you must fix what you broke. It warns leaders to plan for every outcome.
Why did George H.W. Bush stop after freeing Kuwait?
He set a clear goal, won international support, and respected legal limits. When that goal was met, he withdrew troops. That restraint spared him a long occupation.
What mistakes did Trump make in the Venezuela plan?
He skipped Congress, ignored allies, and offered no clear goals or rebuilding strategy. That lack of plan risks chaos and high costs.
How can the U.S. avoid repeating these errors?
By securing legal approval, building coalitions, defining limited missions, and planning for post-conflict recovery before any military action.