It's only been days since an audacious U.S. raid snatched Nicolás Maduro from a Venezuelan military base and sped him to a Brooklyn prison, yet Detroit-area Trump supporter Aaron Tobin can already see it all playing out on the big screen.
It'll be the subject of movies for years to come, he predicts. ''I am thrilled.'' Plenty of others who voted for President Donald Trump and spoke to The Associated Press about the raid are applauding, too — at least for now.
The seizure of Venezuela's authoritarian leader and his wife has forced another reckoning on the ''Make America Great Again'' coalition, already rocked by the Trump administration's handling of the Jeffrey Epstein files and strained by rising health insurance premiums and living costs.
Trump promised his voters that ''America First'' would stand against more foreign entanglements. Instead, he intervened with force and without congressional approval in a new frontier, a South American capital so far from Washington that Google Maps says it ''can't seem to find a way there.''
The geopolitical action film that Tobin sees in his mind is only at its opening scene, before all the complexities of uprooting a foreign government by a U.S. president's fiat come rushing in. U.S. forces entered and exited swiftly. But what happens next?.
Trump finds early but not endless support
Early on, the pushback from congressional Republicans and Trump's core constituencies has been guarded.
Against that backdrop, Trump voters interviewed by AP journalists around the country praised the operation and expressed faith in Trump's course. But not always limitless faith.