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The US captures Maduro — 46 Comments

  1. Just WOW!
    Just hope Venezuela doesn’t descend into a Civil War.
    Sounds like a very clean, quick op.
    Will there be any more drug boats headed to the US?

  2. I’m not against the capture of Maduro but I do hope Team Trump has thought this through.

    This is sure to be spun by enemies as further evidence that Trump is an out-of-control monster. There may be unpleasant reprisals.

    OTOH, in the past few decades hundreds of thousands of Americans, more than in WW II, have died of cartel drugs — fentanyl, heroin, cocaine and methamphetamines. I count my younger sister among them.

    I don’t see why the US should stand by and allow mass drug trafficking into America when the trafficking is partly sponsored by foreign governments.

  3. huxley:

    I agree that there are substantial risks – in my opinion, who comes next as Venezuela’s ruler is the biggest one. But I would assume the administration has at least some intelligence on that, although I doubt it can be totally foreseen or influenced. But my guess is they’ll do their best to make it Machado/Gonzalez.

    As for what the world thinks, I doubt Trump much cares. Thing is, much of the world is on record against Maduro, and that may act as a brake on their outrage even though they can’t stand Trump. For example:

    “The EU has repeatedly stated that Mr Maduro lacks legitimacy and has defended a peaceful transition” in Venezuela, the bloc’s top diplomat Kaja Kallas wrote on X after speaking with her US counterpart Marco Rubio on Saturday.

    “Under all circumstances, the principles of international law and the UN Charter must be respected. We call for restraint,” she wrote.

    Kallas said the EU was closely monitoring the fast-moving situation and that she had spoken to the bloc’s envoy to Venezuela, with the safety of EU citizens “our top priority”.

    France condemned the American operation, saying it undermined international law while no solution to the country’s crisis can be imposed from the outside.

    Maduro “gravely violated” the rights of Venezuelans, but the military operation that led to him being grabbed “contravenes the principle of non-use of force, which underpins international law”, Foreign Minister Jean-Noel Barrot wrote on X. …

    British Prime Minister Keir Starmer said all countries should “uphold international law”, adding that “the UK was not involved in any way in this operation” as he urged patience in order to “establish the facts”.

    Seems relatively tepid to me.

  4. AOC, Tampon Tim and our progressives black-robed rulers are especially outraged at this although the NGO lawyers will anticipate a windfall of billable hours.

  5. No one expects The Spanish Inquisition.

    Iran didn’t expect their nuke facilities to go kaboom either (MOP them up he did).

    Happy New Year indeed.

  6. If Biden or Cackling Harris or perhaps the next president Gavin Newsom, had ordered this action, the US media would be over the top, effusive in their support of this action. They would be reporting 24/7 how it was necessary to get rid of Maduro and how his alignment with drug cartels are responsible for the deaths of thousands of US citizens.

    But alas, it was Trump who ordered this action and , according to the media, it illustrates yet again that Trump is Hitler and that he is a menace to the world and he aims to become a dictator.

    It really is impossible to hate the MSM too much.

  7. I looked at Caracas Chronicles, the Venezuelan oppo blog. Didn’t have a lot.

    El Feed
    It Happened
    The US bombed military facilities and infrastructure in Caracas and nearby on January 3rd. Donald Trump says Nicolás Maduro and Cilia Flores are in US custody

    Also a tweet from Trump that there will be a press conference at 11 am.

    The question I have is: will the US be able to knock out the Cartel del Soles?

  8. Cross-posted from the Open Thread:

    I listened to a twenty-minute phone call from Trump to Fox News this morning (9-9:30 hour). He watched the operation live from the secure room at Mar-a-Lago. This was long planned and trained for, including a mock-up of Maduro’s safe house for practice by special forces. (Which exact unit was not revealed.) They had wanted to go four days ago but had to wait for weather to clear. Maduro had been offered, by phone a week ago, safe passage for himself and his family but he refused. His drug and weapons indictment is in New York and that’s where he’s headed, aboard the Iwo Jima, to which he was carried by helicopter. Trump said all equipment was returned to U.S. ships, but one helicopter was hit, with injuries. He thinks no U.S. fatalities.

  9. IrishOtter49:

    My main fear for the Trump administration is overreach. The world is a complicated place.

  10. I think the most important point is that the US knew exactly where Maduro would be exactly when.
    No amount of military power or political posturing could succeed without that. So, what else do we know?
    And in the Middle East, we can talk to Mossad who are everywhere.

    Various individuals must be contemplating this as opposed to missile bases and security forces and other hardware usually considered protection. You don’t need to think about being captured when somebody can put a missile in your window. And knows which window.

  11. “His drug and weapons indictment is in New York and that’s where he’s headed”

    What happens when some NY judge decides the whole operation was illegal and that Maduro’s rights have been violated?

  12. Noodling it this morning, snatching the head of state of a country we’re not at war with is the kind of thing that very few countries can actually do. “International norms” are fake: there’s only force and the threat of force that keeps peace. I don’t think we need to worry much about precedents even if we hadn’t done it before in 1988. UN General Assembly condemned the 1988 operation, but that meant nothing. There were no consequences.

    If Putin could do this to Zelenskiy, does anyone doubt he would have? It’s not “the norm” that stops him. Lot of Victor Davis Hanson fans here; he’s commented on the Melian Dialogue enough. In international relations, the strong do as they will, the weak suffer what they must. There’s no monopoly of force that can change that.

    I think the real risk here is that a Hawaiian judge orders Maduro released, which is going to make Trump look a little silly. Won’t do Maduro any favors though, to send him back to Venezuela, but I suppose we don’t know what’s there yet. Maybe some sleazo caudillo will keep his chair warm for him.

    It’s not like we’re in Venezuela for ten or twenty years of “nation-building” (sorry GOPe). Except for the Hawaiian judge factor, it could be an example of pour encourager les autres.

  13. This makes the 2026 election starkly critical. If the Dems take control of the house, impeachment will begin the day after a new House leader is chosen.

    We had every legal right to bomb the drug boats, we had every legal right to seize the oil leaving Venezuela to compensate legal claims by US oil companies.

    This is more comparable to Iraq– but then we had created a coalition to get UN approval and a consensus in Congress. I think we’re in uncharted territory.

    He should have worked to get Maduro to agree to new elections under strict supervision. I imagine he was working to that end and Maduro refused.

  14. huxley,

    There are some pundits whom I generally admire (like the Fifth Column podcast guys) who seem to completely miss the boat on your point regarding the drug war foreign countries have been waging on our citizens. It’s similar with the tariffs. Yeah, I get the Econ 101 math, tariffs are bad. But what about the fact that foreign countries, especially China, are using trade and economics to harm our citizens and economy. Pure economics may say Labor rates and shipping costs warrant manufacturing all antibiotics in China, but what are the risks to the U.S.?

    The world, as it is, is not a level playing field. To butcher an idiom, “you may not be interested in the drug war, but it’s interested in you, and your family members.”

  15. The left minions are, of course going crazy. It only adds to their TDS. They are claiming it’s all for the oil and for Trump to set up his own oil company. As if he needs the money. And as mentioned above, he is a threat to peace of the entire world.

    In the meantime, AT has a list of reactions from those who count:

    https://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2026/01/venezuela_is_free.html

    I also saw a video, can’t find it anymore, of people celebrating and lining the streets in Caracas.

    I agree that the fly in the ointment is going to be the transition government and how it handles the obvious blowback from the bad guys still there.

  16. So many sheep bleating about failure to use “international law”. Leftists advocate that when their totalitarian moves are blocked. The Monroe Doctrine lives !

  17. Time will tell, but with the willingness of Maduro’s VP to work with the US in the administration of Venezuela as it rebuilds and restores self-government it appears the future will look more like Macarthur and Japan than post-conflict Iraq or Afghanistan. Lesson learned, perhaps

  18. Re: Machiavelli
    __________________________

    Never when he [Castracani — Machiavelli’s exemplar] could win by fraud did he attempt to win by force because, as he used to say, it is victory, not the manner in which it is obtained, which brings glory.

    https://www.conservativewoman.co.uk/victory-is-all-that-matters/
    __________________________

    Democrats live by the virtue of fraud over force and that victory is all that matters. I would prefer to consider further possibilities.

  19. Tariffs are not “bad”, there are enormous costs incurred managing imports and exports. Tariffs are a reasonable offset to those costs.

    Maduro’s VP is reportedly in or on her way to Russia.

    No one is going to save Maduro. No judge is going there. I think the Somali fraud is the breaking point and the beginning of the end of the donkey party.

  20. The next shoe to drop may be Mexico. See this article

    Something’s Gonna Have to be Done With Mexico’: Trump Floats Further Intervention to Fox & Friends
    President Donald Trump said Friday that the U.S. operation that led to the capture of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro was not intended to send a message to Mexico, though he suggested additional action may be necessary to combat drug trafficking.
    Trump called into Fox & Friends Weekend for a nearly 30-minute interview, during which he described the U.S. operation involving airstrikes in Caracas and the capture of Maduro and his wife. Trump said the couple was extradited to the United States to face narcotics trafficking charges filed by the Southern District of New York.
    During the interview, co-host Griff Jenkinsreferenced comments from Vice President JD Vance that “the drug trafficking must stop” and asked Trump directly whether the operation was meant as a message to Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum.
    Well, it wasn’t meant to be, and we’re very friendly with her. She’s a good woman,” Trump said, before arguing that Mexican cartels, not the country’s elected leadership, hold real power. “She’s not running Mexico. The cartels are running Mexico. And we could be politically correct and be nice and say, ‘Oh yes, she is.’ No, no. She’s very frightened of the cartels.”
    Trump claimed he had repeatedly offered U.S. assistance in taking action against drug cartels operating in Mexico.
    “They’re running Mexico, and I’ve asked her numerous times, ‘Would you like us to take out the cartels?’” Trump said, paraphrasing what he said was her response. “‘No, no, Mr. President, no, no, no, please.’”
    I The president then pivoted to the issue of drug-related deaths in the United States, asserting that official figures understate the toll.

    https://www.yahoo.com/news/articles/something-gonna-done-mexico-trump-154448760.html

  21. huxley: “This is sure to be spun by enemies as further evidence that Trump is an out-of-control monster.”

    How does that differ from any other action Trump has ever taken, including combing his hair?

  22. During the news about the post-election fracas in Venezuela, I saw some photos or a video—IIRC Neo had linked to it— which showed a room of Venezuelan electoral council employees and their computer screens. The video scanned the computer screens in the room, all of which which showed graphic election results. Red–the Chavista/Maduro side–graphics were all in the minority.

    I supposed that our Democrat friends will tell us that electoral fraud is no one’s business.

  23. This op is straight out of the “The Pentagon’s New Map”: (War and Peace in the Twenty-First Century Hardcover – April 26, 2004
    by Thomas P.M. Barnett -Author)

    Basically, “TPNM” explains the strategy and tactics to use military and economic pressure to transform Third World countries (Gap countries) into better functioning more successful countries. (Core countries.)

    It’s an idea based on the premise that most people are yearning to be free and capitalistic, like here in the U.S.

    I think the premise is wrong as proven by the failure of the Global War on Terror. And further so by the fact that we have recently elected several Democratic Socialists here in the U.S.

    During his first term, Trump steered clear of getting involved in “transforming the world” with military and economic power. He seems to have changed his mind.

    I agree with huxley. This could go very wrong. Trump says we will run Venezuela until a transition can be carried out. Hmm, where have we heard that before? Iraq? Afghanistan?

    I sincerely hope they have a solid plan that will restore Venezuela to a functioning democracy. If they succeed, Trump and his team deserve a lot of praise. But it will not, IMO, prove that “TPNM’s” theory is correct.

  24. How does that differ from any other action Trump has ever taken, including combing his hair?

    FOAF:

    There are straws which can break the camel’s back. I don’t know if this is one, but as an engineer I know everything has trade-offs. Sending in a special forces team to kidnap the leader of another country is a drastic step.

    I include in my concerns the possibility Democrats can use this to harden opposition in the 2026 midterms, which could be serious in the House elections.

  25. Update from Venland: Caracas Chronicles: What’s Happening in Venezuela? Start Here.

    2:29 p.m. update:
    Maduro’s VP, Delcy Rodríguez, held a press conference with the chavista top brass present: Jorge Rodríguez (who hadn’t appeared), Tarek William Saab (Maduro’s chief prosecutor), Yvan Gil (Foreign Minister), Caryslia Rodríguez (president of the Supreme Tribunal), and Diosdado Cabello. Minister of defense Vladimi Padrino was also in attendance.
    Delcy Rodríguez insists that Nicolás Maduro is still the president, so she’s not assuming the role as Trump suggested in his press conference. It seems to be a response to T2’s presser, probably to show some political control in the country…

    What about the colectivos?

    Colectivos are motorcycle gangs used as enforcers—a.k.a. “muscle”—against regime opponents. (In some countries, colectivos are city buses. :))

    Contrary to reports that she is in Moscow, VP Delcy Rodriguez is in Venezuela.

    From what I have read over the years, I get the impression that Maduro is a puppet. No Hugo, he. As such, taking Maduro out is just a piece of the puzzle. While Maduro most likely lost the recent election by a landslide (70-30 guesstimate), his regime has a lot of supporters, and a lot of supporters with guns. This battle is just beginning.

    I would like to have the Cubans involved in intelligence in Venezuela sent back to Havana in pine boxes.

  26. Some of these heads (or adjacent) of government imagine themselves Grand Chess Masters and the world is their chessboard. James Baker under both Bushes is a great example. Is Trump doing this to a relatively inconsequential country to send a message to Iran? And will that, in turn, send a message to Putin? Although I voted for Trump 3 times, things like this make me uneasy and I won’t give him a thumbs up for the time being. I guess just the concept of entering a sovereign nation (however deplorable) and kidnapping its “leader” rubs me the wrong way. I’ll just have to trust that this was deliberated a lot and serious people (not the James Baker types!!) were involved when (if) it was thought through.

  27. I’m amused by people claiming this action is unprecedented. Just shows how short memories are. Reagan did the same thing to Noriega, and I don’t recall any leftwing judges ordering his release back then.

  28. A little perspective here would be helpful, especially to the adherents of the
    Donkey Party who are foaming with rage.

    In 1916, just a little bit over 110 years ago, President Woodrow Wilson (D) ordered the U.S. Army into Mexico to catch the bandit Pancho Villa. General Pershing commanding. They chased him for some time but never caught him

    Point is, there we have a President ordering the invasion of a foreign country
    WITH NO DECLARATION OF WAR.

    Jefferson did not have a D of W to send Marines into Tripoli (now Algeria).

    Reagan did not have a D of W to invade Grenada.

    And on and on and on.

    Dems need to learn them some history.

  29. Niketas Choniates on January 3, 2026 at 12:01 pm”
    “… I think the real risk here is that a Hawaiian judge orders Maduro released,…”

    That is an interesting and damning prospect. But this Blaze article suggests some people are beginning to question the wisdom of Trump (and the Executive Branch) being overly accommodating to the excesses of the Judicial branch:
    https://www.theblaze.com/columns/opinion/the-courts-are-running-the-country-and-trump-is-letting-it-happen
    The courts are running the country — and Trump is letting it happen
    Daniel Horowitz
    December 30, 2025

    My general perception was that any two branches working together could end up holding a misbehaving third branch to account, but we may not yet have the Congress needed to help put the Judiciary back into proper balance.

  30. Somewhere this evening I saw or heard that Maduro and his wife were running towards their safe room, and actually got to the door, but were captured before they could get “safely” inside.

    If the US teams had mocked up the Maduro’s compound for practice tactical exercises (as was done to capture bin Laden) I presume they would have had a contingency for breaching even that safe room.

    If there was a $50M reward for the capture of Maduro, I suspect there must be a dozen or more brave Venezuelans who deserve a share of that reward for their contributions of intelligence info.

  31. I would like to say a word of commendation to all the hundreds of people involved in this operation who did NOT leak its existence to the New York Times.

  32. Reearching another comment in re Mamdani and NYC, I encountered this post by Bill Whittle from the past, where he discussed some of the origins of the disaster in Venezuela.

    The podcast is missing, and I didn’t find it on The Internet Archive.
    Check out the Mamdani post today for some similar videos by Whittle.

    https://billwhittle2.com/socialism-is-for-suckers-venezuela/
    “Since socialists are unwilling or unable to look at what their philosophy does to people, Firewall host Bill Whittle shows us what it is doing to the animals, and asks how the richest person in Venezuela just happens to be the daughter of the socialist former President of that starving country.”

    This post covers some of the same territory.
    https://archive.org/details/nratv_nr-170317-stinchfield-s01-e54-12pm-oc-vdgm
    “Bill Whittle and Grant discuss the problems that arise in countries that have socialistic forms of government such as Venezuela.”

  33. Maduro was indicted on March 26, 2020.
    He held, then rigged, an election in which he lost but claimed he won and kept power. The USA did not recognize him as the legitimate leader, tho he was de facto.
    I’m glad he was arrested. Very very glad no Americans died.

    I thought Maduro was going to make a deal with Trump & leave with $100 million. But then Maduro wanted amnesty for some 100 allies.

    Maybe this is part of a new deal, with none of those 100 allies getting a parachute, neither golden nor cloth. I guess not, but being wrong wouldn’t surprise me.

    Fantastic arrested of a bad guy.

    Who starts running Venezuela now?
    I guess the VP makes a transitional deal with the opposition for new elections, very soon.

    https://donsurber.substack.com/p/the-three-hour-war-in-venezuela?utm_source=post-banner&utm_medium=web&utm_campaign=posts-open-in-app&triedRedirect=true

  34. @ Tom Grey: ” I thought Maduro was going to make a deal with Trump & leave with $100 million. But then Maduro wanted amnesty for some 100 allies.”
    Maybe Trump should have said “OK, we will amnesty your 100 allies, but you have to pay them out of the $100M being allocated to you”. Might have dropped to only 10 allies really quickly!

  35. I’ve gleaned some informed perspective from Fox News expert interviews (while admittedly channel surfing). Gen. Jack Keane and a Heritage Foundation expert from Venezuela among them.

    Apparently, the Venezuelan Constitution has a proviso in the event of unforeseen interruption of top leadership. First, the Vice President now controls their government. Second, he or she must declare an election within 45 days.

    There are many chess pieces on the chessboard of this country’s domestic politics, including important players yet to surface who haven’t because of fear of reprisals. The above FNC experts also suggest that many fringes of the nation may have and may exercise independent control that differs from the leadership in the Capitol. Fragmenting authority remains a real possibility.

    Furthermore, one can well imagine other LatAm nations being called upon to provide security for this broken country — whether later for elections or sooner.

    Much remains to be decided. huxley mentions that the Veep has already fled to Russia — this is news I haven’t caught up with, yet.

    Many chess pieces, many moves and counter-moves to be settled before things become clear.

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