STUNNING CAPTURE: U.S. Seizes Maduro in Overnight Venezuela Operation, Trump Says Washington Will Temporarily Run Country
The United States carried out a surprise military operation today inside Venezuela that resulted in the capture of President Nicolas Maduro, an escalation that U.S. President Donald Trump said would lead Washington to temporarily administer the country despite immediate resistance from Venezuelan officials.
Speaking from his Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida, Trump said U.S. Special Forces detained Maduro during a nighttime raid that disrupted electricity in parts of Caracas and targeted one of the president’s secure locations. With Maduro now in U.S. custody, Trump said Washington would assume control during a transition period. “We will run the country until such time as we can do a safe, proper and judicious transition,” he said. “We can’t take a chance that someone else takes over Venezuela who doesn’t have the interests of Venezuelans in mind.”
Video footage showed an aircraft landing at Stewart International Airport, roughly 60 miles northwest of New York City, where U.S. personnel wearing FBI and other agency gear boarded the plane. Multiple television networks, including CNN, Fox News and MS Now, identified the individual seen exiting the aircraft as Maduro.
Despite Trump’s declaration, it remains unclear how the United States intends to exert authority inside Venezuela. U.S. forces do not control the country, and the existing government appears to remain operational while signaling no willingness to cooperate with Washington.
A Justice Department official said Maduro, who faces U.S. indictments including allegations of narco-terrorism conspiracy, is expected to appear initially in federal court in Manhattan on Monday.
Venezuelan Vice President Delcy Rodriguez, viewed as Maduro’s apparent successor, appeared on state television today alongside senior officials, condemning what she described as an abduction. “We demand the immediate release of President Nicolas Maduro and his wife Cilia Flores,” Rodriguez said, insisting that Maduro remains “the only president of Venezuela.”
Her remarks came hours after Trump said his administration had been in contact with Rodriguez and that she seemed willing to cooperate. “She really doesn’t have a choice,” Trump said.
Inside Venezuela, conditions were largely quiet today. Security forces patrolled certain areas, and small groups of Maduro supporters gathered in parts of Caracas.
Some residents, however, voiced relief. “I’m happy, I doubted for a moment that it was happening because it’s like a movie,” said Carolina Pimentel, a 37-year-old merchant in Maracay. “It’s all calm now, but I feel like at any moment everyone will be out celebrating.”
At his press conference, Trump—flanked by Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth—declined to provide specifics about how the United States would administer Venezuela. He suggested that senior officials around him would manage the effort. “The people that are standing right behind me” would oversee the country, he said.
Trump also left open the possibility of deploying U.S. troops inside Venezuela. “We’re not afraid of boots on the ground,” he said.
The removal of Maduro, who critics have labeled a dictator after more than a dozen years in power, raises concerns about a potential power vacuum in a nation bordering Colombia, Brazil, Guyana and the Caribbean.
Trump ruled out cooperation with opposition leader Maria Corina Machado, widely regarded as Maduro’s strongest political challenger. He said Washington had no contact with her. “She doesn’t have the support within or the respect within the country,” he said.
Those comments angered some of Machado’s supporters. She has backed U.S. action against alleged drug trafficking and dedicated her Nobel Prize win to Trump and the Venezuelan people. Pedro Burelli, a former board member of state oil company PDVSA, pushed back online, saying Machado “is the most respected politician in the country,” adding, “Venezuela is broke and needy, but it is not about to surrender to absurd whims.”
Reuters has previously reported that members of Machado’s team assisted the Trump administration in shaping a tougher approach toward Caracas, despite concerns about potential repercussions for Venezuelan immigrants living in the United States.
Trump’s remarks about a potentially open-ended U.S. military presence echoed language used during past interventions in Iraq and Afghanistan, conflicts that ultimately ended with U.S. withdrawals after years of fighting and heavy casualties.
Today, Trump said that during his presidency, including his first term, military operations he oversaw were “only victories,” though none involved removing a foreign head of state. In the past, he criticized such actions, calling the Iraq invasion “a big fat mistake” during a 2016 debate and saying in 2021 that he was “especially proud to be the first president in decades who has started no new wars.”
The United Nations Security Council is scheduled to convene on Monday to discuss the U.S. action.
Before today, the last comparable U.S. intervention in the region was the 1989 invasion of Panama to oust military leader Manuel Noriega over drug trafficking allegations. U.S. authorities have leveled similar accusations against Maduro, claiming he oversaw a “narco-state” and manipulated the 2024 election.
Maduro, 63, a former bus driver chosen by Hugo Chavez as his successor in 2013, has rejected those allegations, accusing Washington of seeking control over Venezuela’s vast oil reserves—the largest in the world.
Trump’s move has drawn comparisons to the Monroe Doctrine of 1823 and the era of “gunboat diplomacy” under Theodore Roosevelt. Trump acknowledged the parallels at his press conference, joking that a modern version might be called the “Don-roe Doctrine.”
While several Latin American governments oppose Maduro and say he stole the 2024 election, Trump’s comments about controlling Venezuela and exploiting its oil have revived memories of past U.S. interventions in the region that remain deeply unpopular.
Argentina’s President Javier Milei praised what he described as Venezuela’s new “freedom,” while Mexico condemned the operation. Brazil’s President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva said the action crossed “an unacceptable line.”
A former diplomat warned that the unilateral move would resonate far beyond the region. “For Latin America, it basically says no leader is safe if deemed illegitimate by the U.S.,” said Tyson Barker, a senior associate fellow at the German Council on Foreign Relations. “For the world, it flattens any moral credibility we have vis-à-vis China and Russia.”
Trump insisted that a U.S. occupation would be financially self-sustaining. It “won’t cost us a penny,” he said, arguing that the United States would be reimbursed through revenue from Venezuela’s oil resources—a comparison that recalls claims made ahead of the 2003 Iraq war, which ultimately cost the United States an estimated $2 trillion.
The president’s focus on foreign intervention has given Democrats an opening ahead of November’s midterm elections, where control of Congress is at stake and Republicans hold narrow majorities. Polls show voters are more concerned about high domestic prices than foreign policy. “How does going to war in South America help regular Americans who are struggling?” Democratic Senator Chris Murphy wrote on X.
Outside the White House, roughly 100 demonstrators organized by the ANSWER Coalition and the Party for Socialism and Liberation gathered to demand Maduro’s return to Venezuela, denouncing the U.S. action as a “kidnapping.”
{Matzav.com}