War Trump says Venezuela's Maduro captured after strikes - The U.S. has accused Maduro of running a "narco-state" and rigging an election.

WASHINGTON, Jan 3 (Reuters) - The U.S. has struck Venezuela and captured its President Nicolas Maduro, who has been taken out of the country, President Donald Trump said on Saturday.

The U.S. has not made such a direct intervention in Latin America since the invasion of Panama in 1989 to depose military leader Manuel Noriega.

"The United States of America has successfully carried out a large scale strike against Venezuela and its leader, President Nicolas Maduro, who has been, along with his wife, captured and flown out of the country," Trump said in a Truth Social post.

There was no immediate confirmation from the Venezuelan government.

The U.S. has accused Maduro of running a "narco-state" and rigging an election. The Venezuelan leader, who succeeded Hugo Chavez to take power in 2013, has said Washington wants to take control of its oil reserves, the largest in the world.

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This article has been updated a number of times to reflect changes to the linked Reuters article, the following text is from the original unaltered post when this story was first reported on:
Residents in the captial, Caracas, reported hearing multiple explosions, particularly near Fort Tiuna, a major military installation in the city’s south.

Unverified footage appears to show large fires at 3 separate locations.

The cause of the explosions remains unknown at this time.

 
Ostatnio edytowane:
America might be the only empire in history to convince itself that it isn’t an empire and everything will be just dandy if they hide in a corner and ignore everyone. I don’t understand how you can be like this when you are the most powerful empire to have ever existed.

So powerful that you don’t even need colonies, but you all turn into weeping faggots when a couple of soldiers get slotted.

Accept you are top dog or restore the British Empire and let someone else in the west run the show.

Do you think your constitution will be worth the paper it’s written on if China becomes the only superpower whilst you hide your heads in the sand?
This is actually something I'm not against conceptually. I think a lot of Americans are cautious to be an "Empire" because historically we DON'T take over a country. We usher in an endless conflict that we don't seem to actually win (the "winning" is the conflict, and the govmt and financers are the winners not the people.) We don't go and take over and form an empire. So we've been kind of conditioned to think (this goes for Right and Left) that any conflict will just be 20 years in the desert then we don't get anything. MAYBE we usher in a new regime, but then we just end up fighting with them down the road. Which is the goal of many involved at higher levels it'd seem.

BUT if we actually just fucking took the fuck over, Imperial Britain style, I think that's not BAD. Fuck Commies. Fuck Islam. A lot of these fuckers need the shit slapped out of them. So I'm fine if we actually Empired vs this gay shit where we start a war, kill a leader, then sit on our hands for 10-20 years and walk away leaving our weapons behind.

More Rhodesia less Zimbabwe.
 
Have these things happened after any of the previous NeoCon adventures?
No brazilians rushed to your US to live the American Dream when Jango's socialist regime was thwarted in the 60's

In fact Brazil had decades of stability and economical growth. So yeah, my neocon adventures were very nice, and i'd like more neocon adventures if this means purging socialism from latin america
 
Maduro was indicted by a grand jury in New York for crimes against the United States.

And yet, I anticipate the Seditious Six will soon be wailing and gnashing their teeth about "MUH ILLEGAL ORDERS!" again (because this hurts their pet imports and business buddies in Beijing).

Suffah, commies.
 
Trump needs approval from Congress to actually declare war on a foreign country. He can get away with a few bombs because the cartels are considered terrorist organizations.
Even supposing that were true, where does abducting the head of state of a country at will fit into that? And please don't bother telling me the President can simply remove the heads of state of a country just because they deem them to be a terrorist. We all know that is flat out asinine.
 
Maduro was indicted by a grand jury in New York for crimes against the United States.

And yet, I anticipate the Seditious Six will soon be wailing and gnashing their teeth about "MUH ILLEGAL ORDERS!" again (because this hurts their pet imports and business buddies in Beijing).

Suffah, commies.
I'd actually love for people to show up to defend a commie dictator.
 
The NYT is already seething:

Donald Trump’s Attack on Venezuela Is Illegal and Unwise​

By The Editorial Board
The editorial board is a group of opinion journalists whose views are informed by expertise, research, debate and certain longstanding values. It is separate from the newsroom.
Jan. 3, 2026

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Damon Winter/The New York Times

Over the past few months, President Trump has deployed an imposing military force in the Caribbean to threaten Venezuela. Until now, the president used that force — an aircraft carrier, at least seven other warships, scores of aircraft and 15,000 U.S. troops — for illegal attacks on small boats that he claimed were ferrying drugs. This weekend, Mr. Trump dramatically escalated his campaign by capturing Venezuela’s President Nicolás Maduro as part of what he called ”a large scale strike” against the country.

Few people will feel any sympathy for Mr. Maduro. He is undemocratic and repressive, and has destabilized the Western Hemisphere in recent years. The United Nations recently issued a report detailing more than a decade of killings, torture, sexual violence and arbitrary detention by henchmen against his political opponents. He stole Venezuela’s presidential election in 2024. He has fueled economic and political disruption throughout the region by instigating an exodus of nearly eight million migrants.

If there is an overriding lesson of American foreign affairs in the past century, however, it is that attempting to oust even the most deplorable regime can make matters worse. The United States spent 20 years failing to create a stable government in Afghanistan and it replaced a dictatorship in Libya with a fractured state. The tragic consequences of the 2003 war in Iraq continue to beset America and the Middle East. Perhaps most relevant, the United States has sporadically destabilized Latin American countries, including Chile, Cuba, Guatemala and Nicaragua, by trying to oust a government through force.

Mr. Trump has not yet offered a coherent explanation for his actions in Venezuela. He is pushing our country toward an international crisis without valid reasons. If Mr. Trump wants to argue otherwise, the Constitution spells out what he must do: Go to Congress. Without congressional approval, his actions violate United States law.

The nominal rationale for the administration’s military adventurism is to destroy “narco- terrorists.” Governments throughout history have labeled the leaders of rival nations as terrorists, seeking to justify military incursions as policing operations. The claim is particularly ludicrous in this case, given that Venezuela is not a meaningful producer of fentanyl or the other drugs that have dominated the recent epidemic of overdoses in the United States, and the cocaine that it does produce flows mostly to Europe. While Mr. Trump has been attacking Venezuelan boats, he also pardoned Juan Orlando Hernández, who ran a sprawling drug operation when he was president of Honduras from 2014 to 2022.

A more plausible explanation for the attacks on Venezuela may instead be found in Mr. Trump’s recently released National Security Strategy. It claimed the right to dominate Latin America: “After years of neglect, the United States will reassert and enforce the Monroe Doctrine to restore American pre-eminence in the Western Hemisphere.” In what the document called the “Trump Corollary,” the administration vowed to redeploy forces from around the world to the region, stop traffickers on the high seas, use lethal force against migrants and drug runners and potentially base more U.S. troops around the region.

Venezuela has apparently become the first country subject to this latter-day imperialism, and it represents a dangerous and illegal approach to America’s place in the world. By proceeding without any semblance of international legitimacy, valid legal authority or domestic endorsement, Mr. Trump risks providing justification for authoritarians in China, Russia and elsewhere who want to dominate their own neighbors. More immediately, he threatens to replicate the American hubris that led to the invasion of Iraq in 2003.

As a presidential candidate, Mr. Trump seemed to recognize the problems with military overreach. In 2016, he was the rare Republican politician to call out the folly of President George W. Bush’s Iraq war. In 2024, he said: “I’m not going to start a war. I’m going to stop wars.”

He is now abandoning this principle, and he is doing so illegally. The Constitution requires Congress to approve any act of war. Yes, presidents often push the boundaries of this law. But even Mr. Bush sought and received congressional endorsement for his Iraq invasion, and presidents since Mr. Bush have justified their use of drone attacks against terrorist groups and their supporters with a 2001 law that authorized action after the Sept. 11 attacks. Mr. Trump has not even a fig leaf of legal authority for his attacks on Venezuela.

Congressional debates over military action play a crucial democratic role. They check military adventurism by forcing a president to justify his attack plans to the public and requiring members of Congress to tie their own credibility to those plans. For years after the vote on the Iraq war, Democrats who supported Mr. Bush, including Hillary Clinton and John Kerry, paid a political price, while those who criticized the war, like Bernie Sanders and Barack Obama, came to be seen as prophetic.

In the case of Venezuela, a congressional debate would expose the thinness of Mr. Trump’s rationale. His administration has justified his attacks on the small boats by claiming they pose an immediate threat to the United States. But a wide range of legal and military experts reject the claim, and common sense refutes it, too. An attempt to smuggle drugs into the United States — if, in fact, all the boats were doing so — is not an attempt to overthrow the government or defeat its military.

We suspect Mr. Trump has refused to seek congressional approval for his actions partly because he knows that even some Republicans in Congress are deeply skeptical of the direction he is leading this country. Already, Senators Rand Paul and Lisa Murkowski and Representatives Don Bacon and Thomas Massie — Republicans all — have backed legislation that would limit Mr. Trump’s military actions against Venezuela.

A second argument against Mr. Trump’s attacks on Venezuela is that they violate international law. By blowing up the small boats that Mr. Trump says are smuggling drugs, he has killed people based on the mere suspicion that they have committed a crime and given them no chance to defend themselves. The Geneva Conventions of 1949 and every subsequent major human rights treaty prohibit such extrajudicial killings. So does U.S. law.

The administration appears to have killed defenseless people. In one attack, the Navy fired a second strike against a hobbled boat, about 40 minutes after the first attack, killing two sailors who were clinging to the boat’s wreckage and appeared to present no threat. As our colleague David French, a former U.S. Army lawyer, has written, “The thing that separates war from murder is the law.”

The legal arguments against Mr. Trump’s actions are the more important ones, but there is also a cold-eyed realist argument. They are not in America’s national security interest. The closest thing to an encouraging analogy is President George H.W. Bush’s invasion of Panama 36 years ago this month, which drove the dictator Manuel Noriega from power and helped set Panama on a path toward democracy. Yet Venezuela is different in important ways. Panama is a much smaller country, and it was a country where American officials and troops had operated for decades because of the Panama Canal.

The potential for chaos in Venezuela seems much greater. Despite Mr. Maduro’s capture, the generals who have enabled his regime will not suddenly vanish. Nor are they likely to hand power to Maria Corina Machado, the opposition figure whose movement appears to have won the country’s most recent election and who accepted the Nobel Peace Prize this month.

Among the possible bad outcomes are a surge in violence by the left-wing Colombian military group the ELN, which has a foothold in Venezuela’s western area, or by the paramilitary groups known as “colectivos” that have operated on the periphery of power under the Maduro dictatorship. Further unrest in Venezuela could unsettle global energy and food markets and drive more migrants throughout the hemisphere.

So how should the United States deal with the continuing problem that Venezuela poses to the region and America’s interests? We share the hopes of desperate Venezuelans, some of whom have made a case for intervention. But there are no easy answers. By now, the world should understand the risks of regime change.

We will hold out hope that the current crisis will end less badly than we expect. We fear that the result of Mr. Trump’s adventurism is increased suffering for Venezuelans, rising regional instability and lasting damage for America’s interests around the world. We know that Mr. Trump’s warmongering violates the law.
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Yeah there's nothing wrong with snatching Maduro and calling it quits there, if the people overwhelming wanted him out then that is what will likely happen. I'd maybe set a boundary for any use of force on the civilian population by leftover Maduro loyalists with airstrikes or something though.

Seems like a well planned op with the details we currently have tbh, if it was that easy why wasn't it done in the last 13 years?
 
Seems like a well planned op with the details we currently have tbh, if it was that easy why wasn't it done in the last 13 years?
Because he needs Congress approval. He said so on Joe Rogan as well, given how half of it suffers from TDS, I'm guessing he just did not bother.

The reason why they didn't blow up Qasam Solemani sooner was because of this reason as well.
 
Seems like a well planned op with the details we currently have tbh, if it was that easy why wasn't it done in the last 13 years?
Because the socialist block in Latam is expanding and consolidating, along with it, the narcoempire in Latin America

You haven't seen it on the american news, but in Brazil we had a law project that would mean a huge step fighting organized crime and cartels, but Lula and his little judicial dictatorship gutted the project, which was a victory for Maduro, Lula and all South American druglords. This is probably a side of the history that you guys don't know

As a matter of fact, Lula is quaking in his boots and called an emergency meeting over Maduro's capture, he is surely scared of Maduro ratting him out. It's gonna be a very interesting year
 
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