How the US’s audacious operation to capture Nicolás Maduro unfolded

Shortly before 11pm on Friday, Donald Trump ordered the US military to launch an operation in the dead of night to snatch the leader of Venezuela Nicolás Maduro from his compound in Caracas. 

“Good luck, and god speed,” Trump said, as he gave the command.

Within hours Maduro was in US custody, captured as he tried to make his way to a steel safe room in the compound. Trump and his senior advisers watched the operation live from the president’s Mar-a-Lago club in Palm Beach, Florida.

“He was trying to get to a safe place, which wasn’t safe, because we would have had the door blown up,” Trump said in a press conference on Saturday, flanked by secretary of state Marco Rubio, defence secretary Pete Hegseth and other senior officials.

The Venezuelan leader and his wife, Cilia Flores, were taken by helicopter to the USS Iwo Jima. A photo released by Trump on social media showed Maduro aboard the warship, blindfolded and his hands bound in front of him.

Pete Hegseth, John Ratcliffe, Marco Rubio, and Donald Trump at a table watching a remote military operation on a screen.
From left to right, Hegseth, CIA director John Ratcliffe, Rubio and Trump at Mar-a-Lago © Donald Trump's TRUTH Social/AFP via Getty Images
An image President Donald Trump posted on Truth Social appears to show Venezuela’s President Nicolás Maduro on the USS Iwo Jima
An image Trump posted on Truth Social appears to show Maduro on the USS Iwo Jima © Donald Trump's TRUTH Social/AFP via Getty Images

The operation, one of the most complex carried out by the US in recent history, was months in preparation. It involved all branches of the military working with law enforcement and intelligence agencies, said Dan Caine, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the nation’s most senior military officer.

Since August, a small CIA team had been on the ground to provide “extraordinary insight” into Maduro’s habits and patterns of movement, a source familiar with the operation said.

US intelligence officials worked to find Maduro, who had tightened his security in response to US threats, and “understand how he moved, where he lived, where he travelled, what he ate, what he wore, what were his pets”, Caine said.

Planning was conducted by a core group of top US officials, including Trump’s homeland security adviser Stephen Miller, Rubio, Hegseth and CIA Director John Ratcliffe, a person familiar with the operation said.

Trump has presided over a major military build up in the Caribbean in recent months as he sought to dial up the pressure on Maduro, who was designated by Washington as the leader of a “narco-terrorist” drug cartel.

More than 14,000 US troops were moved into the region, in addition to dozens of aircraft and warships and an aircraft carrier.

By early December, US forces were ready to carry out the operation. It was then a matter of choosing the right day to minimise the risk of civilian harm and maximise the element of surprise, Caine said.

Trump told Fox News on Saturday that the operation was initially planned to take place days earlier but was called off because of poor weather.

“We waited four days,” he said. “Then, all of a sudden it opened up and we said ‘go’.”

After Trump gave the order on Friday evening, more than 150 US aircraft, including B1 bombers, F-35 and F-18 fighter jets and surveillance aircraft took off from 20 locations on land and sea from across the region.

Multiple videos from social media appeared to show footage of CH-47 Chinook helicopters flying over Caracas. In one video, an air refuelling boom was visible.

Video description

Helicopters flying across Caracas

Helicopters flying across Caracas © X; verified by the FT
Graphic illustrating two of the main helicopter types used by US Delta Force special forces troops

US warplanes pounced on Venezuelan air defence systems to allow helicopters and ground forces to approach Maduro’s compound.

“The lights of Caracas were largely turned off, due to a certain expertise that we have,” Trump said. Videos posted on social media appeared to show explosions across the city. The US Space Force and Cyber Command helped clear the way for the operation as the planes approached.

Explosions were reported at several military and communication targets in and around Caracas early on Saturday morning. Targets included the sprawling military complex at Fuerte Tiuna, the main air base at La Carlota and a communications facility at Cerro El Volcán.

Outside the capital, La Guaira, Venezuela’s primary seaport 30km to the north, was also hit, according to social media footage verified by the FT.

Video description

A strike hits warehouses at the La Guaira port, north of Caracas

A strike hits warehouses at the La Guaira port, north of Caracas © X; verified by the FT

The airport in the coastal city of Higuerote, about 120km to the east of Caracas, also appears to have been targeted.

Video description

Explosions can be seen at Higuerote airport in northern Venezuela on Saturday

Explosions can be seen at Higuerote airport in northern Venezuela on Saturday © X; geolocation by @99Dominik_ verified by the FT

There is so far little evidence that Venezuelan anti-aircraft equipment offered any meaningful resistance to the attack. “We assessed that we had maintained, totally, the element of surprise,” Caine said.

The US air armada would have been able to suppress Venezuelan air defences using a variety electronic and kinetic attacks, from spoofing GPS timing and jamming communications to turning off early warning and targeting radar remotely.  

These measures meant the Blackhawk and Chinook helicopters seen flying low over the skyline of Caracas were “in little danger” said Andrew Turner, a former Royal Air Force helicopter pilot.

“The ingress and egress from the Iwo Jima to the target and back would have been the easy part,” said Turner. “The hard part is the 60-90 seconds where you are approaching the target and you don’t ever have a full picture of who is there and what their disposition is. That is where the danger is.” 

US helicopters came under fire as they descended on Maduro’s location shortly after 2am local time, and responded with force. One US helicopter was damaged in the exchange of fire, but was still able to fly, Caine said.

A firefighter walks past a destroyed anti-aircraft unit at La Carlota military air base
A firefighter walks past a destroyed anti-aircraft unit at La Carlota military air base © Reuters

Trump said that two US troops were injured in the operation, but had returned in “pretty good shape”. No US forces were killed. It is unclear whether there were Venezuelan casualties.

“Maduro and his wife, both indicted, gave up, and were taken into custody by the Department of Justice,” Caine said. The pair were flown out on US helicopters before being transferred to the USS Iwo Jima.

They are expected to be taken to New York, where Maduro will face federal charges of “drug trafficking and narco-terrorism conspiracies” according to an indictment unsealed on Saturday.

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