Maduro is out but his top allies still hold power in Venezuela
FILE PHOTO: Venezuela's President Maduro attends a special session to take oath as re-elected President at the Palacio Federal Legislativo in Caracas
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The U.S. capture
of Venezuelan leader Nicolas Maduro - praised by President Donald Trump as
stunning and powerful - leaves behind uncertainty about who is running the
oil-rich country.
Trump said on
Saturday that Vice President Delcy Rodriguez, part of the powerful cabal at the
top of the country's government, had been sworn in after Maduro's arrest and
that she had spoken with U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio, leading to
speculation that she would take the reins.
Under Venezuela's
constitution, Rodriguez becomes acting president in Maduro's absence and the
country's top court ordered her to assume the role late Saturday night.
But shortly after
Trump's remarks, Rodriguez appeared on state television flanked by her brother,
the head of the national assembly Jorge Rodriguez, Interior Minister Diosdado
Cabello and Defense Minister Vladimir Padrino Lopez and said that Maduro
remained Venezuela's only president.
The joint
appearance indicated the group that shared power with Maduro is staying united
- for now.
Trump publicly
closed the door Saturday on working with opposition leader and Nobel Prize
winner Maria Corina Machado, widely seen as Maduro's most credible opponent,
saying she doesn't have support inside the country.
After Machado was
barred from running in Venezuela's 2024 elections, international observers say
her stand-in candidate won the vote in a landslide, despite Maduro's government
claiming victory.
CIVILIAN-MILITARY
POWER BALANCE
For more than a
decade, real power in Venezuela has been held by a small circle of senior
officials. Analysts and officials say though that the system depends on a
sprawling web of loyalists and
security organs, fueled by corruption and surveillance.
Within the inner circle,
a civilian-military balance reigns. Each member has their own interests and
patronage networks. Currently Rodriguez and her brother represent the civilian
side. Padrino and Cabello represent the military side.
This power
structure makes dismantling Venezuela's current government more complex than
removing Maduro, according to interviews with current and former U.S.
officials, Venezuelan and U.S. military analysts and security consultants to
Venezuela's opposition.
"You can
remove as many pieces of the Venezuelan government as you like, but it would
have to be multiple actors at different levels to move the needle," said a
former U.S. official involved in criminal investigations in Venezuela.
A big question
mark surrounds Cabello, who exerts influence over the country's military and
civilian counterintelligence agencies, which conduct widespread domestic
espionage.
"The focus is
now on Diosdado Cabello," said Venezuelan military strategist Jose Garcia.
"Because he is the most ideological, violent and unpredictable element of
the Venezuelan regime."
The United Nations
found both SEBIN, the civilian agency, and DGCIM, the military intelligence
service, have committed crimes against humanity as part of a state plan to
crush dissent. Eleven former detainees - including some who were once security
personnel themselves - described electric shocks, simulated drownings, and
sexual abuse at DGCIM black sites to Reuters in interviews before Maduro's
capture.
"They want
you to feel like you are a cockroach in a cage of elephants, that they are
bigger," said a former DGCIM agent who was arrested and accused of treason
in 2020 after having contact with military dissidents.
In recent weeks,
as the United States mounted its biggest military build-up in Latin America in
decades, Cabello has appeared on live TV ordering the DGCIM to "go and get
the terrorists" and warning "whoever strays, we will know."
He repeated the
rhetoric in a state television appearance on Saturday, clad in a flak jacket
and helmet and surrounded by heavily armed guards.
Cabello has also
been closely associated with pro-government militias, notably groups of
motorcycle-riding armed civilians
known as colectivos.
GENERALS CONTROL
KEY SECTORS
Cabello, a former
military officer and a major player in the socialist party, has influence over
a meaningful fraction of the armed forces, even though Venezuela's military has
been formally run by Defense Minister Padrino for more than ten years.
Venezuela has as
many as 2,000 generals and admirals, more than double the number in the United
States. Senior and retired officers control food distribution, raw materials
and the state oil company PDVSA, while dozens of generals sit on the boards of
private firms.
Beyond contracts,
military officials profit from illicit trade, defectors and current and former
U.S. investigators say.
Documents from an
opposition security consultant, shared
with the U.S. military and seen by Reuters, say commanders close to Cabello and
Padrino are assigned to key brigades along Venezuela's borders and in
industrial hubs.
The brigades,
while tactically important, also sit on major smuggling routes.
"There are
some 20 to 50 officers in the Venezuelan military who need to go, probably even
more, to fully remove this regime," said a lawyer who has represented a member of senior
Venezuelan leadership.
Some might be
considering jumping ship. The lawyer said that around a dozen former officials
and current generals had reached out after Maduro's capture, hoping to cut a
deal with the U.S. by offering intelligence in exchange for safe passage and
legal immunity.
But those close to
Cabello said he was not currently interested in cutting a deal, the lawyer
said.


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