Trump claims US has captured Venezuelan dictator and wife

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Donald Trump has claimed the US has “captured” Venezuela’s dictator, Nicolás Maduro, and his wife, Cilia Flores, and flown them out of the South American country after a pre-dawn assault on Caracas and the surrounding region.

“It was a brilliant operation, actually,” the US president told the New York Times after eyewitnesses in Venezuela reported a series of explosions. “A lot of good planning and [a] lot of great, great troops and great people.”

Writing on social media, Trump confirmed his troops had launched “a large-scale strike against Venezuela” and said more details would be announced at a press conference at his Mar-a-Lago residence. CBS News reported that US officials said Maduro had been captured by members of the elite army unit Delta Force, which was responsible for the 2019 killing of the Islamic State leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.

Speaking on ​Venezuela’s state-run television channel, the vice​ president Delcy Rodríguez ​appeared to confirm ​the capture of Maduro and Flores​, admitting that she did not know where they were. Rodríguez​, who is one of Maduro’s closest allies, demand​ed immediate “proof of life” ​for the couple and accused the US of “murdering humble and innocent Venezuelan men and women”.

“At this moment Venezuela is calm, absorbing the significance of a military aggression of this nature,” she added in the brief telephone interview.

Earlier, Venezuela’s government accused the US of launching a series of attacks against civilian and military targets in the South American country after explosions rocked its capital, Caracas, before dawn on Saturday.

Smoke and fire rises from explosions in Caracas, Venezuela
Smoke rises from explosions in Caracas, Venezuela, on 3 January. Photograph: Video obtained by Reuters/Reuters

In a statement, Venezuela’s government urged citizens to rise up against the assault and said Washington risked plunging Latin America into chaos with “an extremely serious” act of “military aggression”.

“The entire country must mobilise to defeat this imperialist aggression,” it added.

In a defiant online video, V​enezuela’s defense minister, Vladimir Padrino López​, accused the US of launching a “deplorable” and “criminal” regime change operation and said the “barbaric” invading forces had “desecrated our sacred land”.

​“This invasion represents the greatest outrage the country has ever suffere​d,” Gen Padrino López declared, adding that Venezuelan authorities were still trying to calculate how many civilians had been killed or injured during helicopter attacks in urban areas.

Venezuela’s defense chief called on citizens and soldiers to unite to resist the foreign “invasion”. “They have attacked us but they will not vanquish us … we will form an indestructible wall of resistance. Our vocation is peace, but our heritage is the fight for freedo​m,” he said.

US media reported that Trump had ordered the strikes against the South American country.

Explosions and low-flying aircraft were heard in Caracas in the early hours of Saturday. In its statement, Venezuela’s government confirmed that the city had come under attack, as well as three other states: Miranda, La Guaira and Aragua.

“The only objective of this attack is to seize control of Venezuela’s strategic resources, in particular its oil and minerals,” it said, calling on the international community to denounce what it called a flagrant violation of international law that put millions of lives at risk.

The president of neighbouring Colombia, Gustavo Petro, said on social media that Venezuela was under attack. “Right now they are bombing Caracas … bombing it with missiles,” Petro wrote on X, calling for an immediate emergency session of the UN security council.

Venezuelan forces patrol the streets in Caracas
Venezuelan forces patrol the streets in Caracas, Venezuela, on 3 January, after multiple explosions were reported across the capital. Photograph: Miguel Gutiérrez/EPA

CBS News reported shortly afterwards that Trump had ordered the attacks – including on military facilities. The White House and Pentagon did not respond to requests for comment.

At least seven explosions were heard at about 2am local time and people in various neighbourhoods rushed to the street, the Associated Press reported. “The whole ground shook. This is horrible. We heard explosions and planes in the distance,” said Carmen Hidalgo, a 21-year-old office worker.

Eyewitnesses reported seeing smoke pouring from two key military installations in Caracas: the La Carlota military airfield at the heart of the city and the Fuerte Tiuna military base where Maduro has long been thought to live. Another important airport to the east of Caracas, Higuerote, also appeared to come under attack.

The explosions come after a five-month US pressure campaign against Maduro, which many analysts believe is designed to topple the Venezuelan leader. Since August, Donald Trump has ordered a massive military buildup off Venezuela’s northern coast and conducted a series of deadly airstrikes on supposed “narco boats”.

Trump has repeatedly promised land operations in Venezuela, amid efforts to pressure Maduro to leave office, including expanded sanctions, a ramped-up US military presence in the region and more than two dozen strikes on vessels allegedly involved in trafficking drugs in the Pacific Ocean and Caribbean Sea.

The US has also seized sanctioned oil tankers off the coast of Venezuela, and Trump ordered a blockade of others in a move that seemed designed to put a tighter chokehold on the South American country’s economy.

Colombia’s president Petro published what he claimed was a partial list of the bombed installations in Venezuela, including the 19th-century national assembly building in Caracas; La Carlota, the most important airbase within the capital; and an air force base in the city of Barquisimeto.

The reputedly targeted sites also included the Cuartel de la Montaña barracks in Caracas, a military base that is home to the mausoleum of Maduro’s mentor, Hugo Chávez. The mausoleum is one of the most sacred locations for their political movement, Chavismo, which has governed Venezuela in an increasingly authoritarian fashion since Chávez first came to power in 1999. Chávez’s remains were taken to the barracks and put on public display after he died of cancer in 2013.

The president of Cuba, Miguel Díaz-Canel, denounced the US’s “criminal attack” and claimed the region was being brutally assaulted. “[This is] state terrorism against the gallant people of Venezuela and against Our America,” wrote Díaz-Canel who is Maduro’s main regional ally.

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