Inside
‘Operation Absolute Resolve,’ the U.S. Effort to Capture Maduro
The
tactically precise operation successfully extracted Mr. Maduro with no loss of
American life, a result heralded by President Trump amid larger questions about
the legality and rationale for the U.S. actions in Venezuela.
Julian E.
BarnesTyler PagerEric Schmitt
By Julian
E. BarnesTyler Pager and Eric Schmitt
Julian E.
Barnes and Eric Schmitt reported from Washington. Tyler Pager reported from
West Palm Beach, Fla.
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/01/03/us/politics/trump-capture-maduro-venezuela.html
Jan. 3,
2026
Updated
7:33 p.m. ET
In
August, a clandestine team of C.I.A. officers slipped into Venezuela with a
plan to collect information on Nicolás Maduro, the country’s president, whom
the Trump administration had labeled a narco-terrorist.
The
C.I.A. team moved about Caracas, remaining undetected for months while it was
in the country. The intelligence gathered about the Venezuelan leader’s daily
movements — combined with a human source close to Mr. Maduro and a fleet of
stealth drones flying secretly above — enabled the agency to map out minute
details about his routines.
It was a
highly dangerous mission. With the U.S. embassy closed, the C.I.A. officers
could not operate under the cloak of diplomatic cover. But it was highly
successful. Gen. Dan Caine, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said at
a news conference that because of the intelligence gathered by the team, the
United States knew where Mr. Maduro moved, what he ate and even what pets he
kept.
That
information was critical to the ensuing military operation, a pre-dawn raid
Saturday by elite Army Delta Force commandos, the riskiest U.S. military
operation of its kind since members of the Navy’s SEAL Team 6 killed Osama bin
Laden in a safe house in Pakistan in 2011.
The
result was a tactically precise and swiftly executed operation that extracted
Mr. Maduro from his country with no loss of American life, a result heralded by
President Trump amid larger questions about the legality and rationale for the
U.S. actions in Venezuela.
Mr. Trump
has justified what was named Operation Absolute Resolve as a strike against
drug trafficking. But Venezuela is hardly as big a player in the international
drug trade as other countries. Officials had previously told congressional
leaders that their objective in Venezuela was not regime change.. And Mr. Trump
has long said he opposes U.S. foreign occupations.
Yet on
Saturday, the president proclaimed that American officials were in charge of
Venezuela, and that the United States would rebuild the country’s oil
infrastructure.
In
contrast to messy U.S. interventions of the past — by the military in Panama or
the C.I.A. in Cuba — the operation to grab Mr. Maduro was virtually flawless,
according to multiple officials familiar with the details, some of whom spoke
on the condition of anonymity to describe the plans.
In the
run-up, Delta Force commandos rehearsed the extraction inside a full-scale
model of Mr. Maduro’s compound that the Joint Special Operations Command had
built in Kentucky. They practiced blowing through steel doors at ever-faster
paces.
The
military had been readying for days to execute the mission, waiting for good
weather conditions and a time when the risk of civilian casualties would be
minimized.
Amid the
heightened tensions, Mr. Maduro had been rotating between six and eight
locations, and the United States did not always learn where he intended to stay
until late in the evenings. To execute the operation, the U.S. military needed
confirmation that Mr. Maduro was at the compound they had trained to attack.
In the
days leading up to the raid, the United States deployed increasing numbers of
Special Operations aircraft, specialized electronic warfare planes, armed
Reaper drones, search-and-rescue helicopters and fighter jets to the region —
last-minute reinforcements that analysts said indicated the only question was
when military action would happen, not if.
The
United States had made other moves intended to ratchet up the pressure on Mr.
Maduro and prepare for the raid to capture him. A week earlier, the C.I.A. had
carried out a drone strike on a port facility in Venezuela. And for months, the
U.S. military has conducted a legally disputed campaign that has destroyed
dozens of boats and killed at least 115 people in the Caribbean and eastern
Pacific.
In recent
days, Mr. Maduro tried to head off an American raid, offering the United States
access to Venezuelan oil, Mr. Trump said Saturday. A U.S. official said the
deal, offered on Dec. 23, would have had Mr. Maduro leave the country for
Turkey. But Mr. Maduro angrily rejected that plan, the official said. It was
clear, the official added, that Mr. Maduro was not serious.
The
collapse of the talks set the stage for the capture mission.
There was
likely little doubt in the Venezuelan government that the United States was
coming. But the military took pains to maintain so-called tactical surprise,
like it did with its operation over the summer to destroy Iran’s nuclear
facilities.
Mr. Trump
had authorized the U.S. military to go ahead as early as Dec. 25, but left the
precise timing to Pentagon officials and Special Operations planners to ensure
that the attacking force was ready, and that conditions on the ground were
optimal.
The U.S.
military wanted to conduct the operation during the holiday period because many
government officials were on vacation and because significant numbers of
Venezuelan military personnel were on leave, according to a U.S. official.
Unseasonably
bad weather pushed the operation off by several days. Earlier in the week,
however, the weather cleared, and military commanders looked at a “rolling
window” of targeting opportunities in the days ahead. Mr. Trump gave the final
go order at 10:46 p.m. Friday.
Had the
weather not cleared, the mission could have been pushed off until mid-January,
one official said.
The
operation officially got underway around 4:30 p.m. on Friday, when U.S.
officials gave the first set of approvals to launch certain assets into the
air. But that did not mean the full mission would be authorized. For the next
six hours, officials continued to monitor the conditions on the ground,
including the weather and Mr. Maduro’s whereabouts.
Mr. Trump
spent the evening on the patio at Mar-a-Lago, his Florida club, where he had
dinner with aides and cabinet secretaries. The president’s aides told him that
they would be calling him later that evening, around 10:30 p.m., for the final
approval. Mr. Trump did so by phone, then joined his senior national security
officials in a secure location on the property.
Inside
Venezuela, the effort began with a cyberoperation that cut power to large
swaths of Caracas, shrouding the city in darkness to allow the planes, drones
and helicopters to approach undetected.
More than
150 military aircraft, including drones, fighter planes and bombers, took part
in the mission, taking off from 20 different military bases and Navy ships.
As the
aircraft advanced on Caracas, military and intelligence agencies determined
that they had maintained tactical surprise: Mr. Maduro had not been warned that
the operation was coming.
Early
Saturday morning, thunderous explosions boomed across Caracas as U.S. warplanes
struck at radar and air defense batteries. While some of the explosions posted
on social media looked dramatic, a U.S. official said that they were mostly
radar installations and radio transmission towers being taken out.
At least
40 people were killed in Saturday’s attack on Venezuela, including military
personnel and civilians, according to a senior Venezuelan official who spoke on
condition of anonymity to describe preliminary reports.
Later,
General Caine told reporters that the fighter planes, bombers and drones came
into Venezuela to find and destroy the country’s air defenses, to clear a safe
pathway for the helicopters carrying Special Operations forces.
Even
though Venezuelan air defenses were suppressed, the U.S. helicopters came under
fire as they moved in on Mr. Maduro’s compound at about 2:01 a.m. local time.
General Caine said the helicopters responded with “overwhelming force.”
One of
the helicopters was hit. Two U.S. officials said that about half a dozen
soldiers were injured in the overall operation.
The Delta
Force operators assigned to capture Mr. Maduro were whisked to their target —
on Venezuela’s most fortified military base — by an elite Army Special
Operations aviation unit, the 160th Special Operations Aviation Regiment, which
flies modified MH-60 and MH-47 helicopters.
The
160th, nicknamed the Night Stalkers, specializes in high-risk, low-level and
nighttime missions like insertions, extractions and raids. The unit conducted
what the Pentagon called training missions near the coast of Venezuela in
recent months.
Once on
the ground, Delta Force moved quickly through the building to find Mr. Maduro.
About 1,300 miles away, in a room inside Mar-a-Lago, Mr. Trump and key aides
watched the raid play out in real time, courtesy of a camera positioned on an
aircraft overhead.
As
General Caine narrated the events on the screen, the president peppered him
with questions about how the operation was unfolding.
“I
watched it literally like I was watching a television show,” Mr. Trump said on
Fox News Saturday morning.
As the
president monitored the raid from Florida, the Delta Force operators used an
explosive to enter the building.
The U.S.
official said that the Special Operations forces took three minutes after
blowing open the door to move through the building to Mr. Maduro’s location.
Mr. Trump
said that once the Special Operations forces made it through the compound to
Mr. Maduro’s room, the Venezuelan leader and his wife tried to escape into a
steel-reinforced room, but were stopped by the U.S. forces.
“He was
trying to get to a safe place,” Mr. Trump said during the news conference with
General Caine, adding: “It was a very thick door, a very heavy door. But he was
unable to get to that door. He made it to the door, he was unable to close it.”
About
five minutes after entering the building, Delta Force reported that they had
Mr. Maduro in custody.
The
military was accompanied by an F.B.I. hostage negotiator in case Mr. Maduro had
locked himself in a safe room or refused to surrender.
Those
negotiations, however, proved unnecessary. The Delta operatives swiftly loaded
the couple into the helicopters, which had returned to the compound. By 4:29
a.m. Caracas time, Mr. Maduro and his wife were transferred to the U.S.S. Iwo
Jima, a U.S. warship in the Caribbean stationed about 100 miles off the coast
of Venezuela during the operation.
The
couple was transferred from the Iwo Jima to the U.S. Navy base at Guantánamo
Bay, where the F.B.I. had a 757 government plane waiting to bring him to a
military-controlled airport north of Manhattan.
Mr. Trump
watched until the Special Operations forces were out of Venezuela, flying over
the ocean, an official said.
Mr. Trump
said that the United States was prepared to conduct a second wave of attacks
against Venezuela, but that he did not think it would be necessary. He issued a
warning to other Venezuelan leaders: He would be willing to come after them, as
well.
Reporting
was contributed by Anatoly Kurmanaev and Mariana Martínez from Venezuela, Riley
Mellen from New York and Carol Rosenberg from Miami.
Julian E.
Barnes covers the U.S. intelligence agencies and international security matters
for The Times. He has written about security issues for more than two decades.
Tyler
Pager is a White House correspondent for The Times, covering President Trump
and his administration.
Eric
Schmitt is a national security correspondent for The Times. He has reported on
U.S. military affairs and counterterrorism for more than three decades.


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