Breaking Points with Krystal and Saagar - 1/5/26: Trump Threatens Cuba, Mexico And Colombia, Maduro Internal Betrayal
Episode Date: January 5, 2026Krystal and Saagar discuss Trump threatens multiple countries after Venezuela attack, Maduro internal betrayal. Juan David Rojas: https://x.com/rojasrjuand?s=20 Eva Golinger: https://x.com/evagolinger...?s=20 To become a Breaking Points Premium Member and watch/listen to the show AD FREE, uncut and 1 hour early visit: www.breakingpoints.comMerch Store: https://shop.breakingpoints.com/See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Good morning, everybody. Happy New Year. We have an amazing show for everybody today. What do we have, Crystal?
Feels good to be back in the studio, I have to say. It feels great to be back, reflecting our muscles. We've got a new war on the horizon. Didn't want it.
We're here in war. We're here to do it with all of you. And I wouldn't rather, I would rather, I would not rather do it with anyone else.
Thank you, soccer. Same.
So we are actually just going to focus on Venezuela for the entire show today from every angle that you could think of.
We're going to give you the latest Trump made a bunch of new comments yesterday.
Also, Maduro is actually expected in court today.
He's being held in the same person as Luigi and Diddy.
So I don't know.
None of it feels real.
Anyway, we're also going to have a fantastic guest named Ava Gollinger.
She's an attorney.
She's also written a book about Hugo Chavez.
And she has a lot of insight and theories about what actually went down.
and especially with regard to the now acting president, Delci Rodriguez, so definitely want to talk to her.
We've got one, David Rojas, joining us as well. He wrote a piece about the future that he sees for Venezuela and also going to ask him about some of the South Florida reaction and the upset over the fact that Trump just threw Machado, the opposition leader under the bus.
We're going to take a look at all of the vulture capitalists who are swarming and circling and also whether or not Trump's oil dreams are actually going to come to fruition.
We're going to take a look at the Democratic Party reaction as well.
They are a bit in disarray over how to approach all of this.
And also got to call out a bunch of right-wing influencers who shared a bunch of fake-ass videos.
And even after they got called out, did not take them down, including just like overt AI
slop retweeted by people like, oh, I don't know, the richest man on the planet, Elon Musk,
which again, continues to just be up, even though it's widely clear, totally clear.
has been widely pointed out that this is AI generated.
We'll also show you some actual videos from inside of Venezuela
and give you the polling on, you know, as best we can figure,
how people inside Venezuela and how people in the Venezuelan diaspora
also feel about this military intervention as best as we can glean.
So that's what we're going to get to today.
We're going to go in deep because obviously this is incredibly significant action
and we're going to try to figure out where we are and where things may go from here.
Yeah, that's right.
I mean, it's very tough, as you know, I want to say from the top,
like we're not in Venezuela. We don't really know anybody who's claiming that they know exactly based on the word of somebody in Durrell, Florida, you know, a little bit ridiculous. In my opinion, it is a country, it's a large country, tens of millions of people. Many of them will have differing opinions. It's complex. We're going to do our best over the coming weeks and months to get down to it. Thank you to everybody who is supporting the show, breaking points at dot com if you're able to join us. It's an election year. So now we can roll back some of our older pitches. It's an election year. The 2026 election is common.
It's upon us, if you want to join us for all of that content, as well as what I'm sure going to be an insane year here whenever it comes to Venezuela, perhaps Iran, many other conflicts, which we have are eye on. Please join us at breaking points.com and support our work. If you're just watching this on YouTube, please hit subscribe on YouTube. And if you're listening to this podcast, just go ahead and share an episode with a friend. Perhaps this one is an entire special just on Venezuela, as everybody tries to make sense of this situation. But let's go ahead and dive into the nitty-gritty. We do, of course, Crystal, thank you very much.
I was actually in South Florida on a bachelor party while all of this was going down on a boat trying to help Crystal on the team get all of this.
Haven't been able to weigh in.
But here we can.
You honestly, what was it when you had your wedding was when Biden dropped down?
Every time you're like off the grid, it's when something crazy happens.
Before, maybe we could cut up.
People can fast forward this.
October 7th, I was planning my wedding.
That's right.
My food tasting.
That's right.
Then when Biden dropped out.
It was my, it was the day after my wedding on my way to a mini moon.
Then, let's see, well, yeah, there's like multiple of, it's like a meme at this point.
Whenever I'm, like, completely out of pocket, unable to join, that something insane happens.
So all of you can just set your watch by it.
Oh, when I had the baby, what happened?
There was something crazy that happened.
We've lost track at this point, but yeah.
I almost said maternity leave.
Well, my critics can have a good time.
with that one. All right, Trump, Maduro, let's do it. So, Mr. Maduro, I don't even know how
refer to him. The former president, current president, it's up to the Venezuelans, I guess,
here is now here in U.S. custody. In fact, as we speak, it just landed in Lower Manhattan
on his way to the courthouse, but we did have a perp walk. We can go and put this up here
on the screen. Stunning scenes, actually, he somehow was placed in the hoodie by my friend
Jaccoe Willings Company, so I'm not exactly sure who did that. That was after his Nike track
suit, which is now been completely sold out.
A lot of fit changes. Yeah, a lot of outfit changes happening here to Mr. Maduro being
perp walked here at the DEA headquarters, posing, smiling. He was seen wishing people happy
New Year saying good night to his wife, Celia, who was also, what, extraordinary renditioned
from the country of Venezuela. I mean, it's an insane image. You know, one day being the leader
of Venezuela, a long time now to being in U.S. custody after that stunning Delta force.
raid, but what we do know now and the big questions are the day after. So Crystal broke that news
down, Trump saying we're going to run Venezuela, Marco Rubio backtracking, Trump retracking,
saying, no, no, no, we are going to run it. Basically, everything is up in the air. And that's what
the focus of our show is going to be. So we've done a super cut here of many of Donald Trump's
comments specifically about how he intends to, quote, run Venezuela. Let's take a listen.
But we can't take a chance after having done this incredible thing last night of letting somebody else take over where we have to do it again.
We can do it again, too.
Nobody can stop us.
There's nobody that has the capability that we have.
You know, when I watch that war in Russia going on and on and on and everybody dying, it's like it's primitive.
It's primitive. It's horrible.
One of the things that is happening, I think you see it, you see it all the time.
time, Howard, you've seen it, that Cuba is ready to fall.
Yes.
Cuba looks like it's ready to fall.
I don't know if they're going to hold that.
But Cuba now has no income.
They got all of their income from Venezuela, from the Venezuelan oil.
They're not getting any of them.
And Cuba literally is ready to fall.
And you have a lot of great Cuban Americans that are going to be very happy about this.
They come in through the southern border and something's going to have to be done with Mexico.
Mr. President, so Colombian President Gustavo Petro, you know, a couple weeks ago,
he said he's got to watch his ass. And today he said he's not concerned about anything
happening to him in the aftermath of this operation. So just what your message is about that?
Well, he has cocaine mills. He has factories where he makes cocaine. And yeah, I think I stick
by my first statement. He's making cocaine. They're sending it into the United States. So he does
have to watch his ass. So we're going to run Venezuela and also multiple of these other countries
are perhaps going to fall. I mean, at this point, obviously, this is what they wanted.
They want the madman theory of perhaps being able to threaten any of these other countries
in Latin America. This is obviously a massive kind of geopolitical moment. There's a lot of talk
about the Monroe Doctrine. I previously said here on the show that the vast majority of people
saying Monroe Doctrine don't actually know what the Monroe Doctrine means. Perhaps if anyone
was to saddle up for a history lesson. The Monroe Doctrine was created to prevent European powers
from intervening in the Western Hemisphere and had a much more of an idea and, frankly, like, you know, intellectual basis in the age of a European Empire when the U.S. was a much smaller and tertiary player on the global stage.
Now, this time around, what has unfortunately kind of been morphed into is just America gets to do whatever it wants, which we actually did try that.
It's called the, you know, Cold War, period. And it didn't work out so well, if you ask me.
And in fact, if you ask that, because it's engendered not only a lot of the problems that happened there between the 70s and the 80s, but a long legacy actually of the very leaders like Maduro and now the current leader of Venezuela who see that legacy as the exact reason for the why they need to be oppositional, let's say, to the United States.
Many of the countries that he actually just named, one of the things that he could, again, I've talked about this here previously with Venezuela, is that he's actually doing the best possible thing he could.
for Claudia Scheinbaum, for Petro, for the Cuban regime, all of whom actually,
well, Scheinbaum excluded, let's take Lula, in all of those cases, those leaders were less popular.
And actually, after Trump started threatening them, they became dramatically more popular.
I was told directly by a source in the State Department that Petro's greatest dream is for Trump to
threaten to depose him and to attack him because that would make, he's very unpopular, actually,
in the country, but this is lifting his tide there. So look, there's, I mean, I have no idea, right? At this point,
can you really rule out any of what is going on? But this is one of the most explicit and frankly,
I mean, look, there's so much, you know, kind of geostrategically and all that to say about it.
But just at the very least, what they want is to basically move past even directly, let's say,
intervening in elections like Argentina with talks of loans, but just be like, we can blackbag any leader.
And I mean, just think about this legal precedent.
The United States president cannot be prosecuted for any official acts.
But the official acts of any foreign leader, as long as you're indicted in the United States, you can be blackbacked and then charged under U.S. law for trying to procure machine guns for the use of your military.
That is literally in the indictment, which we'll break down at some point tomorrow.
So, yeah, I hope we're all ready to live in this era when the Taiwan.
president is indicted in the Chinese court or when, you know, I'm sure Zelensky will be indicted
soon by the Duma for being a Nazi and all this. Good luck. Good luck talking, right? I mean,
what did we just say now? Who's the biggest superpower who is opposed to Israel? Can they just use
an ICC warrant to go into Israel and just blackbag him? President AOC is going to have her eye on this.
I mean, yeah. I mean, by the way, Mr. I saw Bukeli celebrating this. I'm like, listen, brother,
Whoever Democrat is in the future, I wouldn't be talking this way if I were you.
So, yeah, okay.
I mean, this is the world that we live in now, I guess.
And Gaza is an important part of setting the stage for this moment of, you know, complete barbarism,
complete law of the jungle, complete might makes right, you know, when Israel and the U.S.
were able to get away with all of that.
It's like, okay, then anything is on the table, which is something we also talked about at the time.
If you are any country around the world, you should be thinking, I need to get nukes because that's basically your only insurance policy against the U.S. doing whatever the hell the U.S. wants to do with you, going in and grabbing your oil, your gold, kidnapping your head of state, locking them up in a federal prison in the Southern District of New York. That is your only real safeguard. So like North Korea, vindicated, you know, we're not messing with them, are they? Are we? There's a reason for that.
And, you know, for the Monroe Doctrine people, there's a few things I would want to say.
Number one, there seems to be this illusion that, like, oh, if, quote, unquote, we take the oil,
this is somehow going to directly benefit the American people versus, no, no, no.
This is about the bottom line of ExxonMobil and the bottom lines of the oligarch class.
It doesn't have anything to do with your self-interest.
Like your self-interest and the interest of the empire and the oligarch class, maybe sometimes they align, but they are not the same interests.
And I think that's really important to remember.
Another thing about the Don Roe doctrine people is Trump himself has said like, oh, no, it's not just about our neighborhood.
It's about doing whatever we want, wherever we want.
It's about getting what we want when we want.
So that is the world that we live in now.
And if anyone was under any illusions, I think those illusions should be disabused.
But the, you know, the other thing that I would say about this is that we are going to have immediate repercussions in terms of the way that the rest of the world relates to us.
And there's a tension in what Trump did here because on the one hand, it's insane.
It's a sort of like military spectacle, right?
This great theatrical military display, which Trump absolutely loves.
He's, you know, going all the, you know, our amazing military in this operation was so.
dangerous and they're so courageous and they love that aspect. He loves that aspect of it.
On the other hand, it also does illustrate that there was a limit to what he wanted to do.
You know, there were war games that they conducted previously where they found, you know,
if we really did the whole like take out the whole Maduro regime and try to install Machado,
it's going to be a fucking mess. And we're going to have to have, you know, massive number of
troops there, we are truly going to have to like own this thing and occupy it and there's
going to be rival groups fighting and it's going to be a disaster. Trump looked at that and was
like, I don't want to deal with that. So sorry, Machado, we're not doing that. As of today,
you can't really call it a regime change because the same regime is in charge and you have the same
level of threats. Now, Trump feels that he's up the ante, that he's escalated the threats. So he may get
more out of the, you know, out of the vice president who's now in charge in Venezuela. There's also
a possibility we're going to talk to our next guest about, you know, whether there was a deal
that was struck directly between Delci Rodriguez and between the Trump administration.
But in a lot of ways, the situation has not fundamentally changed. We have military assets in
the region, but not on the ground. We have the same regime in charge. And they are still
stuck between having to respond to their own population and their own movement and having to worry
about Trumpian threats.
So at the same time that it's this insane and extraordinary action,
it also actually demonstrates some of the limits
of how far Trump was ultimately willing to go here.
He kind of showed his hand in terms of what he is actually willing to do.
So I think that's an important learning to take from this as well.
I mean, I have seen so much discourse about the Afghanistan and Iraq wars,
and they're like, wow, the military has changed.
We need to rethink.
Guys, you're an idiot if you think that.
The United States defeated Saddam's military in three weeks.
The United States deposed and took out the Taliban with barely any troops on the ground and a CIA team, very similar in some ways to what happened here with Maduro.
Nobody has ever doubted the incredible professionalism planning and all of that of U.S. special operations.
What we do doubt is the strategic know-how of the general class and of Washington and our civilian authorities to be able to govern that effectively.
And that's the end game that we're in right now.
So it's not even correct to call it regime change.
It's not even really correct to call it a coup or any of that.
It is very similar.
We have to roll the clock back almost over 100 years to the British times,
where this is probably more akin to a British colonial,
where British colonial experiments,
where what they would do is they would have quasi-local leaders.
They would have a very select few number of troops and corporations
on the ground. And the implicit kind of admission was that you do what we want. We won't mess
too much in your own internal affairs. But if you do, the full force of His Majesty's Navy will come in
and will basically wipe you out. But even that, obviously, broke apart. Many times it worked in
some cases. And then every once in a while, oh, Afghanistan would happen, right? And a number of
troops would die in the Khyber Pass. Like, this is akin to that model. Even in the U.S. times,
like our grand colonial experiments, we're honestly,
much more like flirt like we've never really had explicit basic denounce or announcements we're
here to take the oil now remember keep this like deep in the back of your mind that is trump
today that is not trump in you know tomorrow or yesterday like it could be anytime anywhere
and this is the competing faction which is currently in the white house okay new year fresh start
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So we have the Secretary of State, Marco Rubio, here, all over the place.
We're about to play for you.
First, we're not running it.
Trump says we are running it.
He says that this isn't regime change, but maybe regime change isn't so bad.
The Middle East was bad, but this isn't necessarily the exact same thing.
We could be using leverage.
It's about China, even though Trump said that we're going to sell them oil to China.
So let's take a listen to this from the Secretary of State.
It's completely all over the map.
We intend to use every element of leverage that we have to ensure that that changes.
The one I would point everyone to is that our military is helping the Coast Guard conduct a law enforcement function,
which is not just the capture of Maduro, but the enforcement of our sanctions.
We go to court, we get a warrant, we seize the boats.
And we think that this is tremendous leverage, incredible, crippling leverage,
which we intend to continue to use until we see the changes that we need to see.
Was asked about the possibility of U.S. boots on the ground.
He said, quote, we're not afraid of it.
how many U.S. forces are on the ground right now in Venezuela?
Are there any?
We don't have U.S. forces on the ground in Venezuela.
No, we don't have U.S. forces on the ground.
Everyone knows.
They were on the ground for about two hours when they went to capture Maduro.
And I think what the president is saying is very simple.
And that is, as President of the United States, he is not going to go around telling people what he's not going to do.
He's not going to go around saying, I won't do this, I won't do that.
Yes, I care about this issue, but I'll only go so far.
He retains all this optionality.
In the particular case you're citing, this was, in essence, at its core, a law enforcement function.
Is the Cuban government, the Trump administration's next target, Mr. Secretary, very quickly?
Well, the Cuban government is a huge problem. Yeah, the human government is a huge problem.
So is that a yes? But I don't think people fully appreciate, I think they're in a lot of trouble. Yes, I'm not going to talk to you about what our future steps are going to be and our policies are going to be right now in this regard.
but I don't think it's any mystery
that we are not big fans of the Cuban regime
who, by the way, are the ones
that we're propping up Maduro.
His entire internal security force,
his internal security apparatus
is entirely controlled by Cubans.
One of the untold stories here
is how, in essence,
you talk about colonization
because I think you said,
Dulce Rodriguez mentioned that.
The ones who have sort of colonized,
at least inside the regime, are Cubans.
It was Cubans that guarded Maduro.
He was not guarded by Venezuelan bodyguards.
He had Cuban bodyguards.
So important clip there
because that's what's really all about there for Mr. Rubio, right,
whose father's dying wish was that he liberate Cuba.
Not joking, he wrote about it in his own book.
By the way, they left before the revolution just so everyone knows.
Oh, yeah, sorry.
And visited it after the revolution.
And, yeah, also their families involved in drug trafficking, was involved in drug trafficking.
So, cue notes, we'll put that up.
Few notes about Mark of Rubio.
Not sure about that, but, okay, we could.
On the Cuba piece, there's a piece in American prospect where you can,
you can read the details about the narco trafficking piece.
In any case, the Cuba bet is,
Both that, they will, you know, have fear struck in the heart from this, you know, kidnapping, abduction, holding the leader of Venezuela hostage.
And also, they do, they benefit from, you know, inexpensive oil from Venezuela.
And it is true, the Cuban economy is a mess.
Like, they are actually in very dire straits.
So their, like, reverse domino theory is that perhaps just by withholding this Venezuela oil, that will be enough to shake the,
the Cuban regime, and then with the threat that, you know, we could go in and take direct action
as well. The whole mentality, I think the best way to think about it is a couple things. Number one,
in the same way that you have the Israel lobby, you have a like, you know, Miami, South America
lobby that is obsessed with these things and that are very influential, both in terms of
financial donations, in terms of the administration, and in terms of a political constituency that's
important to the Republican Party. So sometimes the moves that are taken seem irrelevant.
rational because you have to calculate in that you have this incredibly ideological diehard faction
that is both, you know, money and political power that is dedicated to this like neocon
ideology with regard to these certain, to any left-wing government, you know, that is in
Central, South America, or in the Caribbean. So there's, you know, that piece I think is really
important to keep in mind. And then in terms of the way the Trump administration is operating
here, Graham Platner, which we may play later in the show, called it international
gangsterism. And I do think that is the right mentality. They are operating like mob bosses
through threats and intimidation. We're going to hold your leader hostage and do with him
what we will. We're going to amass these forces in your region as a threat. And we're going to
hope that those threats and that coercion is enough for us to be able to effectively run your
country without actually doing the boots on the ground, the military occupation, et cetera. Now,
they're not ruling that out. That's part of the sort of like mob threat on the table. Hey,
we could come in and occupy your country. We could come back and bomb your country some more
and kill more of your citizens. But it truly is this sort of like gangster mentality that
they're hoping that the threat and the coercion is enough to be able to run the entire country
and turn them into a puppet regime. It's possible. I mean, a lot of it, it's like gunboat
diplomacy from the early 1800s. If you don't know what it is, we don't have enough
time to let go into it. But like basically the idea is you can roll in, you can open a port,
you can coerce the government to do what it wants. But the idea and really why a lot of this fell
out of favor from the United States is that what it unleashed effectively was not only the
greatest war that Europe had ever seen, but then 10 to 20 to 30 years of complete destabilization,
Hitlerism, fascism, the Soviet Union. And the United States were the ones who decided,
They're like, look, we need to go to war in Europe to stop international gangsterism.
Look, as people know, I think international law is fake.
And that's why I'm like, I'm not using some of illegal kidnapping and all of that.
Might does make right.
But that doesn't mean that you should do it.
And so I think that everybody should talk in terms of good idea, bad idea.
Now, when we talk here in terms of Venezuela, one of the reasons that a lot of this fell out of fashion, I guess, if you will,
is that the United States, for a long time, actually dramatically benefited from effectively doing this.
same thing, but under very different not only tonal ways, but also in terms of the way that they
acted in order to make sure that you didn't have the same contradictions arise. Let's say
when Russia invaded Ukraine and you want to sanction the hell out of their economy. And what
do we really even have to say here? And look, Monroe Doctrine, I mean, yeah, good luck explaining
that to the Chinese when they're starting to talk about Taiwan. They're like, yo, look at the
mileage between Washington and Venezuela. And then look at the little space there between us and
between Taiwan. They're like, yeah, it's an unresolved question. You guys are, you know,
in our sphere of influence. This is open and shut case. You have nothing to say it. Now, I'm not
saying this is going to make it more likely or less. I think it just makes it like, I think if
they were going to do it, they were going to do it. But the way that the United States and the
world, of course, would have to react in that type of situation does dramatically matter.
And so here... Remind people, Sagar, what percentage of chips are manufactured in Taiwan?
It depends. I mean, if we're looking at overall, but in terms of the advance, the most
importance over 90%. Like literally the entire US economy is gone like this. Like even if you don't
care whether Taiwan is independent or under Chinese control or whatever, in terms of what actually
will impact your life and our national security, your ability to buy basic consumer goods,
you have a lot more interest in Taiwan than you do. I've said this before. I mean, if Taiwan happens,
all of us, like all of our camera equipment will probably be nationalized by the government.
It's like in Russia. Like we're literally going to have to turn this laptop in. They're going to
take the chip out, we'll all have to go buy like 2006 laptops on eBay. You think I'm kidding.
This could be, after two years of something like that going on, and if we try to react negatively
to that situation and don't come to some quasi deal with the Chinese, that's what it's going to
look like. And beyond that, I mean, just like with us in Venezuela, the Chinese now currently
figuring out what they want to do. But let's just really remember, like within this, it's the
chaos element. And the chaos element, what it can unleash is if we look back and Marco Rubio is
claiming with a straight face, this is not Middle East. The point is not about the Middle East.
The point is about the playbook is that in every single time, the United States has never
been adept at being able to manage a multi-year occupation and or governance plan, which would
actually benefit the people there and the people here in every single case, whether it was
direct intervention, whether it was decapitation, what happened was chaos, the United States
was never adept because of its own domestic abilities or whatever, in order to actually
manage this and it unleashed hell for the region and eventually led to either blowback
or problems for us. Now, the craziness of this is that in the interim, the Maduro regime
remains in power without Maduro. And in fact, the most likely outcome as of today, we have
no idea, of course, what will happen is that the current vice president will assume power,
issue oil licenses, her and her brother run the entire country. They will use
some sort of concession and economic benefit from the United States with their new, I mean, just
lifting the sanctions would boom the Venezuelan economy, will reopen an embassy, Trump doesn't
care about democracy. What do you think that Delci Rodriguez and her brother are going to do?
They're going to lock up the entire opposition and kill them. Just, I mean, why wouldn't you
if you were them? That is the modal outcome. Now, the problem then is that it becomes just like any
other volatile U.S.-backed situation. I'm not saying any of this will fall apart in one year or two.
That's what many people misunderstand. In retrospect, you can see how Libya was a disaster.
It took years for Libya to fully fall apart. In Iraq, 04, you could actually make a case that it
all worked out. 05 in Afghanistan. That was the only time that it was the only time it's really
started to go off the rails. Everybody can say mission accomplished. It's easy. And then in retrospect,
we see like, ah, the groundwork for the problem, everything falling apart.
not going to sit here and say that it's going to be chaos tomorrow. That's not how these things
happen. What has always been the case for non-intervention or for deeply thoughtful intervention
is that 40th order consequences are completely unpredictable, and you would rather not, as the United
States, play with them. I mean, even now, they're talking about how Midnight Hammer was some great
success. It's like, really? Well, BB's still trying to claim that he wants to bomb Iran. Okay, so that's what
I'm saying. When you read the history book, you'll just skip over, be able to go,
midnight hammer to here, right? And it'll look completely obvious. But in the interim, we're all
having to deal with this ridiculous propaganda about how incredible it is. But kind of wrap all of this
section up. Let's go and put A6 up on the screen just to show the chaotic element. Trump is
currently threatening Venezuela's new leader with, quote, fate worse than Maduro. A second wave
of strikes is possible. And, you know, even my analysis earlier is presumptive on the fact that she can
keep control. The thing is about Venezuela and the reason why they couldn't actually do
the regime change, we're going to talk about this with Eva, there are multiple competing
factions. Remember, there are the oil fields. There are the cartels. Yes, they do operate
in areas of Venezuela. There is the military. There are actually various factions within the
military. There's the assembly. There is Rodriguez and there, but there's the Venezuelan kind of
like quasi-oil oligarchs like in Russia. There are multiple competing power.
centers, who knows what will happen and whether there will there be some internal coup
against them. That's what happens in these scenarios. Within chaos, anything can happen. And
again, usually it does not work out to overall U.S. benefit. It usually leads to some sort
of intervention or it can easily spiral. It can cause a decision tree, which very easily leads
to more U.S. boots on the ground, which our president explicitly refuses to rule out. Also, yeah,
saying there's no U.S. service members on the ground.
Yeah, maybe not officially.
I mean, the entire story of the captures
is multiple CIA black squads running around, okay?
So obviously there are U.S.
They don't consider that, you know, military.
I count it.
I think everybody else should.
Yeah.
You know, it counts to me.
And then finally, A7, let's go and put this up here on the screen.
What we have here is that, look, this hasn't been officially confirmed,
but I called around.
Some people are saying it's fake.
It's not.
What it does generally fit with, though, is that Venezuelan leaders
offer the U.S. a path to stay in power without Maduro.
And this is, I think, a good segue to Iva,
is that we really still don't know
whether this was part of some backroom deal
where the other people inside the Maduro regime
made a deal with Trump and them and said, look, yeah,
you can come and take him, Soviet, kill some Cubans, whatever.
You can create some big victory.
Yes, I mean, they have, remember,
whenever we say we want to take the oil,
it's in their benefit, too.
They want to sell it to us.
Their economy has been destroyed by sanctions over the last decade.
I mean, they're actually doing okay, what, some 15 years ago or so.
It's now that they've actually been driven down into the ground.
That's what had a lot of the migration.
They don't want any of those problems.
They want to be rich, too.
And they have no problem killing their opposition or any of that
and effectively being like a quasi-corrupt state, which is under semi, like, one-party-ish-type rule.
They don't want elections or fake elections or any of this.
This could be a great outcome for them.
want to basically be, you know, almost a golf style monarchy.
Well, but that's part of the thing is, and this is something you and I have covered a lot.
Like, none of this was necessary.
The deal was on the table.
You didn't need to kidnap Maduro to secure this deal.
It was not required at all.
I mean, the oil deal was there for, and whatever other natural resources would say,
do have other significant stockpiles and natural resources.
That was all on the table.
I think Trump with his rhetoric and also under pressure from,
Rubio and that faction felt like he needed to do some like, oh my God, Venezuela spectacle
to appease that constituency. And so that's how you end up with this outcome. Because in terms
of the economics of it, I mean, I think there's a pretty strong case to be made that he actually
would have been better off not doing this. Because now you have Delci Rodriguez under more
pressure domestically from, you know, but possibly because the population.
is looking like, we don't want to be some colonial outposts. We don't want to just completely
bend and be, you know, under the thumb of the Yankee oppressor. You know, so it actually
creates some more potential dissent and some more pressure in terms of, you know, what may happen
going forward. So in any case, the deal was on the table, did not require this, you know,
and by the way, over 80 people were killed in the context of this military operation, did not require
the kidnapping of a world leader, did not require any of this if you just wanted the freaking
oil. Yeah, I mean, I'm not going to sit here, and this is what's so complicated, because
what I think Trump and his White House want is for everyone to absolutely lose it and be like,
this is regime change, entanglement, and all of that. Yeah. It's not responsible. That's not what
happened. But that doesn't mean that it isn't bad. And that also doesn't mean that you can't
easily foresee many of the issues. And also the triumphalism in the big, look, I've just been in
politics long enough. I always know the day after tweet, it usually doesn't age well. And especially
when it comes to war.
Let me ask you this basic proposition,
and I'll ask it to the nation,
do you have confidence that this team
can competently pull off
an oil extraction inside of Venezuela?
Yes or no question.
Do you have confidence
that this team could have...
I mean, look, I hate Bush, I hate Cheney.
Cheney was an actual oil man, all right?
If anybody could have done it, it could have been him.
If anybody could have done it, it could have been Ronald Reagan
and those people, they were very smart.
They were very competent.
In fact, one of my favorite books,
is about Vietnam, what is the best and the brightest.
We had the world's greatest minds, you know, sit there and come up with their stat sheets
and their ideas behind how to win against North Vietnam.
And in fact, you know, if they can't do something like that, really ask yourself whether
this team can.
And then say, do you have confidence that this can also be not only a single administration,
but a future problem that every one of our great, we're going to talk about the
Democrats, do we really have confidence that this bipartisan establishment in our current
country can competently pull this off? Or can we look at our long history of all of this
and say, yeah, we probably would have been better off just striking a deal with Maduro.
She's like, hey, man, stop dancing, you know, in public and cut us some oil and minerals.
He would have, he would have, he would have been like, okay, fine, you know, stop threatening
to kill me, and then I will. But we'll see. Now you break it, you buy it, and they certainly do.
So with all of that, let's get to Eva and let's see, get her reaction on some of the background behind this possible deal between the Maduro remnants of the regime and the Trump administration.
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Let's turn now to the question of Delcie Rodriguez. She was the vice president to Maduro. Now she has
been sworn in. So she is the active president of Venezuela. And there's a question of whether or not
she could have been involved in striking a deal with the Trump administration in advance of their
kidnapping of Maduro and attack on the country of Venezuela. So following those actions,
we've gotten some contradictory signals from Ms. Rodriguez. So first we had this very bombastic
public statement where she said we'll never be slaves again. She also said that the action
had a quote, Zionist tinge. Since then, we've gotten a new statement that has quite a different
tone. We can put this up on the screen, where she's seeking cooperation, she says. So she says
Venezuela reaffirms its commitment to peace and peaceful coexistence. Our country aspires to live
without external threats and an environment of respect and international cooperation. We believe
global peace is built by first guaranteeing peace within each nation. We prioritize moving towards
balanced and respectful international relations between the U.S. and Venezuela and between
Venezuela and other countries in the region premised on sovereign equality and non-interference. These
principles guide our diplomacy with the rest of the world. We invite, and this is the key paragraph,
we invite the U.S. government to collaborate with us on an agenda of cooperation oriented
towards shared development within the framework of international law to strengthen lasting
community coexistence. President Donald Trump, our peoples and our region deserve peace and
dialogue, not war. This has always been President Nicolas Maduro's message, and it is the message
of all of Venezuela right now. This is the Venezuela I believe in and have dedicated my life
too. So for further analysis of the situation, we are very fortunate to be joined by author and
lawyer, Ava Gollinger. She is also the author of the book The Chavez Code. Great to have you,
Ava. Good to see you. Thanks for having me on. All right. So talk to us about Delci Rodriguez and what
you think is going on here. There's so much going on also under the surface behind the scenes
that obviously most of us are not privy to. So things are very much in development in real time.
But certainly, there can be several things true at the same time.
One, it can be true that there was some type of negotiation for this outcome that then has
platformed and placed Delci in the presidency in Venezuela for this transitionary period,
as it's being referred to, at least by the United States.
And it can be true that Delci and the government in Venezuela remain anti-imperialist and
opposed to, you know, the U.S. control of their country. Both things can be true. I mean,
this is a very dangerous moment for Venezuela. Even if there was a negotiation that took place
ahead of time that somehow sacrificed Maduro or enabled his capture to remove him to give Trump
a victory so that, you know, the rest could stay in power. It doesn't mean that they're welcoming
U.S. intervention and invasion into the country. I mean, obviously they were pushed into a
corner. But at the same time, there have been negotiations going on now for months, at least since
the start of this year. And leading them have been Delsey and her brother Jorge, who up until now
has been head of Venezuela's legislative body, the National Assembly. They are very astute and
intelligent and, you know, internationalist individuals who have been involved in this particular
part of the government throughout most of Maduro's presidency. So it's really not surprising to see that
they are the two key players in this chapter of the Venezuelan government. But I think primarily
they're trying to hold power. So by any means that that's necessary. And it's in part to ensure
their own power and their own, you know, posturing in the country, the wealth they have accumulated.
But it's also to ensure that the opposition doesn't come back and take power. Because they
certainly don't want that to happen. And that's not something that's widely accepted and
and desired in, at least in the Venezuela that I know. So I think that there can be several things
true at the same time. Well, we should know you're one of the literal experts on the country.
You spent a lot of time there. You know, you knew many of these people personally. Part of the things
I'm interested in here is about this deal with Delci Rodriguez. You know, you have said that
she's looked at in the country as more of a technocratic manager of the current, like, quasi-socialist,
capitalist system whenever it comes to oil, part of the reason that she may have been to,
picked here by Donald Trump or at least accepted by the current Trump administration. I mean,
how will you see her capability of balancing these two things, of wanting to either appease,
work with the Trump administration, and then organic internal, you know, small D democratic
concern over the United States and this current intervention, the kidnapping of Nicholas Maduro.
What's your sense of the internal dynamics and her ability to manage that and what that's going to
look like. Well, I think that that's going to play out over the next few days because certainly
there's an internal power struggle going on. I mean, Delsey may have been the chosen one by the
United States and through the negotiation process. That doesn't mean that she sort of has that
power over the other group's powerful figures in the government. You know, there are sectors.
Delsey is not the one who's controlling the security forces in the military and the social movements.
again, they have been the key negotiators with Washington.
And one other aspect is very, well, a couple of things.
One that's very interesting is that both her and her brother Jorge have never been sanctioned by
the United States or implicated in any of these indictments, whereas pretty much almost
every other member figurehead of the government has been.
And that was reiterated in this most recent updated indictment that included Celia Flores,
Maduro's wife, as well as his son and Diocel Covello.
And so that's curious because I think it puts them sort of on alert that they're the ones who are next in line, Dios Dalla particularly, holding the threat on Maduro and his wife possibly to not give up any information because their son, well, his son, it's not their son together, but Celia's stepson could be next.
And there's already outstanding indictments and sanctions against the Minister of Defense, Vladimir and Padino Lopez, and others in the security application.
So I think there's several factors going on that she has she has to comply to maintain order and
power in the country right now. She has to be complicit to the U.S. I think that's what's gone on
behind the scenes. But again, this has been a lobby in place now at least for months, possibly since
the beginning of the year. We saw her placement, for example, in the New York Times weeks ago
where she was presented as the moderate, which is entirely laughable because her history shows she
While she may be more pragmatic to deal with in terms of business, certainly not moderate in terms of ideology and behavior, these are people who have, I would say, very repressive instincts.
She will not accept any kind of dissent. They will go after anyone who they think would be betraying them.
So I think it's a very volatile time in the country in that aspect that she's going to be with the help of her brother trying to exert some kind of control.
power brokering amongst the groups to see how far can they advance under this immense pressure
that they have.
Trump's made clear.
They'll just go in and do it again if they want to.
And I mean, I think that it's true.
We've seen that it's true that they can do that.
And now I think they've placed all these, you know, CIA assets inside the country.
So they could execute another rendition at any time if they wanted to.
Right.
But give us a sense of who Delsey is, where she comes from, how she comes into this position
as vice president to Maduro.
Well, she's someone, again, her brother, Jorge, or older brother, is the more sort of behind
the scenes powerful player here.
He did always have a key position, not directly with Hugo Chavez when Chavez was president.
Neither of them are from sort of the grassroots original movement that brought Chavez
to power, nor were they close confidence of Chavez, whereas definitely Maduro was, his wife,
Celia was, Diozdao Cabellia was.
you know, Padino Lopez was, I mean, those are more the core members that were part of the
original movement. Delci and Jorge were always on the outskirts, but had powerful positions.
Well, Jorge did. Jorge was head of Venezuela's national electoral council, so he oversaw
the voting process for years in the country. He also was mayor of Caracas at a key moment.
He pushed Delci into Chavez's government at one point. Chavez briefly took her on as his chief of staff.
her first sort of foray into the government that lasted not more than six months, Chavez fired
her and ousted her entirely from the government and never wanted her back again, never
brought her back again. It wasn't until after his death that she was brought back in along
with her brother Jorge as part of this power sort of deal that they made with Maduro for him
to maintain power. But she is someone who's educated internationally. She's a lawyer. She's very smart.
these are very smart, calculated people. So they've been playing a long game here.
She has, they have wanted to take the presidency and to rise to that position. And she's done
well for herself. She started as Minister of Communication with Maduro. She rose to foreign
minister. That was the way she was sort of able to, you know, create her networks and get into
the sort of role as being the pragmatic and the technocrat. And then she pushed her way into
both the vice presidency and the head of the oil industry. I mean, you know, they have been
playing the long game here, and I think that they have done quite well for themselves, that
she has been placed in this position now. And, you know, I think that they've been, not to say
that they were always sort of working to undermine Maduro, but I think that that was their,
that was the objective in the end, was that Delsey could rise to the presidency, and potentially
her brother could be next in line.
Amel, what's your general sense of, like, the modal outcome here? You know, we make some deal.
They crush the opposition. Does that just end U.S.
intervention? What does that look like inside of the country? Let's say the sanctions lift,
all the groups get rich. Everybody seems to be happy. What are the downsides to that, you know,
for Venezuela? Yeah, I mean, the groups are rich anyway already. But, you know, it's really more,
there's other aspects here because there are the people of Venezuela. I mean, there are movements
there. They can't be disregarded. You know, there is still a powerful bastion of the original sort
of Chavista movement. There's a lot of.
that were not content with the situation with the current government and wanted change,
but that didn't mean they wanted U.S. intervention or any kind of, you know, U.S. puppet regime
in place. They weren't supporting the opposition either, but they wanted change.
So I think there's a lot of factors that, you know, it's still volatile and delicate.
Just because Delsey's getting support from Trump doesn't mean that she's going to have the support
of the people. And there's a lot of, you know, sciops going on internally, people saying that it's not
true, the betrayal, that there must be some other things.
going on here. And I'm sure they're going to present it to the country as though this is what
they have to do in order to maintain the Bolivarian revolution in Venezuela. But in reality,
is to maintain their own power. But I do think that potentially over time, you know, grassroots
movements will again begin to build up in opposition. And, you know, it could be anyone's game at
some point. What I found really interesting, though, from Trump was that they did completely
dismiss the opposition and Maria Corrina Machal who were waiting in the sidelines, who asked for
this. So, I mean, I think that Delci sold it really well to Rubio and Trump. And I think that she was
right. You know, many outside of Venezuela and who had the sort of platforms in the media were saying
that she, Maria Carina Machau, had all this support and could just ease back in if she was given the
chance. But that's not really true. She doesn't command any of the military.
and security forces in the country. She doesn't have that level of, you know, political and
security military support. So this was definitely sold to Trump as we are the ones who can maintain
stability. We are the ones who can guarantee access to the oil, which is what Trump wants and everything
else in the country. If you try to come in and put these other people here, it will be civil
unrest and, you know, there will be a civil war, which could also be true. So I think that, you know,
that's this that's how it was um explained and i think that that was was a very you know reasonable
proposal to to trump and and i think that they believe it because it's actually true and so i you know
it just depends how it's going to play out because i this doesn't seem to be that it's a long-term
solution with delsey at the forefront but you really never know i mean these people are survivors
people thought that when chavez died the whole thing was dead the the whole revolution was over and
here we are, look, it's now going to be 13 years since Chavez's death and they're still in power.
Do you think it's possible that Maduro was also in on the deal and the whole thing was sort of like fake and staged?
It's hard for me to imagine him going to trial here.
I mean, just with a sort of cursory understanding of his showmanship, it would be quite a spectacle.
I, you know, I sort of have doubts in the ability of them to proffer enough evidence to actually fully convict him, at least on all of the charges.
that they've asserted. So is there a possibility that actually he and Delsey that they were all
in on some sort of a deal with the Trump administration? Trump gets his military spectacle,
the revolution, the regime gets to stay in power, and Maduro maybe they quietly ship him
off somewhere else after some period of time and decide not to go through with the trial?
I don't think so. I mean, not in my opinion. I think that Maduro really thought that this
wouldn't happen. And that's why he was sort of taunting Trump. But I mean, Maduro's always been
trying to negotiate. Basically everything Delcee's going to do now, Maduro essentially would have done.
It's just that he wouldn't have done it in the same way. So no, I don't think that he was in on it.
I don't think where he is right now. That's not a place where anyone would voluntarily go to.
The case is real. They have some pretty star witnesses. It doesn't mean that all the evidence is going to hold
up, but there is witness testimony. They have some key figures. They have the former head of
military, Venezuelan military intelligence is in the same prison as Maduro, and he's already
singing his song. And Diddy and Luigi Mangione all hanging out together in the same person.
Well, I mean, there are a lot of figures there. But in terms of this particular case, there's aspects
of it that obviously are not going to hold up. Some of the charges are ridiculous. But there are other
things that they could try to make work. And I mean, there's no one possibly who could believe that
Maduro is going to get a fair trial in the United States. So certainly his lawyers are going to try
to get the charges dismissed, to get it thrown out because of the way that he was captured.
Obviously, it was an illegal violation of international law. There's no question. However,
if it played out that somehow there was an agreement that Delsey had sort of taken over and
permitted this, then they could say that it was authorized by the government that they were
recognizing in Venezuela. You know, we don't really know some of the issues behind the scenes that
come out in discovery if the case does proceed to trial. But I could see it actually happening at
some point further down the line. There could be a deal. There could certainly be a deal. I mean,
they have his wife too. It would be very sad. I'm just saying from a human perspective,
also I know them. They would be in prison basically for the rest of their life. These are two
people who spent the past, you know, 30 plus years together every day. They are a team. You know,
they're a very solid couple. They're going to be separated. I saw at least that, you know,
as they go into trial, they're still together. But at some point in prison, they're going to be
separated and they may never see each other again. So, you know, or there could be a negotiation
further down the line that gets Celia at least released and sent somewhere. But it would be hard
to imagine that this would have been some facade planned by all of them just to appease Trump and
give him his victory. It seems more likely that Trump had a buildup in the military in the region that
if he wasn't going to use it, he was going to look like a big loser.
And Maduro would have come out extremely fortified and strengthened.
And they would never have left.
They would never have left.
So at least this way, two sides get a victory.
Trump gets his man.
He gets his show.
And the same regime stays in power in Venezuela.
And so it's just a question of, you know, how long will this play out?
And is Trump so emboldened now that he's going to go after Cuba, for example, which
seems to be next on the list, at least from Rubio's perspective.
Very possible.
Eva, one last thing I wanted to get your reaction to, because you did know Hugo Chavez so well,
wrote a book about him.
This clip has been circulating.
This is B4, guys, and we can put this up on the screen, where he effectively predicts
exactly the chain of events that occurs.
He says years ago, someone told me they're going to end up accusing you of being a drug
trafficker.
You personally, you Chavez, not just that the government supports it or permits it.
no, they're going to try to apply the Noriega formula to you. And we have now heard a lot about
the Noriega formula and, you know, Panama being held up as like the positive example of what is
being done in Venezuela now. So just wanted to get your, you know, thoughts and reflections on that
clip that is now making the rounds again. No, no doubt. I mean, Chavez knew what was in the works for
that he knew the danger that it presented, um, the fact that, you know, he was his movement and,
And his ideology was about nationalism and sovereignty
and that Venezuela sits atop the world's largest oil reserves.
I mean, even as part of the research work that I did,
because I investigated and unraveled the entire US
and CIA role in the coup of de Taga against Chavez in 2002.
And subsequent destabilization and intervention attempts
over the years until his death, frankly, have continued to date.
And we've now see them play out explicitly.
But there were invasion plans drawn.
up. Plan Balboa was drawn up and practiced as a war exercise against targeting Venezuela to take control
of the oil reserves and to divide the movement internally and to take out and decapitate the leftist
leader. I mean, this has been a scenario they have been planning now for over 25 years, essentially
when Chavez took not only one office but refused to obey at that time George W. Bush's mandate
that he would take him under his wing and, you know,
ensure that the U.S. would continue all access into Venezuela's oil industry.
So certainly that's what's going on here.
I mean, I haven't seen all the evidence, but from experience,
I could say that I would find it highly unlikely that Nicholas Maduro is a drug kingpin.
Certainly there are, there is circumstantial evidence of drug shipments.
Venezuela doesn't produce drugs, so it's not made in Venezuela.
They're coming from Colombia, from Ecuador.
You know, they have been facilitated through the country.
There's no question of that.
There's plenty of evidence pointing to that.
But pointing to Maduro himself running the show and the operation,
that's just very hard to believe and highly unlikely.
But nevertheless, being the leader of the country,
they can try to pin it all on him,
especially now that he's the one they've captured.
Exactly right.
Yeah.
If you can pin machine gun by somebody,
it's ridiculous.
I mean, you could pin it.
What even is that?
Yeah.
It's unbelievable.
I mean, I reported this.
I was told directly by somebody who spoke with him.
He said, I have all the oil and all the gold.
What the F do I need to deal drugs for?
That's apparently what he said.
Maduro?
Maduro said that, apparently, to U.S.
Well, I mean, he's not dealing drugs.
But it is true.
You know, I think another thing, just because a lot of people always talk about the oil.
You know, Venezuela has vast resources, huge amounts of gold.
They have all kinds of heavy masks.
metals, aluminum, you know, there's a massive industry in Venezuela of rare earths, everything
that is desired, frankly, from the Trump administration. So it's really no surprise that
this has been played out in this way. It's a very sad and tragic time, though, for Venezuelans.
Nobody wanted this inside Venezuela amongst the Venezuelan people, and they're the ones who
are going to pay the price.
Yeah, you're right. Thank you so much for your analysis. It's just been excellent. We hope you'll
come back again.
Yeah, great to meet you, Eva.
Thank you.
Thanks for having me on.
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