The NPR Politics Podcast - Trump Says The U.S. Will 'Run' Venezuela After Capturing Maduro
Episode Date: January 3, 2026Overnight, the U.S. military launched strikes on Venezuela and captured its president, Nicolás Maduro. We discuss President Trump's announcement that the United States will run Venezuela’s governme...nt "until such time as a proper transition can take place," as well as the criminal charges Maduro faces in New York. This episode: political correspondent Sarah McCammon, White House correspondent Franco Ordoñez, justice correspondent Ryan Lucas and national security correspondent Greg Myre.This podcast was produced by Casey Morell and Bria Suggs, and edited by Rachel Baye.Our executive producer is Muthoni Muturi.Listen to every episode of the NPR Politics Podcast sponsor-free, unlock access to bonus episodes with more from the NPR Politics team, and support public media when you sign up for The NPR Politics Podcast+ at plus.npr.org/politics.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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Support for NPR, and the following message come from Yarl and Pamela Mohn, thanking the people who make public radio great every day and also those who listen.
Hey there, it's the NPR Politics Podcast. I'm Sarah McCammon. I cover politics.
I'm Frank O'Donias. I cover the White House. I'm Ryan Lucas. I cover the Justice Department.
And I'm Greg Myrie. I cover national security.
It is 1.45 p.m. Eastern Time on Saturday, January 3rd.
The United States has captured Venezuela's President Nicholas Maduro and his wife, and both of them are headed to U.S. soil.
A short while ago, President Trump made that announcement.
Late last night and early today, at my direction, the United States Armed Forces conducted an extraordinary military operation in the capital of Venezuela.
overwhelming American military power,
air, land, and sea was used to launch
a spectacular assault
and it was an assault like people
have not seen since World War II.
Franco, you've been following this.
What can you tell us about how this extraordinary action
played out overnight?
Yeah, President Trump said he actually watched
the operation in real time from a room in Mar-a-Lago
along with some generals.
And one of those generals, Dan Kane,
head of the Joint Chief of Staff,
gave some details in today's presser.
He said the operation was named Absolute Resolve.
He said that more than 150 aircraft
from across the hemisphere were involved.
The U.S. actually dismantled
Venezuelan air defenses in advance
so that American military helicopters
could go into Caracas.
There was shooting,
and one of the aircraft was hit,
but he said that it remained flyable. Forces were on the ground, he said, by 2 a.m. local time. And maybe about two hours later, they had both Maduro and his wife on an aircraft out of the country.
Trump actually released a photo of Maduro in U.S. custody. It kind of showed him in handcuffs. He was in sweats and kind of wearing this blackout mask.
And the president said that Maduro tried to get to a safe room.
and he reached the door, was able to barely open it, but he was unable to close it.
Though Trump said, even if they did close it, the U.S. forces would have blown it open.
Greg, as you've been following this, what stood out to you?
Well, a couple things that General Kane mentioned.
He said, you know, this had been planned for months, and you certainly would expect that.
He said everything was in place by early December, so roughly a month ago, and they were just waiting for the right set of circumstances.
and you had to deal with things like the weather in the Caribbean.
There's some mountainous terrain in Venezuela, a lot of cloud cover at times.
So the weather broke for them.
This could have happened at any time recently.
And they really did keep it under wraps, which is what the administration wanted.
And, of course, members of Congress are complaining that they were not informed, that they
weren't given any advance notice.
Secretary of State Marco Rubio said they were informed when the mission began.
in the middle of the night, but they had no advance warning. And Rubio said they couldn't do that
because then the mission could have been compromised. Trump said Congress leaks, which is true.
But it was interesting to hear a little bit about the dynamics that have been going on because
there was certainly the sense that something like this could happen, but it was kept under wraps.
All of this leads to the big question, which is who is in charge here now that the president of
Venezuela has been physically removed.
by the United States. Who's running Venezuela? Well, the vice president, Delsi Rodriguez, was sworn in as
president today, according to Trump. But according to Trump, it's really probably the U.S.
Secretary of State, Marco Rubio, and perhaps Pete Heggseth, and perhaps Kane. I mean, Trump said
they were part of a large group of leaders who were going to be kind of running Venezuela,
and they would continue to lead the country until its infrastructure was rebuilt. I mean,
Trump wasn't clear about what kind of support they would have, whether U.S. military force would be there.
But he also said that he was not afraid of having boots on the ground. And I would just say that is something very significant for this president, considering how adverse he has been about U.S. troops' involvement in foreign wars or foreign affairs.
And this will be the case for how long?
We don't know. Trump said those troops are still poised.
just off the coast of Venezuela. They are prepared, as Trump described it, to carry out a second
wave, which he said could be even bigger. So it seems the desire is that this can all be worked out
politically and diplomatically and a new Venezuelan government can take hold without unrest. But what
Trump didn't say is what happens if there is instability? What happens if they can't get a
government that the Trump administration likes in Venezuela? What exactly?
would trigger those U.S. forces to go back in and carry out more military action. We don't know the
answer to that question. We don't know how much longer they might sit there offshore. I will say
that I was pretty surprised that Trump, you know, in past, Trump's M.O. is kind of like,
we'll get this done quick. It'll be easy. It'll be fast. But I actually found that Trump was
pretty honest about this being a long-term commitment. He did not sugarcoat the fact that there
would be billions of dollars needed to invest in this, and it would take time and effort
to rebuild that infrastructure. I got the impression from him that the United States is going
to be sticking around a long time. And that, to me, is pretty eye-opening. You know, Ryan,
lots of questions clearly for Venezuela. But meanwhile, here in the U.S., Trump says that Maduro
and his wife, Celia Flores, will face trial in New York at some point. What do we know about the
charges that they're facing? Well, look, the Justice Department actually originally announced
charges against Maduro back in 2020 in March of 2020 for trafficking, cocaine trafficking,
a sort of drug conspiracy. What we got today was a new indictment that was unsealed
in the Southern District of New York, so in Manhattan. There are four charges there,
including narco-terrorism conspiracy, cocaine importation conspiracy, and a couple of weapons charges.
It's a 25-page indictment. And it was a five-page indictment.
What it does is essentially allege that there was this relentless campaign headed by Maduro and senior Venezuelan officials to flood the United States with cocaine.
The indictment says that senior Venezuelan officials worked with major cartels like the Sinaloa cartel and the Zetas in Mexico, as well as some groups in Colombia, that these Venezuelan officials, including Maduro, provided law enforcement covering logistical support for cocaine shipments by those groups to the United States.
Maduro and his wife, Celia Flores, are being brought to the United States.
Trump has said to New York, the Attorney General Pam Bondi, says that there they will face the full wrath, as she put it, of American justice.
One thing that I will also point out here is that we have heard a lot from the Trump administration over the past four or five months since the strikes against the drugboats began, the suspected drug boats began in early September, that this is a campaign to stop the importation of illicit drugs.
into the United States. They leaned heavily into that messaging. We've seen roughly 30 strikes
against suspected drug boats in the Caribbean and the Pacific. But at the same point in time,
that has been undermined in part by one, the fact that President Trump recently pardoned
the former Honduran president who had been convicted and sentenced for running a massive
drug conspiracy, importing tons of cocaine into the United States. And I will point out that that
includes shipments, as prosecutors have said, that were coming.
from Venezuela during the period of time when Maduro was in charge.
All right, we're going to take a quick break.
We'll have more in just a moment.
Support for NPR, and the following message come from Yarl and Pamela Mohn, thanking the people
who make public radio great every day and also those who listen.
And we're back.
I want to go back to these questions about who is running Venezuela going forward.
During the press conference, President Trump had this to say about what comes
next. We're going to stay until such time as we're going to run it, essentially, until such time
as a proper transition can take place. Greg, what might be involved in running another country,
as President Trump says the U.S. is going to do? Well, I guess you could say the U.S. has a lot of
experience in trying to run other countries, and it's been mixed at best. I think in many cases,
it's gone very poorly. We've certainly seen Iraq and Afghanistan in the last quarter century.
So you can start there with examples of places where leaders were toppled quite quickly, and it seemed then it would just be a steady rebuilding process, but it wasn't.
And so you've got to consider that possibility.
The country has been run by Nicolas Maduro for more than a decade, his predecessor Hugo Chavez.
We've seen just absolute economic decline from a country that has a lot of oil resources.
so it can be very, very complicated, both at the political level, the diplomatic level, there could be
instability. But it is also a country that has a lot of oil resources. If it could resume producing
the level of oil that it has in the past, and that's a very big if. It's going to take a lot of work
and a lot of effort. But there are potentially the resources there for Venezuela to rebuild.
So I think it's hard to make a prediction with any certainty one way or the other, but I think you can say there are going to be a lot of complications that are very difficult to predict.
And I'll just echo what Franco said. President Trump often talks about doing a deal, doing something quickly.
He does seem to be realistic about the length of time that it will take.
There are two other countries that immediately come to mind that the U.S. has intervened in militarily in the past quarter century that people talked about.
their vast oil reserves and how that is going to help quickly rebuild Iraq and Libya. And we have
seen how both of those cases turned out. Now, Ryan, a moment ago, you were describing the charges
against Nicholas Maduro and his wife. Under what legal authority does the administration say it is
doing this? Well, the administration has not talked publicly about its justification here.
the administration did brief members of Congress, as we've said, after this operation began.
And from speaking to a person familiar with the matter, I'm told that the administration said that the president was acting under his Article 2 authority as commander-in-chief and that the Pentagon was in, in essence, taking action to assist the Justice Department in an arrest warrant for Maduro and his wife.
Now, the United States has gone into foreign countries in the past and grabbed a suspect who's been indicted in the U.S. and brought them back to the United States to face trial.
There's a notable case in the country that I just mentioned, Libya, of a suspect who was involved in the killing of a U.S. ambassador there.
So this has happened with terrorism suspects, but in many cases, what you end up having is in agreement with a given country's authorities or there is a plausible.
self-defense argument that the U.S. is taking this action in self-defense. Here, legal experts,
and we've also seen pushback from some members of Congress saying that the idea that the U.S.
was taking this action in self-defense doesn't hold water, the idea being that Venezuela did not
pose a direct and imminent threat. Some members of Congress were not briefed ahead of time. The
president said that and Secretary of State Marco Rubio said this was essentially not the kind of
operation that Congress could have a heads up about, I guess because of the sensitivity and the
security risk. Franco, what is Congress saying so far in response? You are hearing pushback from
some Democrats. Even, you know, Senator Tim Cain, who was on our air earlier this morning, called
these strikes clearly illegal. He said the Constitution is clear that the U.S. doesn't engage
in military action or war without a vote of Congress, except in the case of imminent self-defense.
That obviously did not happen. Trump did not seek authorization from Congress. Again, in his press
conference, he complained that Congress leaks too much. But I do think this is just another example
of the United States or of President Trump and his administration kind of, you know, expanding
his executive power while diminishing the power of Congress. I would also jump in here and just
say that, you know, the operation today, the administration says, was a great success.
There weren't any American service members who were killed in this operation. They captured
Maduro and his wife. They successfully took him out of the country and are bringing him to
the U.S. to face trial. But that is not the end of this, as we have said. This is the beginning
of this. There's going to be a long tail here. And because the legal rationale is disputed, the
upside of getting legal buying and public buying for an operation like this is it provides you
political cover. And they have not done that here. And so if things do go south, there's only
one person who's going to be to blame for that, and that's going to be President Trump.
And we should say Republican leaders are praising the president's actions, House Speaker,
Mike Johnson and Senate Majority Leader John Thune, among others. Thune, in a statement,
called it a decisive action to disrupt the unacceptable status quo. But again, there is a lot
a pushback, especially from from Democrats so far. You know, Trump's whole campaign was based largely
on putting America first. That's been a slogan for a long time. How does this move by the Trump
administration fit into that vision, especially when he campaigned on the idea that he would
bring closure to conflicts around the world? So far, his international focus, you know, this term,
has really alienated some of his supporters. So, you know, in addition to where Venezuela kind of
comes out on this, I think there is a big question about how Trump's own supporters are going to
kind of feel about this long-term investment. And I think that's why you're getting so much
emphasis from Trump and his AIDS about oil. This push for oil is clearly an argument that this
is in U.S. interest. Trump said that Venezuela stole U.S. oil.
speaking to when Venezuela nationalized the industry, it is clearly, I think, an effort to kind of
mitigate some of those concerns that the United States, from MagaWorld, that the United States
is too focused on foreign wars and not focused enough on domestic interest, that Trump has
lost his way on America first. And he argues that this is America first. This is about
American interests. And oil is a prime example of that.
Well, Trump said during the press conference that this should serve as a warning, essentially, to anyone who would compromise American interests. I'm paraphrasing. We've been talking about this America first policy and the idea that Trump promised to restrain military action. But could there be more of the same here? Is this the beginning of a different approach? Do you expect to see more actions like this?
Well, the president has already acted much differently this term. I've done some counting. He's bombed four
countries in the Middle East, two countries in Africa, and now this operation in Venezuela,
all in less than a year since he took office last January. So we're seeing a president much more
willing to use military force in this term, and we've seen him lay it out in the national
security strategy, which was just put out recently, talking about this greater emphasis on the
Western Hemisphere and Latin America. He brought it up again today, the Monroe Doctrine dating to
President James Monroe just over 200 years ago that Latin America, the Western Hemisphere is the U.S.
backyard. Other countries should not be involved. So there is much more of an emphasis,
and we see Secretary of State, Marco Rubio, son of Cuban immigrants, also being very aggressive,
very hawkish. So I would not be surprised having seen what we
We saw today that we could see more of this.
All right, well, let's leave it there for today.
I'm Sarah McCammon. I cover politics.
I'm Frank O'Donias. I cover the White House.
I'm Ryan Lucas. I cover the Justice Department.
I'm Greg Myrie, and I cover national security.
And thank you for listening to the NPR Politics Podcast.
Support for NPR, and the following message come from Yarl and Pamela Mohn.
who make public radio great every day and also those who listen.
