The President's Daily Brief - PDB Special Report | January 3, 2026: The Fall of Maduro: Inside the U.S. Operation That Toppled Venezuela’s Dictator
Episode Date: January 4, 2026In this Special Edition of The President’s Daily Brief: The world wakes up to stunning news as the United States captures Venezuelan strongman Nicolás Maduro following a sweeping U.S. military... operation deep inside Caracas. We break down Operation Absolute Resolve, including how U.S. intelligence tracked Maduro for months, the scale of the air campaign, and the special forces raid that led to his capture. To listen to the show ad-free, become a premium member of The President’s Daily Brief by visiting PDBPremium.com. Please remember to subscribe if you enjoyed this episode of The President’s Daily Brief. YouTube: youtube.com/@presidentsdailybrief Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
As the crispy chicken sandwich from 7-Eleven, people always call me loud.
And I'm like, yeah, I know.
I'm crispy.
Did you expect me to whisper?
If you want quiet, go eat some soup and reflect.
Like, I know I'm a handful.
I'm bold, I'm juicy.
Throw some pickles and barbecue sauce on me, and baby, I'm a whole meal.
And with seven rewards, I'm just $4.
Quiet.
No.
Krispy, saucy, and $4?
Very.
Only at 711.
Valley 362326, participating stores only while supplies lastly out for full terms.
It's Saturday, the 3rd of January.
Welcome to the special edition of the President's Daily Brief.
I'm Mike Baker.
Your eyes and ears on the world stage.
And what a stage it is.
Well, the world woke up to some genuinely stunning news this morning
as President Trump announced that Nicholas Maduro,
the longtime strongman ruler, of course, of Venezuela,
has been captured, along with his wife
following U.S. military strikes
on key Venezuelan military facilities in and around Caracas.
This marks one of the most extraordinary moments in modern U.S. foreign policy in recent memory,
the removal of a sitting head of state through direct American military action.
It harkens back to the 1989 removal of Daniel Noriega from Panama.
But while the significance of the actions in Venezuela are clear, many critical questions remain unanswered, at least for now.
Chief among them, what comes next?
I'll give you my thoughts on what this all means going forward, but first, here's what we know about the operation.
at least so far.
Overnight, U.S. forces carried out what officials are now calling an apprehension mission in Venezuela.
According to Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff General Dan Cain, the operation had been in development for months
and relied on a close integration of intelligence collection and military planning.
U.S. intelligence services, Kane said, had been tracking Maduro closely throughout that period.
Now, falling in the category of for what it's worth, if from my perspective this would undoubtedly
have included recruited assets inside the Venezuelan government and military.
The operation, known as Absolute Resolve, began early Saturday morning with a large-scale bombing
campaign. Explosions were reported across Caracas and surrounding areas, with aircraft operating
at low altitude. Multiple facilities tied to Venezuela's military and internal security services
were hit. Targets included communications hubs, commanded control nodes, and air defense systems.
Power was reportedly knocked out across much.
of the city during the opening phase. General Kane said approximately 150 aircraft were involved
in the operation, including bombers and surveillance platforms, fighter jets, helicopters, and remotely
piloted drones. Those aircraft launched from roughly 20 different air bases across the hemisphere.
One aircraft was reportedly struck during the operation, but remained flyable and returned safely
to base. Then, at approximately 1 a.m. Eastern time, U.S. Special Forces descended into
to downtown Caracas.
They assaulted what was described as a heavily fortified location,
where President Maduro and his wife, Micelia Flores,
were believed to be sheltering.
According to U.S. officials, both were captured without significant resistance.
The pair were then transported to the USS Iwo Jima,
a U.S. maybe amphibious assault ship,
essentially a floating helicopter base,
currently operating in the Caribbean.
General Kane said the entire operation
from the opening strikes to extraction lasted roughly two hours and 20 minutes.
Maduro and his wife are now reportedly en route to New York.
U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi announced that Maduro has been indicted on federal charges.
The indictment accuses him, along with multiple associates of terrorism, conspiracy to import cocaine into the U.S., large-scale drug trafficking,
corruption of public institutions to protect narcotic shipments, and partnerships with foreign drug trafficking organizations.
It's being reported that Maduro could make his first appearance in New York federal court as,
soon as Monday. As you can imagine, what remains of the regime isn't too happy with this morning's
developments, at least so they claim. Senior Venezuelan officials have denounced the U.S. action
as an act of aggression and declared a national emergency. Of course, Maduro has long been the
target of U.S. pressure. He's been under U.S. indictment for years on drug trafficking-related
charges. Washington has accused his regime of operating as a narco-state, facilitating transnational
criminal networks, repressing political opposition,
and presiding over the collapse of Venezuela's economy.
As we've been tracking here in recent months, that pressure has steadily intensified.
The U.S. acknowledged targeted strikes on drug trafficking infrastructure,
naval activity in the region increased, and rhetoric from Washington hardened.
This operation appears to be the culmination, of course, of a campaign designed not merely to weaken the Maduro regime,
but to remove it altogether.
International reaction has been mixed thus far, and telling.
UN Secretary General Antonio Gutierrez said he was, quote, deeply alarmed,
warning that the operation could set a dangerous precedent and urging respect for international law.
Mexican President Claudius Scheinbaum issued a similar statement,
condemning the action as a violation of the UN Charter.
Perhaps my favorite of all international reaction thus far has been from Russia,
Russia's foreign ministry, weighed in, posting on X with no sense of irony,
that the U.S. had committed what it called, quote, an act of
armed aggression against Venezuela, adding that it raised deep concern and warranted condemnation.
Oh, well, maybe the Russian foreign ministry, busy with its four-year invasion of Ukraine,
should sit this one out.
But there has been support within the international community as well.
Argentine President Javier Miele welcomed the news by sharing a previous video in which he
denounced Maduro's government as a, quote, narco-terrorist regime and a regional threat.
Miele has repeatedly urged Latin American leaders to back U.S. pressure against Caracas.
He closed his post with a familiar refrain.
Quote, long-live freedom, damn it, end quote.
The damn it is a nice touch.
Which brings us to the biggest question of all.
What happens next?
During a press conference this afternoon, President Trump offered some insight, but few specifics.
He said, quote, we're going to run the country until such time as we can do a safe, proper, and judicious
transition, end quote. He added that the U.S. wants liberty and justice for the people of Venezuela
and for the country to be, quote, rich, independent, and safe, end quote. What the president did not
outline was how the U.S. would oversee Venezuela or for how long. It remains unclear whether that
would involve an extended military presence, the installation of an interim government, or some other
transitional arrangement. Trump did say the administration was not afraid of deploying boots on the
ground if necessary. He also said U.S. oil companies would invest, quote, billions of dollars
to rehabilitate Venezuela's damaged oil infrastructure. One point of criticism already in Washington
has been the lack of advance notice to Congress. Congress hates to be shut out. The administration
did not seek prior authorization for the operation. Addressing that concern, Secretary of State,
Marco Rubio said this was not the kind of mission that allowed for advance congressional
notification. He described it as, quote, largely a law enforcement operation carried out under
extraordinary circumstances. And that brings us to the bigger picture here and some necessary
perspective. Excema is unpredictable, but you can flare less with ebbglis, a once-monthly
treatment for moderate to severe eczema. After an initial four-month or longer dosing phase,
about four in 10 people taking ebb glist achieved itch relief and clear or almost clear skin
at 16 weeks, and most of those people maintain skin that's still more clear at one year with
monthly dosing.
Ebglis, Librikizumab, LBKZ.
A 250 milligram per 2 milliliter injection is a prescription medicine used to treat adults and children
12 years of age and older who weigh at least 88 pounds or 40 kilograms with moderate
to severe eczema, also called atopic dermatitis that is not well controlled with
prescription therapies used on the skin or topicals or who cannot use topical therapies.
Ebglis can be used with or without topical corticosteroids.
Don't use if you're allergic to Epglis.
Allergic reactions can occur that can be severe.
eye problems can occur. Tell your doctor if you have new or worsening eye problems. You should not receive a live vaccine when treated with Ebbglis. Before starting Ebbglis, tell your doctor if you have a parasitic infection. Ask your doctor about Ebbglis.com or call 1800 lilyrx or 1,800 545-9709.
As we've mentioned in the past, once the U.S. began assembling such a large and visible military posture,
there were really only three plausible end states for Venezuela.
The first was that Maduro would negotiate his own departure, securing safe passage for himself and his immediate family.
That option was quietly explored.
Maduro even floated what amounted to a trow balloon.
But by all indications, he misjudged his leverage and asked for terms that were no longer realistic.
He hadn't yet grasped just how isolated and exposed he had become.
The second possibility was an internal move.
That figures around him, military leaders or regime insiders, would decide that Maduro had become a liability and that they would act to remove him themselves.
And the third option was direct U.S. intervention.
That clearly is what we've got.
Although this intervention may have involved backroom negotiating with one or more of the key power brokers within the Maduro
regime. It's important to say this plainly. Removing a regime leader is never clean. It is always
messy in one way or another. And just because Maduro is gone, it does not automatically mean
Venezuela becomes democratic, stable, or free. It's not a one-man dictatorship. Maduro was the
face of the regime, but not the entirety of it. There are still powerful figures inside Venezuela,
who matter a great deal. That's a rather statement of the obvious, I suppose. Defense Minister Vladimir
Reno Lopez, who controls a military,
Diazado Cabello, their regime's chief enforcer, and political strongman,
and the Rodriguez siblings, Delci Rodriguez and Jorge Rodriguez,
who control key levers of state power, specifically oil and propaganda.
Add to that, a number of senior military officers who've spent years
enriching themselves under both Hugo Chavez and Maduro.
These people don't simply disappear because Maduro is gone,
Unless, as mentioned, there have been negotiations quietly underway and behind Maduro's back.
So the next phase could get complicated, unless, again, there were pre-negotiated understandings with some of these key actors.
Whether such deals exist is not yet clear, but without them, transitions like this tend to be unstable.
Another point worth making, operations like this do not succeed without help from the inside, for the most part.
Maduro had grown increasingly paranoid in recent years, and particularly this past year.
He tightened his inner security circle and relied heavily on Cuban security personnel for personnel protection, as we've discussed here on the PDB.
And yet, in an operation of this precision, the trigger to act usually comes from one of two things, either exceptionally solid, real-time intelligence on location and security of the target, or recruited assets inside the system who can facilitate action on the ground.
In reality, it's frankly often both.
Now, I would be genuinely surprised if this operation did not involve credible intelligence support,
likely recruited assets inside Venezuela's security or government apparatus.
That's not conjecture.
That's how operations like this work.
And finally, what happens in Venezuela doesn't typically stay in Venezuela, and particularly in this case.
The ripple effects will be significant, especially for Cuba.
The Cuban regime relies heavily on Venezuelan oil and economic support.
court. A genuine transition in Caracas, rather than just a reshuffling of some of the key power brokers,
would place enormous strain on Havana. And beyond the region, the message travels even farther.
Tehran will be watching closely. So will the leadership of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps.
The signal sent by this operation, rightly or wrongly, will be studied in capitals far beyond Latin America.
So, yes, this is a historic moment. But it's also the beginning of a far more complex
phase. The next days and weeks will tell us whether this becomes a managed transition or whether
Venezuela enters a period of instability that no one fully controls. We'll continue to track it closely,
of course, separate facts from speculation, and keep you informed as this story develops. I'm Mike Baker
with this special PDB update. Now, remember to check out also the latest edition of our weekend show,
the PDB Situation Report. That's available on our YouTube channel at President's Daily Brief,
and of course podcast platforms everywhere.
In the meantime, stay informed.
Stay safe.
Stay cool.
It's Mushrooms with me, Maddie Matheson.
You know what's better than thinking about dinner too hard?
Not.
Stop that.
And just choose Mushrooms.
Five minutes.
Done.
Dinner's that easy and you feel like a genius.
It's not magic.
It's Mushrooms.
Stop stressing at mushroomcouncil.com.
