The Trump Administration announced on Saturday that Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro and his wife had been captured in a U.S.-led military operation, drawing comparisons to the 1989 American invasion of Panama that removed Manuel Noriega. President Trump praised the mission as a “brilliant operation” carried out by “great, great troops,” describing it as a decisive strike against a corrupt leader.
The U.S. action, however, faces significant obstacles that experts say could complicate any transition of power in Venezuela. Analysts highlight that unlike Panama, where the United States had over 10,000 troops already stationed and could install Guillermo Endara as president, Venezuela is a far larger and more complex country. The nation has a population of around 28 million, and American forces remain offshore aboard the USS Gerald R. Ford and the Iwo Jima Amphibious Ready Group. Such a “smash-and-grab” mission removes a head of state but does not provide a framework to govern a fractured nation.
Venezuela’s military, the Bolivarian Armed Forces (FANB), has been reorganized under the Chávez and Maduro administrations to prevent coups, creating a fragmented command structure and fostering loyalty through lucrative illicit economies. Defense Minister Vladimir Padrino López called for a “massive deployment” to counter foreign intervention, while Vice President Delcy Rodríguez demanded proof of life for Maduro and insisted the government would not yield. Analysts note that officers are unlikely to cooperate with a transition that could leave them vulnerable to imprisonment or loss of assets.
Regional reactions have been mixed. Colombia has moved forces to the border to manage potential refugee flows, while Mexico condemned the strike as a threat to regional stability. China, a strategic partner with billions invested in Venezuela, criticized the operation, and Cuba’s Miguel Díaz-Canel denounced it as “criminal.” Experts warn that the perception of U.S. interference could heighten tensions across Latin America and beyond.
The Trump Administration has not confirmed whether it sought congressional approval for the strike, and no clear plan for post-Maduro governance has been announced. Opposition figures in exile, such as Maria Corina Machado, have voiced support for U.S. pressure on the regime, but analysts caution that supporting military action from abroad differs sharply from building a functioning government in Caracas.
Historians and former foreign correspondents note that removing a dictator is often the simplest step in intervention; the difficult task is stabilizing governance afterward. Without diplomatic coordination, regional support, and a clear transition plan, Venezuela risks descending into chaos despite the U.S. military’s initial success.
As of Saturday, the FANB remains largely intact, and Maduro’s government continues to call for resistance, suggesting that the real challenge for Washington may only be beginning.