Así Capturaron a Maduro: análisis De CNN Revela Riesgos Extremos Del Operativo Militar en Venezuela
The mission involved over 150 aircraft and elite forces facing heavy resistance, with Venezuelan and Cuban casualties totaling over 130, according to official statements.
- On January 3, U.S. special operations forces captured President Nicolás Maduro at a compound inside the Fort Tiuna military complex, arriving at 2:01 a.m. and removing him after searching the residential site.
- Pre-Dawn strikes across Venezuela disabled radar and air-defense systems, hitting Higuerote airport, while more than 150 aircraft launched from 20 bases, Air Force Gen. Dan Caine said.
- Using eyewitness videos, CNN reconstructed the mission by analyzing more than 50 videos and synchronizing 10 additional clips, revealing a two-minute vulnerable window as transport helicopters landed amid ongoing crossfire.
- Venezuelan authorities reported 100 lives lost, Cuban authorities said 32 security personnel, while the Trump administration stated no American lives were lost and U.S. forces exited around 4.29 a.m.
- The memo cautioned U.S. forces would face significant resistance, including dozens of anti-aircraft batteries, and Wes Bryant warned the operation was a ticking time bomb where just one small factor could have flipped the coin.
19 Articles
19 Articles
President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva stated this Saturday being "indicted by what happened in Venezuela", referring to the military intervention of the United States in the Caribbean who then captured the leader of the Venezuelan regime Nicolas Maduro on 3 January. The following days, the government of Donald Trump went on to support the presidency of the country of Maduro, Delcy Rodríguez. The former dictator is imprisoned in New York, where he …
CNN analysis reveals the extremely dangerous conditions of the US operation to capture Nicolas Maduro, with gunfire, low-flying helicopters and a two-minute window that determined the outcome of the mission
Así capturaron a Maduro: análisis de CNN revela riesgos extremos del operativo militar en Venezuela
Por Isaac Yee, Avery Schmitz, Thomas Bordeaux, Katie Polglase y Allegra Goodwin, CNN en Español La audaz operación estadounidense para derrocar a Nicolás Maduro, presidente de Venezuela hasta su captura, se redujo a un intenso tiroteo final en el que helicópteros estadounidenses estuvieron expuestos a un nivel de riesgo extraordinario al descender a un complejo militar fuertemente fortificado en Caracas, según videos de testigos oculares clave a…
By Isaac Yee, Avery Schmitz, Thomas Bordeaux, Katie Polglase and Allegra Goodwin, CNN en Español The audacious U.S. operation to overthrow Nicolás Maduro, Venezuela's president until his capture, came down to an intense final firefight in which U.S. helicopters were exposed to an extraordinary level of risk as they descended on a heavily fortified military compound in Caracas, according to key eyewitness videos analyzed by CNN.
Caracas. The government of Venezuela denied the information published by the British newspaper The Guardian which claimed that Delcy Rodríguez, current president in charge, and his brother Jorge Rodríguez, president of the National Assembly, would have negotiated and assured his collaboration with the United States long before a U.S. military operation kidnapped and removed President Nicolás Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores, from the country.
The US attack on Venezuela and the capture of President Nicolas Maduro has been a real vitamin injection (or perhaps something stronger) for the hawks around Trump. The event is seen by many as the real start of a more aggressive foreign policy – with heightened tensions over Greenland being another step. The question is what does the Trump administration have in mind next?
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